Brono-Fathanic

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Brono-Fathanic
barônea, barôny-fatanea
faϑane, broń-faϑane
Pronunciation[(Bro.) [baˈronea̯] [baˈronʲ ˈfatanea̯]
(Fth.) [ˈfaθɐnə], [ˌbɾoɲ ˈfaθɐnə]
]
Created byLili21
DateSep 2016
SettingCalémere
EthnicityBronic, Fathanic
Native speakers51,000,000 (6424 / 2312)
Samaidulic languages
  • Eastern Samaidulic
    • Brono-Fathanic
Official status
Official language in
Brono, Fathan, (regional) the Chlouvānem Inquisition, Ylvostydh

Brono-Fathanic (Bronic variant: barônea, barôny-fatanea, fully ta fehoavana ta barôny-fatanea; Fathanic variant: faϑane, broń-faϑane, fully ta fihŏwan ta broń-faϑane), usually just Bronic or Fathanic, is a pluricentric Calémerian language, spoken mainly in the two Márusúturonian countries of Brono (Barôno, Bronu) and Fathan (Fatan, Faϑan) and in the Chlouvānem diocese of Hivamfaida (Bro.: Hivoafaida, Fth.: Hivŏfayðe) lying between them, and also, regionally, in the southern part of Ylvostydh.
It is a Samaidulic language of the Eastern branch, thus distantly related with its western neighbor, Qualdomelic (Bro.: Koadromeali; Fth.: Kwažumaey; a Western Samaidulic language).

Of the two major variants of Brono-Fathanic, Bronic is by far the most spoken (amounting to 90% of Brono-Fathanic speakers) and phonologically the most conservative. Fathanic is the official standard in the country of Fathan and, anyway, constantly sees notable Bronic influence on it. Until a hundred years ago, the Bronic standard was official all throughout the Brono-Fathanic lands; it was only during the Kaiṣamā, when the pre-Nāɂahilūmi Bronic-speaking territory had been divided into two parts (Brono as an independent country, but inside the Union, while the rest (Fathan and present-day Hivamfaida - the latter also containing the city of Moamatempony (Måmatempuñih in Chlouvānem), at the time the largest of the Bronic-speaking world) had been annexed to the Chlouvānem Inquisition), that the ethnic diocese of Fathan started using as its official language the local dialect, Fathanic.
Hivamfaida, meanwhile, had not been annexed to either Brono or Fathan and was not an ethnic diocese - about 60% of its Bronic-speaking population moved to either Brono or Fathan in the following decades and the influx of people from the rest of the Union (mainly Chlouvānem, but also many Taruebs and Soenyubi) meant that that area has been increasingly Chlouvānemized. When, in 6385 (39 years ago), Fathan became independent, predominantly Chlouvānem-speaking (but with a widespread Bronic vernacular) Hivamfaida remained part of the Inquisition, as it still is.

A third Brono-Fathanic variant, Moamatemposisy (endonym ta fewåwanie ta mwåmatimbušihь, måmatempuñiyi dældā in Chl.), is the local vernacular of the Chlouvānem diocese of Hivamfaida, spoken by about 50% of people there. It has a de facto written standard, using the Chlouvānem script, commonly used by its speakers; however it is not officially regulated and the official standard of Brono-Fathanic used in the diocese is the Bronic one. Note that Hivamfaida is not an ethnic diocese, but due to its border location Bronic and Skyrdagor are both commonly used in official contexts there (the city of Moamatempony is located on the 12 km wide Yvyslad Strait (Bro.: vy tantanane vy Ivisilade; Chl.: eveṣlada ga šimbroe; Sky. Yvyslad szelekthyv), dividing the southernmost of the Skyrdegan islands from the mainland of Márusúturon).

The Bronic-speaking area

The Bronic speaking area is a large plain area - with some noticeable hilly areas inside - on the southern coast of the Skyrdegan Inner Sea, just south of the main islands of Skyrdagor. The whole area reaches from 42ºN (northern Fathan) to 33°N (the southernmost tip of Hivamfaida, not too distant from the southernmost tip of Brono). The area stretches inland at most about 1000 km (in eastern Brono) and at least 150 (northern Fathan); the climate in most of the area is markedly mediterranean and warm year-round, sheltered from the colder northern winds by the Skyrdegan islands, but also out of reach from tropical influences because of the over 6000 m high plateaus to the south (the southern third of Hivamfaida is part of this plateau area); Fathan and most of the coast occasionally see snow at least once a year, while to the south - where the climate is also markedly drier - no snow ever falls at most inhabited altitudes.

