Quame languages
Quame | |
---|---|
Naquo-Talmic | |
Created by | IlL |
Geographic distribution | Txapoalli, Talma, Etalocin; today worldwide |
Linguistic classification | One of Tricin's primary language families |
Proto-language | Proto-Quame |
The Quame languages (Eevo: brits Cłem, from *kʷēm-, the reconstructed word for 1), also known as Naquo-Talmic, are a major language family in Tricin. It is well-established that that Naquic and Talmic form a Naquo-Talmic family; the relationship of other languages to Naquo-Talmic is conjectured by some but not well-established.
The Quame urheimat is surmised to be somewhere in Etalocin (the union of Clofabolocin and Dodellia). Proto-Quame was spoken 3000 years ago.
Proto-Quame phonology is inspired by classical IE languages and Tsez.
Family tree
- Quame
- Talmic languages (Proto-Tigolic)
- Roshterian
- Nurian
- Naquian
- Wiobian
- Aevehāne
Phonology
Consonants
The following inventory of consonants is reconstructed for PQ and is now accepted by the majority of Trician scholars.
Labial | Dental | Alveolar | Palatal | Velar | Uvular | Glottal | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
plain | labialized | plain | labialized | |||||||
Nasal | *m | *n | ||||||||
Plosive | plain (unasp.) | *t | *T | *k | *kʷ | *q | *qʷ | *ʔ | ||
ejective | *tʼ | *Tʼ | *kʼ | *kʷʼ | *qʼ | *qʷʼ | ||||
voiced | *b | *d | *D | *g | *gʷ | *ɢ | *ɢʷ | |||
Fricative | *φ | *s | ||||||||
Resonant | *l | *r | *y /j/ | *w |
Vowels
Front | Central | Back | |
---|---|---|---|
Close | *i *ī | *u *ū | |
Mid | *e *ē | *o *ō | |
Open | *a *ā |
Suprasegmentals
Stress was phonemic.
Phonotactics
Rules:
- Grassmann's Law operates in many descendants.
Grammar
Typology
No case, number + classifier marking articles, clusivity (very un-IE)
OVS; focus prominent; Wackernagel clitics
Classifiers
- ne, pl. stae = animates (humans, more "animate" animals like pets)
- tja, pl. jes = honorific form of ne
- kveo, pl. fli = organisms not viewed as sentient: plants, fungi, bacteria, "lower" animals, pests
- mi, pl. min = tiny, point-like objects; mass nouns
Units of measurement can be used such as cups, pails, ...
- oets, pl. al = long, thin objects
- hy, pl. zoe = flat sheets
- gi, pl. kru = food items
- raev, pl. sja = abstractions; intellectual works such as art, books, ...
- mo, pl. lu = manmade structures: houses, buildings, cities; toolsUnits of measurement do not take classifiers with numerals.