Nurian

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Nurian/Lexicon

Nurian
nūrimēs
Pronunciation[/ˈn̪ˠʊ˞ːrʲɪmʲæːs/]
Created byIlL
Extinct220 v.T.
Pfeuno-K'aitian
Language codes
ISO 639-3qnr
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.

Nurian (gathvēs nūrimēs /ˈgɐθvʲæːs ˈn̪ˠʊ˞rʲɪmʲæːs/) is a Talmic language descending from Thensarian, aesthetically inspired by Lithuanian, Arabic, Italian and English, and some accents end up sounding a lot like Mandarin. (also cf. Kjämstian for the Pfeunic twin)

Introduction

Nurian is spoken on the west coast of the continent called Kuderau by Wiebians. It is easily the most conservative Talmic language, though with signficant Meetzarric influences. It is spoken alongside Meetzarric languages, Clofabic languages and New World Reber Wiebian.

Historical phonology

  • Cl > Cj > Cʲ (Italian style): pl bl ml fl cl gl ngl chl ghl > pi bi mi fi ci gi ngi chi ghi
    • Exceptions: ħl ȝl; nl, rl > ll
  • C1C2 > C2C2 (similarly to Italian)
  • mlīd - conclusion, end > mīd /mʲiːdˠ/
  • ar- > aC- (ar- before vowels); as- > s-

Numbers

  • 1: cēma /ˈt͡ʃæːmˠɐ/
  • 2: tithōr /tʲɪˈθˠɔɚ/
  • 3: narge /ˈnˠɑɚd͡ʒɛ/
  • 4: dhaufe /ˈðˠɐʊfʲɛ/
  • 5: salithe /ˈsˠɐlʲɪθˠɛ/
  • 6: stāma /ˈsˠtˠɑːmˠɐ/
  • 7: rōde /ˈrˠoːdʲɛ/
  • 8: lorethe /ɫɔɚˈrʲæθɛ/
  • 9: farve /ˈfˠɑɚvʲɛ/
  • 10: ħiōr /ˈħɔɚ/
  • 11: cēmara /ˈt͡ʃæːmˠɑɚrˠɐ/ (< Themsarian cēmiħiore, influenced by Meetzarri emarra)
  • 12: pide /ˈpʲɪdʲɛ/ (Zutarl pirdi)
  • 144: tarthe /ˈtˠɑɚθɛ/
  • 1728: ūbyc /ˈuːbˠɪ̞k/

Phonology

The Standard Dagȳne Nurian consonant inventory contains around 42 consonants and 12 vowels. A notable feature of the phonology of most Nurian accents is phonemic palatalization in hard-soft pairs, similar to Lithuanian; however, the Fiuschērian dialect or accent is an exception in that the hard-soft distinction is realized as pharyngealization versus lack of pharygealization. All consonants except /ħ ʕ h j/ are members of a hard-soft-pair. /ħ ʕ h j/ color the /a/ vowel as if they were soft, and /ħ ʕ/ tend to lower adjacent vowels.

Standard Dagȳne accent

Consonants

Consonant phonemes in Nurian (Dagȳne)
Labial Dental Alveolar Palatal Velar Radical Glottal
hard soft hard soft hard soft
Nasal /mˠ/ /mʲ/ /n̪ˠ/ /nʲ/ /ɲ/ /ŋ/
Stop tenuis /pˠ/ /pʲ/ /t̪ˠ/ /tʲ/ /tʃ/ /k/
voiced /bˠ/ /bʲ/ /d̪ˠ/ /dʲ/ /dʒ/ /ɡ/
Fricative voiceless /fˠ/ /fʲ/ /θˠ/ /θ/ /sˠ/ /sʲ/ /ʃ/ /x/ /ħ/ /h/
voiced /vˠ/ /vʲ/ /ðˠ/ /ð/ /zˠ/ /zʲ/ /ʒ/ /ɣ/
Trill /rˠ/ /rʲ/
Approximant central /j/ /ʕ/
lateral /lˠ/ /lʲ/


