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{{construction}} | |||
{| class="wikitable" style="float:right;" width="35%" | {| class="wikitable" style="float:right;" width="35%" | ||
|- | |- | ||
| colspan="2" style="text-align:center; background-color:#ffffff; font-size:2em;" | '''Wistanian'''<br />[[File: | | colspan="2" style="text-align:center; background-color:#ffffff; font-size:2em;" | '''Wistanian'''<br />[[File:Aningali.png|350px]]<br />[ən̻iːn̻ɡəl̻i] | ||
|- | |- | ||
| '''Spoken in:''' || Wistania | | '''Spoken in:''' || Wistania | ||
|- | |- | ||
| '''Conworld:''' || | | '''Conworld:''' || Vaal | ||
|- | |- | ||
| '''Total Speakers:''' || ~ 50,000,000 | | '''Total Speakers:''' || ~ 50,000,000 | ||
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| Taliv<br /> - Taliv-Nati Pidgin<br /> '''''- Wistanian''''' | | Taliv<br /> - Taliv-Nati Pidgin<br /> '''''- Wistanian''''' | ||
|- | |- | ||
| ''' | | '''Writing System:''' || Taliv Alphabet<br/>Bwolotil Alphabet<br/>Nati Abugida | ||
|- | |- | ||
| colspan="2" style="text-align:center; background-color:#ffffff; font-size:18px;" | '''Created by:''' | | colspan="2" style="text-align:center; background-color:#ffffff; font-size:18px;" | '''Created by:''' | ||
|- | |- | ||
| Paul A. Daly || Began: | | Paul A. Daly || Began: 10 August 2016<br/>Status: Mostly Fuctional | ||
|- | |- | ||
| colspan="2" style="text-align:center; background color:#ffffff; font-size:18px;" | '''Further Resources''' | | colspan="2" style="text-align:center; background color:#ffffff; font-size:18px;" | '''Further Resources''' | ||
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|} | |} | ||
<big><span style="color:red;">'''This page is currently outdated. Updates to come... eventually.'''</span></big> | |||
<span style="color:red;">'''Update update (27/8/2019): A brand new grammar sketch is currently in the works. Soon after that gets written, I plan for this page to be officially updated. I'm keeping it as is for now, however, because I am still using it as a reference. It's not completely obsolete, just a couple things have changed (e.g., re-labels, more details, plus there are conjunctions now). I hope to update this here very very soon. Thanks for your patience.'''</span> | |||
= | <span style="color:red;">'''Update update update (20/3/2020): Updates to this page have begun, but they are not finished. Do not trust everything you read here.</span> | ||
= | <span style="color:red;">Headers that are currently correct: Intro, Phonology, Consonants, Vowels, Syllable Structure, Prosody, Romanization . . .</span> | ||
'''Wistanian''' (IPA: /wɪˈsteɪniən/), natively known as '''aningali''' (IPA:[ən̻iːn̻ɡəl̻i]) and often nicknamed '''Wisto''', is an ''a priori'' artistic constructed language . Its development began in August 2016 for use in a WIP novel series by prominent characters who are monolingual or bilingual in the language. It is currently on "Version 9.1," having received several edits, updates, and an occasional total rehaul during its development. | |||
In-universe, Wistanian is spoken by groups of fictional peoples on a large tropical island on a planet called Vaal (IPA: [veːl̻]). It is a descendant of the Taliv language after having merged with the Nati language during the Wistanian War. These two language communities worked together against the Bwolotil people who were seeking complete possession of the land. This war eventually ended with the signing of a peace treaty between four people groups, the Taliv, Nati, Bwolotil, and the Katapu who remained mostly separated from much of the fighting. About half a decade later, a fifth people group, the Uzin, joined the Wistanian union. The creole that arose from the Taliv-Nati alliance grew in popularity and loaned a large number of terms from the other languages. During the time of the novels, Wistanian has become the ''lingua franca'' of the island. It is considered the language of government, economy, and education, and it is mandatorily taught in most schools. There are approximately 50 million speakers, comprising 95% of the island's population. Of that number, 60% are native in the language and 20% speak it monolingually. | |||
