Ierumidd
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Ierumith | |
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ierumidd | |
Pronunciation | [je.rɨ.mið] |
Created by | wfosøra |
ierum
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Dialects |
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Introduction
At the start, there was no 'goal' in mind, I knew nothing about linguistics, but as of now, I am going for a somewhat naturalistic lang, I am mostly doing this for fun.
My inspiration comes from a wide range of languages, Sumerian for a lot of the Grammar, Welsh for grammar, spelling, sound changes, and there's certainly some Germanic influence.
List of ideas/wants:
- Incorporate more Brythonic words (Proto-Brythonic and Welsh).
- Incorporate more English (Old to New).
- Translate a song.
This language is spoken by a population of about 20k in North Wales, with a small population in South Wales.
The earliest version of this conlang started on November 8th of 2023, there have been 3 complete redos, making the current version V4, it has changed completely since its birth, going from analytical, to fusional, and now to agglutinative.
I wouldn't exactly say there's anything 'peculiar' about it, but it does have some odd features, in the formal and archaic registers of the language, the perfect is marked through an affix separate from the tense markers, this has since shifted to an aux verb in most dialects, in a few minor southern dialects the marker merged with the tense markers to create three new, separate perfect tense markers.
Phonology
Orthography
Formal | Standard | North | South | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
a/â | /a, aː/ | /a, aː/ | /a, aː/ | /a, aː/ | ||||
b | /b/ | /b/ | /b/ | /b/ | ||||
c | /k/ | /k/ | /k/ | /k/ | ||||
ci | /c, ki/ | /c, ki/ | /kj, ki/ | /kj, ki/ | ||||
gi | /ɟ, gi/ | /ɟ, gi/ | /gj, gi/ | /gj, gi/ | ||||
si | /ç/ | /ç/ | /ʃ/ | /ʃ/ | ||||
zi | /ʝ/ | /ʝ/ | /ʒ/ | /ʒ/ | ||||
d | /d/ | /d/ | /d/ | /d/ | ||||
dd | /ð/ | /ð/ | /ð/ | /ð/ | ||||
e/ê | /e, eː/ | /e, eː/ | /ɛ, eː/ | /ɛ, eː/ | ||||
f | /v/ | /v/ | /v/ | /v/ | ||||
ff | /f/ | /f/ | /f/ | /f/ | ||||
g | /g/ | /g/ | /g/ | /g/ | ||||
ng | /ŋ/ | /ŋ/ | /ŋ/ | /ŋ/ | ||||
ngh | /ŋ̊/ | /ŋ̊/ | /ŋ̊/ | /ŋ̊/ | ||||
h | /x/ | /x/ | /χ/ | /χ/ | ||||
i/î | /i, iː, j/ | /i, iː, j/ | /ɪ, iː, j/ | /ɪ, iː, j/ | ||||
ni | /ɲ/ | /ɲ/ | /ɲ/ | /ɲ/ | ||||
nih | /ɲ̊/ | /ɲ̊/ | /ɲ̊/ | /ɲ̊/ | ||||
l | /l/ | /l/ | /l/ | /l/ | ||||
ll | /ɬ/ | /ɬ/ | /ɬ/ | /ɬ/ | ||||
m | /m/ | /m/ | /m/ | /m/ | ||||
mh | /m̥/ | /m̥/ | /m̥/ | /m̥/ | ||||
n | /n/ | /n/ | /n/ | /n/ | ||||
nh | /n̥/ | /n̥/ | /n̥/ | /n̥/ | ||||
o/ô | /o, oː/ | /o, oː | /ɔ, oː/ | /ɔ, oː/ | ||||
p | /p/ | /p/ | /p/ | /p/ | ||||
r | /r/ | /r/ | /r/ | /r/ | ||||
rh | /r̥/ | /r̥/ | /r̥/ | /r̥/ | ||||
s | /s/ | /s/ | /s/ | /s/ | ||||
z | /z/ | /z/ | /z/ | /z/ | ||||
t | /t/ | /t/ | /t/ | /t/ | ||||
th | /θ/ | /θ/ | /θ/ | /θ/ | ||||
u/û | - | /ɨ, ɨː/ | /ɨ̞, ɨː/ | - | ||||
w/ŵ | /u, uː, w/ | /u, uː, w/ | /ʊ, uː, w/ | /ʊ, uː, w/ | ||||
y | /ə/ | /ə/ | /ə/ | /ə/ | ||||
q | /ɢ/ | /ɢ/ | /ɢ/ | /ɢ/ | ||||
qh | /q/ | /q/ | /q/ | /q/ | ||||
nq | /ɴ/ | /ɴ/ | - | - | ||||
nqh | /ɴ̥/ | /ɴ̥/ | - | - | ||||
x | /ʁ/ | /ʁ/ | /ʁ/ | /ʁ/ | ||||
xh | /χ/ | /χ/ | - | - | ||||
aw/ø | /au̯/ | /ɔ/ | o /ɔ/ | o /ɔ/ |
ø is a modern convention to avoid confusion, it only appears in the Modern Standard form.
