Adamic Code

From Linguifex
Revision as of 03:11, 24 October 2024 by Veno (talk | contribs) (→‎Vowels)
Jump to navigation Jump to search


Adamic (Ādamya, pronounced [aːˈdami̯a ]) is a philosophical ab interiori language that consists on naming roots and applying patterns to make them act as a full fledged language. Its name was chosen by the creator, Veno, due the similarity with the narrative of Genesis, where Adam was tasked to name the animals of Eden[1].

Adamic Code
ādamya
Pronunciation[aːˈdami̯a]
Created byVeno
Date25000-12000 BP
SettingAfrica
Native speakers- (2024)
Pangaean Code
  • Diluvian Code
    • Adamic Code
Early form
Paleolithic Creole
This article contains IPA phonetic symbols. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters. For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA.

Introduction

The Adamic Code was created to simulate the hypothesis of an Afroasiatic Paleolithic Code. Chronologically, the language would be a creole of the Pangaean Code[2] and the Diluvian Code[3].



Phonology

Orthography

Consonants

Guttural Coronal Labial
Sonorant [1]h ɦ l̥ r n̥ m
Fricative s z [1]t͡s ʔ f v
Plosive k g t d p b
^1The sounds /h/ and /ɦ/, as well as the sounds /t͡s/ and /ʔ/, are grouped as sonorants and fricatives respectively without showing the proper phonetic qualities.

The characters used in the orthography are given below.

  • /k/ is written k
  • /g/ is written g
  • /t/ is written t
  • /d/ is written d
  • /t/ is written t
  • /p/ is written p
  • /b/ is written b
  • /h/ is written h
  • /ɦ/ is written q
  • /l̥/ is written l
  • /r/ is written r
  • /s/ is written s
  • /z/ is written z
  • /t͡s/ is written c
  • /ʔ/ is written
  • /f/ is written f
  • /v/ is written v

Vowels

Front Center Back
Short i a u
Long

The characters used in the orthography are given below.

  • /i/ without relevant stress is written i
  • /a/ without relevant stress is written a
  • /u/ without relevant stress is written u
  • /i/ with relevant stress is written í
  • /a/ with relevant stress is written á
  • /u/ with relevant stress is written ú
  • /iː/ without relevant stress is written ī
  • /aː/ without relevant stress is written ā
  • /uː/ without relevant stress is written ū
  • /iː/ with relevant stress is written î
  • /aː/ with relevant stress is written â
  • /uː/ with relevant stress is written û

Prosody

Stress

Intonation

Phonotactics

Morphophonology

Morphology

Adamic grammar consists on a reutilization of the primordial and diluvian systems. When the relevant grammatical terms (X) are expressed the same way they are in the Pangaean Code (but within the morphophonological boundaries of Adamic) it is applied the formula [[X]=P]A; whereas with Diluvian, it is [[X]=D]A. Furthermore, the identification of the particle (Y) in the configuration of the Adamic Code responsible for the equivalence is represented by Y⇒(...Y...).


Lesson 1

[[§1.1.1.1]=P]A ∃ C2⇒(C1V1C2V2C3).

avâla aku
-v-'-l->a/a/a/a a-k-u
person>∅ a-DEITIC-NOMINATIVE
"person" "that"
that person

Lesson 2

[[§1.1.1.2]=P]A ∃ C3⇒(C1V1C2V2C3).

avâla aruk
-v-'-l->a/a/a/a a-r-u-k
person>∅ a-GENERIC-NOMINATIVE-COMITATIVE
"person" "with a"
with a person

Lesson 3

[[§1.1.1.3]=P]A ∃ C2∨C3⇒(C1V1C2V2C3).

avâla alku
-v-'-l->a/a/a/a a-lk-u
person>∅ a-ALIENATIVE.DEITIC-NOMINATIVE
"person" "other next"
other person next

Lesson 4

[[§1.1.2.1]=P]A ∃ V1⇒(C1V1C2V2C3).

avâla iru
-v-'-l->a/a/a/a i-r-u
person>∅ the-GENERIC-NOMINATIVE
"person" "the"
the person

Lesson 5

[[§1.1.2.2]=D]A ∃ V⇒(V-...-V)

Lesson 6

[[§1.1.2.3]=P]A ∃ V2⇒(C1VV1C2VV2C3)

Lesson 7

[[§1.1.3.1]=D]A ∃ cV⇒(cV-...-cV) reduplication?

Lesson 8

[[Concentração]=P]A

Lesson 9

[[Distribuição]=P]A

Lesson 10

Lesson 11

Lesson 12

Lesson 13

Lesson 14

Lesson 15

Lesson 16

Lesson 17

Lesson 18

Lesson 19

Lesson 20

Lesson 21

Lesson 22

Lesson 23

Lesson 24

Lesson 25

Lesson 26

Lesson 27

Lesson 28

Lesson 29

Lesson 30

Lesson 31

Lesson 32

Lesson 33

Lesson 34

Lesson 35

Lesson 36

Syntax

Constituent order

Noun phrase

Verb phrase

Sentence phrase

Dependent clauses

Example texts

Other resources