Cwengâr

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Blackbird's Song Ôsha nCwec'hyr Péladí ba Gécir
A Blackbird sings Tengec'hyrh ôsha, Gécir di ba édhí
To me of my youth, dulh su gwe su n'ashâ, del di me pél adhí
For my loaf of bread. pen legw du nanâr. pon di ba tenira.
It is a song of youth Te ât ashâ ngec'hyr. Té ítibh cu éndhí ba gécíra,
Of flowing white rivers Negw fêrâr cwâ lanàr, Cór nég bérad lenár,
Of high, dark caverns Pel lelycw cwâ c’hylàr, Cór níl pél nilár.
So long as the harp sings Tengec'hyrh ôsha ô ôrhôdon, In gécir tol ítibh me aradon,
I shant forget these things o afongâm du en c’hon. Tel calím me di ce én chon.


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Introduction

This is a sibling language to Fén Ghír, I have come into it more familiar with linguistics and language construction and it should hopefully show in the slightly more fluid nature of the language. There is a voiced/unvoiced contrast used for gender which, combined with the mutation of Fén Ghír, makes it a highly shifting language.

General Information

Cwengâr represents a contemporary sibling language to Fén Ghír.

As Fén Ghír draws heavily of Irish Gaelic influence for spelling, phonetics and to some degree grammar, Cwengâr serves as a Bythronic equivalent, drawing heavily on Welsh and Breton. In this regard, an additional mutation was added [hard/nasal mutuation] and consonant agreement.

Root words are related to Fén Ghír, with some changes in connotations. For example, Cún [Fén: Law, Promise, Vow] has become Cwŷn and now mostly fills the Bér in Fén as a general Superlative like "Good". Cún in the sense of Promise has become Cwŷn C'hâr[af] or "Just Word[s]". Per which is [Cognate to Bér] is basically reduced to meaning "Bright" in Cwengâr.

History of the Cwelhenev. [Cwelhànàff Netar]

Derived from the Galav culture which spread far during the early iron age. The Cwelhàn people occupy the hill and plains at the heart of the Galav expansion to the east of the Fayn Highlands. They are the largest Galavic Culture, by both population and size. Formerly a power, they have declined and ultimately been conquered by the Empire of Toryr. The Northern half of Cwelâr has retained some degree of independance as tribal puppet kings with their armies serving as auxiliaries and mercenaries, while the south is largely pushed to the country under the Toryl speaking aristocracy that has quickly risen up. The divide between the two groups however has not been long enough to be significant and there are no major differences of dialects, with the exception of Loeryr which has been heavily influenced by Toryr and is considered by many to be its own language.

Phonology

Consonants

Bilabial Labio-dental Dental Alveolar Post-alveolar Retroflex Palatal Velar Uvular Pharyngeal Epiglottal Glottal
Nasal m n ŋ
Plosive b/p t/d q/ɢ
Fricative f/v ʃ/ʒ x/ɣ
Affricate
Approximant h
Trill r ʀ
Flap or tap
Lateral fric. l ʎ
Lateral app.
Lateral flap


Vowels

Front Near-front Central Near-back Back
Close y
Near-close Y
Close-mid e ɤ
Mid ə
Open-mid ɛ ʌ
Near-open
Open a ä ɑ

Phonotactics

Cwengâr avoids vowel and consonant clusters as a general rule. Consonant clusters are resolved by dropping the first consonant while the latter is lenitioned. Vowel clusters are usually separate words.

Orthography

Cwengâr spelling corresponds to IPA with these exceptions;

  • ŋ is spelt ng as in English.
  • q is spelt cw, ɢ is spelt gw. This is convention based off the Breton, if a Cwengâr script is invented, they will not be diaphongs.
  • f is spelt ff, v is spelt f, inspired by Welsh.
  • ʃ is spelt sh, ʒ is spelt s, based off the above relation. It's tempting to use "ss" but "sh" is more conventional.
  • x is spelt c'h, ɣ is spelt g'h, inspired by Breton.
  • ʀ is spelt rh at the beginning of the word, rr elsewhere for aesthetic reasons. Rh at all points is acceptable but looks off to me personally.
  • ʎ is spelt lh, inspired by Breton.
  • y is spelt ŷ
  • Y is spelt y
  • e is spelt â
  • ə is spelt à or a.
  • ɛ is spelt e
  • a is spelt a
  • ɤ is spelt ê
  • ʌ is spelt u
  • ä is spelt ô
  • ɑ is spelt o


Grammar

Pronouns

  • 1S: Du, Ty
  • 2S: Rhà, Ra
  • 3S: Lho, Le
  • 1P: Ês, Ŷsh
  • 2P: Ôrhà, Yra
  • 3P: Ulhà, Âla

Genders

Cwengâr bases masculine/feminine distinctions on the first vowel in a word, which modifies the preceding consonant of the word [if any] and the final consonant of the word preceding it.

Masc Fem.
ê ŷ
u â
ô y
o e
à a

a is usually feminine, but is prone to exceptions, particularly when it is representing the ə/à sound.

If the vowel is masculine, the preceding consonant is unvoiced. If Feminine, the consonant is voiced. r and l also agree with feminine vowels, while rh and lh agree with masculine ones. Nasal consonants are wholly neutral.

The primary relevance of this is in personal names and occaisionally in assigning genders to titles and animals, where the first vowel is changed to the corresponding letter on the table above.