Consonants
Labial | Dental | alveolar | palatal | Velar | Uvular | Glottal | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nasal | m̥ | m | n̥ | n | ɲ̊ | ɲ | ŋ̊ | ŋ | ɴ̥ | ɴ | ||||
Stop | p | b | t | d | c | ɟ | k | ɡ | q | ɢ | (ʔ)¹ | |||
Affricate | p͡ɸ | b͡β | t͡s | d͡z | c͡ç | ɟ͡ʝ | k͡x | q͡χ | ɢ͡ʁ | |||||
Fricative | f | v | θ | ð | s | z | ç | ʝ | x | χ | ʁ | |||
Approximant | (w)² | (j)³ | ||||||||||||
Lateral | ɬ | l | ||||||||||||
Trill | r̥ | r |
Notes:
- 1: alophone of /t/, usually between a vowel and a fricative
- 2: non-vocalic allophone of /u/
- 3: non-vocalic allophone of /i/
Vowels
Front | Central | Back | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Close | i | iː | ɨ | ɨː | u | uː |
Close-mid | e | eː | o | oː | ||
Mid | ə | |||||
Open-mid | ɔ | ɔː | ||||
Open | a | aː | ɑ | ɑː |
Front | Back | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Closing | ai̯ | ai̯ː | ou̯ | ou̯ː |
Prosody
Stress
Stress is slightly odd in this language, it is always placed on the case markers in nouns and tense in verbs.
Unstressed vowel reduction does not occur, so always pronounce vowels fully.
Intonation
Phonotactics
Morphophonology
Grammar
Nouns
Cases
Archaic/Formal | Modern | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Nominative | -arh | -ar | ||
Accusative | -amh | -am | ||
Genitive | -as | -az | ||
Dative | -imh | -im | ||
Vocative | -joqh | - | ||
Inessive | -thaw | yn/muwn | ||
Elative | -ide | oddi | ||
Ablative | -llo | oddi | ||
Allative | -all | ar | ||
Adessive | -emh | ar | ||
Abessive | -co | heb | ||
Comitative | -eqh | efo | ||
Instrumental | -poq | drwu/efo |
In the modern forms, all but the main four cases (The first four) are lost, having been replaced with Welsh prepositions.
With the Vocative, the animacy of the person you're adressing was raised (em>anq), this is the only preserved aspect of the Vocative case, though it's being phased out in favor of honorifics, usually an honorific derived from the word for polite interjections, 'ahn', which is a general polite word used for 'Please, thank you, you're welcome', this would look like 'ahn john' or 'ahn mari'
Adjectives
Verbs
Adverbs
Particles
Derivational morphology
Syntax
Word order
The base order is VSO, following Welsh, the more specific word order also follows Welsh, Preverbal particle — Verb — Subject — Direct object — Indirect object — Adverbials (prepositional phrase, adverb, etc.)
Noun phrase
Verb phrase
Sentence phrase
Dependent clauses
Dialects
Formal/Old
The Formal register of the language, also called 'Old' because it's almost identical to Old Welsh Ierumidd, retaining many features lost in the modern and standard forms.
Modern Standard
Standard is what's used here, it's a compromise between Formal and Colloquial, it mostly retains Formal phonology (with a few changes to be more understandable, like Archaic /au̯/ being /ɔ/, and /ɨ/) and vocab but with the grammatical changes the modern forms have, this is what's taught to foreign learners so they have the best of both.
North
This is the most spoken dialect, making up about 83% of speakers (~16,600), it attains the vowels of Northern Welsh, meaning Archaic /au̯/ has merged with short o, which is now /ɔ/.
South
Attains the vowels of Northern ierum, the exception being the merge of /i(ː)/ and /ɨ(ː)/ to /ɪ, iː/
Example texts
I can speak
- ffogwgaxhâqpif (llafgäemar) y ierumiddrëanqam (ierumidd)
- ffogwgaxhâqpif (llafgäemar) y seusnegrëanqam (English)
- ffogwgaxhâqpif (llafgäemar) y cymraigrëanqam (Welsh)
Strength relieves fear
- ciewbogixhâqpif draigrêmar y terwrêmam. (A dragon does not fear the wind)
Other resources
- Ierumidd in Contionary
- ierumidd on Conworkshop (outdated some)
- ierumidd Tumblr blog (outdated some)