Scellan
Scellan-English lexicon
Swadesh list
Scellan | |
---|---|
bris Eevo | |
Pronunciation | [[Help:IPA|bris ɛivɔ]] |
Created by | IlL |
Setting | Verse:Tricin |
Extinct | 220 v.T. |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | qee |
Scellan is the dominant modern Talmic language; it descends from Old Eevo. It's inspired by Icelandic, Welsh and Hmong.
Todo
- determiner
- va < mhadh "like"
- in reócht > rewtt /rɛwht/
- in már > mawr /mawl/ "tree"
- á > aw
- ae > ai
- ai > e
- aei, ái > ee
- e > y /ə/
- éi > oi > ua
- ó > oo
- u > w
- ú > u /y/
- Old Eevo prefixes remain productive.
- D'eell naw'r = I love you
Background
- See also: Proto-Talmic.
Phonology
Consonants
m n ŋ pm tn kŋ m̥ n̥ ŋ̊ (m n ŋ mm nn ŋŋ hm hn hŋ) (In unstressed syllables mm nn ŋŋ are pronounced like m n ŋ.)
ʁ r~l χ r̥~ɬ (l r ll rr)
ph th kh (p t c)
hp ht hk (pp tt cc)
p t k (b d g)
f θ s x h (f þ s ch h)
v ð z j (v ð z j)
Vowels
/a ɛ i ɔ u œ y ə ai au eu iu ei øy ou iə uə ui/
a e i o w ø u y ai aw ew iw ee øø oo ia wa wi
Allowed unstressed vowels: ?
Diaereses (ä ë ï ö ø̈ ẅ) can be used on stressed vowels to distinguish them from diphthongs.
Intonation
Eevo has a distinctive intonation paradigm. Within said paradigm, some accents can sound like Irish accents, while some accents sound more like Valspeak.
- In declarative sentences, the stressed syllable of the focus word (if there is no focused constituent, the last word) has a lower pitch than the immediately preceding syllable. ("...mid ꜜ LOW mid...") This originates from discursive uptalk in older forms of Tíogall, which has since generalized to all declarative sentences. A few accents, such as Tumacan accents, do not use this pattern.
- In interrogative sentences, the stressed syllable of the focus word has a higher pitch than the syllable immediately before. ("... mid ꜛ HIGH mid ... ?")
- In exclamations, the pattern is "... mid ꜜ LOW-HIGH mid ... !", possibly with a gradual drop to low pitch in the end. Angry or indignant questions also use an exclamatory intonation.
Orthography
Morphology
Eevo morphology tends to be simpler than most other Talmic languages; it has no grammatical gender and no mutation.
Nouns
The plural is usually marked by -e (< Old Eevo -ae) for nouns ending in consonants and -r for nouns ending in vowels. There is no marking for possessors or possessed nouns.
- bris "language" > brise "languages"
- chamna "woman" > chamnar "women"
Definite marker = -m or -ym at end of NP
- va bris = a language
- va brisym = the language; va brisem = the languages
- va chamna = a woman
- va chamnam = the woman; va chamnarym = the women
- va swarym = the house
- va swar inym = the blue house
Pronouns
- naw = I
- fiar, 'r = you
- ha = he
- hi = she
- he = it
- cawv = we (exc.)
- gwad = we (inc.)
- swad = youse
- hawr = they
Adjectives
Adjectives do not inflect at all.
Copula
Eevo has no copula. Instead, the "predicate" or the focused constituent is fronted.
D'iant va duvwŋym. = The teacher is sleeping.
TAM marking
Verbs have little inflection, and the bulk of verbs are completely regular. Eevo TAM marking tends to emphasize aspect more than tense, unusually for Talmic languages.
Imperfect
The imperfect uses the unmarked form of the verb followed by the subject. For example, Mol naw va duvwŋcha means "I thank the teacher" or "I used to thank the teacher".
Progressive/Stative
To form the progressive, the particle dy is used before the verb.
Verbs referring to emotional states, as well as adjectives referring to states commonly use the progressive as well. For example, D'eell naw'r means "I love you."
Preterite
Preterite (ergative): Iantin naw. = I slept.
Perfect
Perfect: Yv iant naw. = I have slept.
Future
The future tense is derived from the Old Eevo future tense.
- mol "thank" > molt
- iant "sleep" > iantyt
Syntax
Eevo is strongly head-initial (with exceptions in poetry). It usually uses VSO word order; the focused constituent is fronted.
Noun phrase
va and to are used as specified and unspecified determiners before the noun phrase (like Lushootseed ti and kwi). Determiners are not used with prepositions.
- Es to bris mi?
- Is this a language?
Determiners can be omitted in elevated language.
Relative clauses
- en is used when the head is the subject in the relative clause
- re is used otherwise