Notes
  • Voiceless stops and affricates are unaspirated.
  • All hard consonants (especially /rˠ, lˠ, θˠ, ðˠ/) are velarized.
  • All consonants are labialized before the back vowels /u, uː, ʊ˞ː, o, oː, ɔ˞ː/.
  • /tˠ, dˠ, nˠ/ are laminal denti-alveolar [t̪ˠ, d̪ˠ, n̪ˠ].
  • /tʲ, dʲ, nʲ/ are laminal alveolar [t̻ʲ, d̻ʲ, n̻ʲ].
  • /θˠ, θ, ðˠ, ð/ are dental spirants [θˠ, θ, ðˠ, ð].
  • /sˠ, sʲ, zˠ, zʲ/ are laminal denti-alveolar [s̪ˠ, s̪ʲ, z̪ˠ, z̪ʲ].
  • /rˠ/ is velarized apical alveolar [r̺ˠ] or pharyngealized postalveolar [r̠ˁ]. It is typically a trill.
  • /rʲ/ is palatalized alveolar flap [ɾ̪ʲ] and less commonly a trill [r̺ʲ]. It is always a trill [r̺ːʲ] when geminated.
  • /lˠ/ has been variously described as pharyngealized apical alveolar [l̺ˤ] and velarized laminal denti-alveolar [l̪ˠ].
  • /lʲ/ is laminal alveolar [l̻ʲ].
  • /ɲ/ is postpalatal [ɲ̄].
  • /tʃ, dʒ, ʃ, ʒ/ are laminal palatalized alveolar [tʃʲ, dʒʲ, ʃʲ, ʒʲ].
  • Before /k, ɡ/, /n/ is realized as velar [ŋ].
  • /ħ/ has been variously described as pharyngeal [ħ] and epiglottal [ʜ].
  • /ʕ/ is an epiglottal approximant [ʕ̞].
  • /h/ is voiced [ɦ] after vowels and voiced consonants.

Vowels

Nurian shows an unusual vowel system, with rhotic vowels and a relative lack of phonemic front vowels. There is a three-way contrast between short, long and rhotic vowels. There is a considerable degree of allophony in low short and rhotic vowels.

Vowel phonemes in Nurian [Accent 1]
Front Central Back
short long rhotic short rhotic short long rhotic
Close /ɪ~ɪ̞/ /iː/ /e˞ː/ [ɚ] /u/ /uː/ /ʊ˞ː/
Mid [ɛ~æ] [ə] /o/ /oː/ /ɔ˞ː/
Open [æː] [æ˞ː] /a/ /a˞ː/ /aː/ [ɑ˞ː]

Diphthongs: /ɐɪ ɐʊ iɛ/

  • Short /ɪ/ is lowered to [ɪ̞] after hard consonants.
  • /e˞ː/ has two allophones:
    • [e˞ː] after soft consonants, radicals and /h/
    • [ɨ˞ː] after non-radical hard consonants
  • /a aː a˞ː/ each have three allophones:
    • [ɐ~ɑ ɑː ɑ˞ː] after non-radical hard consonants
    • [ɛ~æ æː æ˞ː] after soft consonants, radicals and /h/
  • Unstressed rhotic vowels have a tendency to reduce in colloquial speech: /ʲe˞ ʲæ˞/ > [ʲɚ], /ˠɑ˞ ˠe˞/ > [ˠɚ], /ɔ˞ ʊ˞/ > [o˞].

Fiuschēra

Fiuschēra [fuʃˈʃæːrˁɑ] accent (Arabic-esque)

  • Hard consonants > pharyngealized; soft consonants > plain
  • o and ō are centralized
  • θˠ ðˠ > fˁ vˁ
  • Non-rhotic

Consonants

Consonant phonemes in Fiuschēra Nurian
Labial Dental Alveolar Palatal Velar Radical Glottal
hard soft hard soft hard soft
Nasal /mˁ/ /m/ /nˁ/ /n/ /ɲ/ /ŋ/
Stop tenuis /pˁ/ /p/ /tˁ/ /t/ /tʃ/ /k/
voiced /bˁ/ /b/ /dˁ/ /d/ /dʒ/ /ɡ/
Fricative voiceless /fˁ/ /f/ /θ/ /sˁ/ /s/ /ʃ/ /x~χ/ /ħ/ /h/
voiced /vˁ/ /ð/ /zˁ/ /z/ /ʒ/ /ɣ~ʁ/ /ʕ/
Trill /rˁ/ /r/
Approximant central /wˁ/ /w/ /j/
lateral l