Brono and Fathan are homogeneously Brono-Fathanic-speaking, with dialects of the language forming a continuum throughout the area, with a moderately high mutual intellegibility between the most extreme forms; the main minority language is Gorjonur Skyrdagor in Fathan - the language of neighboring Gorjan - and Chlouvānem (incl. daughter languages) in Brono. Hivamfaida is mostly diglossic, with classical Chlouvānem being the lingua franca but Moamatemposisy, a Bronic variant, being the vernacular of about half of the population. Note, though, that southern Hivamfaida, despite ultimately being a highland basin drained by the river Hŏrlaš (Bro.: Hoarelasy, Chl.: Hårelasih), the major river of Fathan, is mostly devoid of Brono-Fathanic speakers.

Phonology

Orthography

Consonants

Bronic:

→ PoA
↓ Manner
Labial Labiodental Dentoalveolar Retroflex Palatal Velar Glottal
Nasals m m n n g ŋ
Plosives p p
b b
t t
d d
k k
Affricates tr ʈʂ
dr ɖʐ
Fricatives f f s s h h
Approximants v ʋ r r
l l
Semivowels y j

/j/ is only phonemic in loanwords - which come predominantly from Chlouvānem, Skyrdagor, or (a minority) from Qualdomelic.

Fathanic:

→ PoA
↓ Manner
Labial Labiodental Dentoalveolar Palatoalveolar Palatal Velar Glottal
Nasals m m n n ń ɲ ŋ ŋ
Plosives p p
b [b]
t t
d [d]
k k
Affricates č ć
Fricatives b β f f s s
ϑ θ
ð ð
š ʃ
ž ʒ
kh x h h
Approximants r r
l l
Semivowels y j v w

The phonemic status of /θ/ and /x/ is disputed, as they can be analyzed as intervocalic allophones of /t/ and /k/ respectively, but in present-day Fathanic, often also represented orthographically, vowel syncope has meant that they are not intervocalic anymore. Intervocalic /p/ similarly becomes [f], but /f/ was already a Fathanic phoneme.

Vowels

Bronic:

Front Central Back
High i, y i o u
Mid e e ô o
Low a a
Diphthongs ea ea̯ oa wa

/o/ is a fairly marginal phoneme, only appearing in stressed syllables; many people merge it with /u/ in all but a few words (a notable one always pronounced with /o/ is Barôno "Brono" /baˈronu/ and all derivates).

/u/ is pronounced [ʷ] word-finally, and word-final /i/ is written y and pronounced [ʲ] (except in monosyllables).

Bronic, in stark contrast to Fathanic, has almost no vowel reduction in unstressed syllables: only pretonic /a/ is reduced to [ə], but only if the tonic vowel is /e o a/.

Fathanic:

Front Central Back
High i i u u
High-Mid e e o o
Low-Mid ae ɛ ŏ ɔ
Low a a

Phonemically, the inventory of Fathanic may be said to be essentially the same as the Bronic one, as Fathanic /ɛ ɔ/ almost always correspond perfectly to instances of /ea̯ wa/ in Bronic. The most notable phonetic difference, however, is that Fathan features notable vowel reduction in unstressed syllables, which is nearly absent in Bronic.

Prosody

Stress

Intonation

Phonotactics

Morphophonology

Morphology

Numerals

Modern Brono-Fathanic has two number systems, with a main duodecimal one borrowed from Chlouvānem which, unlike in its western neighbor Qualdomelic, is supplemented by the native decimal one, which is however strictly limited in scope (rarely used for enumerating further than 3010).
Numbers from 1 to ᘔ~1010 are the same in both systems; higher numbers are built with native roots in the decimal system (e.g. 1110 oranasa, cf. Quald. urănțọr, 1310 oranatoary), and with Chlouvānem roots for Ɛ and the dozens in the duodecimal one (Ɛ vedega < Chl. vælden; 1112 mamesa). Unlike Qualdomelic, where the original 10010 (from PSm *klābrod) does not have a numeral value anymore - meaning "a lot of" instead - in Brono-Fathanic that root now serves as the word for 10012, but compound dozenal hundreds use the Chlouvānem root -nihega.

As for types of numerals distinguished, Brono-Fathanic has cardinals, ordinals (all analytic except for 1st (and 2nd in Fathanic), with only ½ having a separate root), and distributives (all analytic, formed by reduplicating the numeral). The apparent irregularity in the Bronic distributive form for 2 is not, diachronically, an irregularity: the cardinal form was the original ordinal form (Proto-Samaidulic *nwejeno, cf. Quald. năjen), which displaced the original cardinal (PSm *nadgo, cf. the distributive nago nago and Quald. nad) in all but a few dialects; Fathanic still has the *nadgo reflex as the cardinal (naŋ, c.f. ordinal nŏń, distr. naŋŋaŋ), even if in colloquial speech the Bronic-influenced use of nŏń as cardinal may be found.