The use for titles is generally rare and will occur mostly etymologically rather than grammatically, "Cwŷshyn" [King] for example is technically a feminine term, but relates to law and legitimacy over the land which is traditionally feminine. Cwŷson is a variation which occurs when the last syllable is made masculine but Cwŷsyn presedes the discintion and is usually left alone unless relevant.

For animals, the distinction usually defaults towards feminine or the roots of the term but when an animal's gender is relevant, the first letter will be changed; merygw "Sheep" becomes "morygw" or "ram".

To emphasize gender in a noun which defaults to the gender, a suffix if added; Female is usually signaled with an addition at the end or "-ŷn" or "-yn". "-ul" may be used at times to emphasize age. Male in turn is signified with "-on" or "-àn". "-àl" is a paternal counterpart to "-ul" but is used more rarely usually only for people seen actively serving as guardians.

Mutations

A "Hard" Mutation occurs in either verbs which are modifed by auxilaries or else a possessed object which are possessed.

A "Soft" Mutation occurs in direct objects or in a noun following a preposition.

Unmutated Soft Hard
m f/ff
p ff m
b f m
ff ' b
f ' p
n sh/s
t sh n
d s n
sh h t
s h d
ng c'h/g'h
cw c'h ng
gw g'h ng
c'h h cw
g'h h gw

Pluralization

Words are pluralized by adding "-àf" if the last letter is masculine and "-aff" if feminine.

Verbs

  • Te*-Present Progressive/Past
  • Lhô-Will
  • Cwŷ- Should
  • Ma-Want
  • A-Negative
  • Te on its own usually implies an action that has taken place consistantly over time. If it is a thing that happened but is not happening currently, a time is specificed after, or else "gwô 'ogw" [at another time] is used.

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Branching

Cwengar is mostly head last language;

Sentance

Verb->Subject->Object

Verb->Subject->Direct Object->Indirect Object

Verb

Adverb->Verb

Noun

Adjective-> Number-> Preposition->Noun

Subject/Object Distinction

The Subject of the sentance follows the Verb and is not mutated unless it follows after adjectives.

The Direct Object of the sentance follows the Subject and undergoes soft mutation regardless of the prescence of adjectives.

Prepositions

Masc Fem English
Ngo Nge Against
Dulh Tyl From
Ta To
Dàf Taff Towards
Rhàlh Ral Than
Êrô Âra Like
Rhàlh By
ffa With
Gwu Cwy Under
Gwê Cwe Over
Gwô Cwâ In[to]
Lhurod Lârot Around
Nêrh Nŷr Near
Erac'hôn Erac'hôn Opposite
Gwuf Cwâff Before
Gwof Cweff After
Dôf Taff Until
Gwêr Cwŷr At/During
Bon Pen For/Because of
Gwulh Cwâl According

These are written as separate words, but grammatically often act almost as cases for the words after them and most speakers blur the distinction of words. Words which begin with vowels following these are often pronounced with with a "h" sound preceding them or "n" in the case of possessives. Only the "n" is written however.


Possessive

Possessive causes a hard mutation in the possessed word;

He walked to your house.

Tenôlh lho dô rhà melem.


Vocative

A person may be addressed directly with  followed by their lenitioned name;

"John, go to the store please."

"Â Hon, ffeLhô dy lhotenan"

Unlike Fén Ghír, the location of this is in a sentance is fairly flexible;

"Â Hon, ffeLhô dy lhotenan pen shecwan ô shanyr"

"FfeLhô dy lhotenan, â Hon, pen shecwan ô shanyr."

"FfeLhô dy lhotenan pen shecwan ô shanyr, â Hon."

Determiners

Determiners

Gender Current Determiner Contrasting Determiner New Determiner Current Determiner (Pl) Contrasting Determiner (Pl) New Determiner (Pl) Inquistive Determiner Relative Determiner Inquistive Determiner (Pl) Relative Determiner (Pl)
Masc âd âdà âdôn âdàf âdànàf âdônàf E âd Ed E âdàf Edàf
Fem ât âta âtyn âtyff âtaff âdynaff E ât Et E âtaff Etaff
This [Person] That [Person] This Other [Thing/Person] These [People] Those [People] These Other [Things/People] What [person]? Which [person] What [people] ? Those [things/people] which...
Masc ugwô ugwà ugwôn ugwôf ugwàf gwônàf E ugwà Egwà E ugwàf Egwàf
Fem ucwy ucwa ucwyn ucwyff ucwaff ucwynaff E ucwa Ecwa E ucwaff Ecwaff
Now Then This Other Time These Times Those Times These Other Times When? When Which Time? Those Times When...

Relative Clauses

In Cwengâr relative clauses are rather common and often mark another action within the sentance. These begin with a relative determiner, however there are no strict rules on there ending.

I shouted at the woman who took my bread.

Terhôlhôt du tyl alyn et tengŷcw dy nânar cwê 'ocwâ. .

These relative clauses can sometimes be worked into the shorter form of dependant clauses to express cause which is something rare in English, the result is something like this;

We went to the store to get fishing supplies.

Would said in Cwengâr as;

Telô dy lhotenan pen ed lhôtan ŷs gwânan c'honaf.

Although, it could also be expressed with depedant coupla dividing it into two sentances;

Tengâb du gwânan c'honaf o telô dy lhotenan.

This would translate as something closer to:

We needed fishing supplies so we went to the store.

It is also important to note that these relatively clauses may build on top of eachother, perhaps more often than in English;

I went to the man who sold the boat to the guy who talked to me yesterday.

Telô dy ôlon et telhotan ât cwerêl ta ed tengâr lho ta ny cwê fon gâl..