Vowels

Vowel phonemes in Fiuschēra Nurian
Front Central Back
short long short long short long
Close /ɪ~ɪ̞/ /iː/ /ʊ/ /uː/
Mid [ɛ~æ] /ə/ /ɵː/ [ɤ] [oː]
Open [æː] /a/ /aː/ [ɑ] [ɑː]

/ɐɪ ɐʊ iə~iɛ iɚ uɚ ɛɚ ɔɚ ɑɚ/ = /ɐj ɐw iə iə uə ɛə~æə əː ɑə/


Accent 3

Conservative

  • ci gi chi ghi = [c ɟ ç ʝ]
  • sci = [skʲ]
  • ȝ ħ = [q χ]

Accent 4

Scottish Gaelic pseudo-gib

Stress

Nurian stress is derived from a particular pattern of weight-sensitive stress (similar to Arabic) in a dialect of late Thensarian:

  • A short final vowel cannot be stressed.
  • Only one of the last 3 syllables can be stressed.
  • the last heavy syllable is stressed if not the final syllable; if there is a final heavy syllable, the penult is stressed. (e.g. burgent [ˈbʊɚdʒænt])
  • If no heavy syllables, the 3rd from last is stressed.

Stress is marginally phonemic in Nurian, due to the loss of vowel length preceding /r/.

Orthography

Consonants

Consonants
Grapheme m p b f v n t d th dh s z r l ng c g ch gh ħ ȝ h j
Hard /mˠ/ /pˠ/ /bˠ/ /fˠ/ /vˠ/ /nˠ/ /tˠ/ /dˠ/ /θˠ/ /ðˠ/ /sˠ/ /zˠ/ /rˠ/ /ɫ/ /ŋ/ /k/ /ɡ/ /x/ /ɣ/ /ħ/ /ʕ/ /h/ /j/
Soft /mʲ/ /pʲ/ /bʲ/ /fʲ/ /vʲ/ /nʲ/ /tʲ/ /dʲ/ /θ/ /ð/ /sʲ/ /zʲ/ /rʲ/ /lʲ/ /ɲ/ /t͡ʃ/ /d͡ʒ/ /ʃ/ /ʒ/

r = r-coloring before a consonant or word-finally

Velars (ng c g ch gh) remain hard before other consonants. The remaining consonants assimilate in palatalization before other consonants.

Vowels

  • a: hard /a/ [ɐ~ɑ]
  • ā: hard /aː/ [ɑː]
  • ar, ār, air, aur: hard /a˞/ [ɑ˞]
  • ai: hard /aɪ/ [ɐɪ~ɑɪ]
  • au: hard /aʊ/ [ɐʊ~ɑʊ]
  • y: hard /ɪ/ [ë]
  • y: hard /iː/
  • yr, ȳr: hard /i˞/ [ɘ˞]
  • o: hard /o/
  • ō: hard /oː/
  • or, ōr: hard /ɔ˞/
  • u: hard /u/
  • ū: hard /uː/
  • ur, ūr: hard /ʊ˞/

  • ia, e: soft /a/ [ɛ]
  • iā, ē: soft /aː/ [æː]
  • iar, er, iār, ēr, iair, iaur: soft /aɚ/ [æ˞]
  • iai: soft /aɪ/ [ɛɪ]
  • iau: soft /aʊ/ [ɛʊ]
  • i: soft /ɪ/
  • ī: soft /iː/
  • ir, īr, ier: soft /i˞/ [e˞]
  • io: soft /o/
  • : soft /oː/
  • ior, iōr: soft /ɔ˞/
  • iu: soft /u/
  • : soft /uː/
  • iur, iūr: soft /ʊ˞/
  • ie: soft /iə/


Grammar

Somewhat unusually, Nurian is verb-final with prepositions and modifier-modified order.

Nouns

Sgv-clv-plv system.