Digit12 Base 10 Cardinal Ordinal Distributive
0 0 adra (soaka adra) (adra adra)
1 1 sa sama sa sa
2 2 noany soaka noany
(½: boanty)
nago nago
3 3 toary soaka toary toary toary
4 4 goaty soaka + CARD. CARD. + CARD.
5 5 botra
6 6 teaka
7 7 sity
8 8 node
9 9 koba
10 orana
Ɛ 11 (base 10): oranasa
(base 12): vedega
10 12 (base 10): oranoany
(base 12): mame
11 13 (base 10): oranatoary
(base 12): mamesa
12 14 (base 10): oranagoaty
(base 12): mamenoany
13 15 (base 10): oranabotra
(base 12): mametoary
... (further numbers only given in base 12)
20 24 noanimame soaka + CARD. CARD. + CARD.
30 36 toarimame
40 48 goatimame
50 60 botramame
60 72 teakamame
70 84 sitimame
80 96 nodemame
90 108 kobamame
ᘔ0 120 tôndamame
Ɛ0 132 vedegamame
100 140 trabo

Note that the ᘔth dozen is expressed not with the root orana but with the borrowed root tônda, not used by itself (< Chl. tålda).

The dozenal hundreds are:

200 (28810) noaninihega
300 (43210) toarinihega
400 (57610) goatinihega
500 (72010) botranihega
600 (86410) teakanihega
700 (100810) sitinihega
800 (115210) nodenihega
900 (129610) kobanihega
ᘔ00 (144010) tôndanihega
Ɛ00 (158410) vedegihega.

All other numbers are simple juxtapositions, written as separate words, e.g. 10112 trabo sa, 17912 trabo sitimamekoba, 8ᘔ5 nodenihega tôndamamebotra, etc.
Higher numbers still follow the Chlouvānem system: 1.00012 is tigada; 1.00.00012 is a raitra; 1.00.00.00012 a gagaraitra; 1.00.00.00.00012 a taikaotre (or simply trabo gagaraitra), and 1.00.00.00.00.000 a gagataikaotre (or mame tigada gagaraitra).

Syntax

Constituent order

Noun phrase

Verb phrase

Sentence phrase

Dependent clauses

Vocabulary

Time

See also: Chlouvānem calendar

The modern Brono-Fathanic calendar, as well as the whole time reckoning system in Brono and Fathan, is essentially the same as the Chlouvānem one.

The fourteen months (asena) of the year are (in Bronic):

  1. mantapanavy (Māltapārṇāvi)
  2. kanampata (Kanamiprātas)
  3. pandragasy (Pāṇḍalañši)
  4. kanammaiga (Kanamimaila)
  5. mokasena (Murkāsena)
  6. bosipata (Būṃṣprātas)
  7. gayaneatra (Laliāñaiṭa)
  8. baosasena (Brausāsena)
  9. maigahera (Mailaheirah)
  10. nayayame (Ñariāyāmyah)
  11. baiveavamy (Bhaivyāvammi)
  12. ilameasena (Īlāmyasena)
  13. heaviyasena (Hælvyāsena)
  14. tramimetre (Camimæchliė)

The main divisions of time are:

English Bronic Fathanic Equivalent to rough Earthly approximation
Year sireameka širaemikh 418 Calemerian days 609.6 Earth days
Day fendra fež 2812 (3210) hours ~35 hours
Hour karana karen 3 noanimamayo
6012 (7210) raiga
~65 min ~37 sec
group of "minutes" noanimamayo naŋmamyu 2012 (2410) raiga ~21 min ~52 sec
"Minute" raiga rayŋ (base unit) ~54.6805 sec
"Second" namisô namšo 1/4012 (1/4810) raiga ~1.8986 sec
1/12 of a "second" (namisô keta) soakomame (namšo ke) sŏkumam 1/1012 (1/1210) namisô ~0.1582 sec
1/144 of a "second" (namisô keta) soakotrabo (namšo ke) sŏkučab 1/10012 (1/14410) namisô ~0.0131 sec
1/1728 of a "second" (namisô keta) soakotigada (namšo ke) sŏkućiŋda 1/100012 (1/172810) namisô ~1.0987 ms

All Brono-Fathanic speaking territories lie in time zone LIL−2 (AKA Bronic Time, Brono-Fathanic Time, or, in the Inquisition, Måmatempuñīh Time), that is, two hours behind the reference meridian of Līlasuṃghāṇa, capital of the Inquisition. In the Cerian/Western standard, this time zone is noted as CER+10:53′40″10 - about 10¾ hours ahead of the Western reference meridian of Mánébodin, capital of Ceria.

Example texts

Other resources

Notes