Dialects of Wistanian are broadly split into three categories: the Standard Dialect, spoken in the central mountains, major cities, and among the Taliv and Nati people groups; The Western Dialect, spoken by a majority of Bwolotil and many Uzin speakers; and The Northern Dialect, spoken by the Katapu and some Uzin. Each dialect is mutually intelligible, although some variations have diverged enough to be confusing to the standard listener. These dialects vary in pronunciation, lexicon, and sometimes syntax. Aulwin Wistanian is a mostly unintelligible variety spoken on a small island off Wistania's northwest shore. | |||
Typologically, Wistanian is a verb-initial and heavily isolating language with around 1.2 morphemes per phonological word. Its phonology is fairly small including an entirely voiced fricative set and no round vowels. Verbs conjugate for perfective, imperfective, and stative aspects with an additional irrealis form for each. Count nouns are declined for plural number only if its number is higher than five. Wistanian has a large collection of grammatical particles, honorifics, and conjunctions (which are sensitive to switch-reference), but no distinctive lexical category for adpositions, adjectives, or adverbs. The language is primarily written using the Talivian Alphabet (which has horizontal RtL and vertical UtD variants). Some alternate scripts do exist, namely the Diwa Alphabet and Nati Abugida. | |||
Wistanian | |||
==Phonology== | ==Phonology== | ||
Derived from the Taliv language, trimmed down by Nati influence, Wistanian has 16 consonants and 5 vowel phonemes. All vowels are almost completely unrounded in the standard dialect, and there's a heavy trend toward voiced fricatives and plosives. Allophony is rather sparse in standard speech, however, it becomes more common in certain dialects. Syllable structure is CCVC, although onsets are restricted to single consonants or fricative-semivowel clusters and codas do not include /w/, /j/, or /ɦ/. There are three varieties of stress that are defined by vowel quality and volume. Despite clear trends, stress is irregular and lexical. | |||
===Consonants=== | |||
The consonants are as follows (allophones are in [brackets]): | The consonants are as follows (allophones are in [brackets]): | ||
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# ɦ > ɣ / #_, [stress]_ | # ɦ > ɣ / #_, [stress]_ | ||
# /w/ is spoken in emphasized or slow speech, while /βʷ/ is spoken in quick speech. Whenever immediately following a consonant, this is always pronounced as /w/. In the Western Dialect, it is always pronounced as /w/. | # /w/ is spoken in emphasized or slow speech, while /βʷ/ is spoken in quick speech. Whenever immediately following a consonant, this is always pronounced as /w/. In the Western Dialect, it is always pronounced as /w/. | ||
# /r/ is spoken in emphasized or slow speech, while /ɾ/ is spoken in quick speech. In some words, the trilled is preferred even in quick speech; for example, '''ggarauni''' (large) is almost always pronounced [ | # /r/ is spoken in emphasized or slow speech, while /ɾ/ is spoken in quick speech. In some words, the trilled is preferred even in quick speech; for example, '''ggarauni''' (large) is almost always pronounced [kərɑni]. | ||
===Vowels=== | |||
The | The following table features the five distinct monophthongs of Wistanian, /i e a ɑ ɯ/, in each form of phonological stress. With primary stress, they are long and tense; with secondary stress, they are short and tense; with tertiary stress, they are short and lax (/e/ and /ɑ/ never receive tertiary stress). Wistanian's one diphthong /a͡i/ has no lax form, therefore only taking on primary or secondary stress. (Secondary stress is only observed in polysyllabic perfective verbs). | ||
{| class="wikitable" | {| class="wikitable" | ||
! colspan="5" style="text-align: center;" | PRIMARY | |||
! rowspan="5" style="text-align: center;" | | |||
! colspan="5" style="text-align: center;" | SECONDARY | |||
! rowspan="5" style="text-align: center;" | | |||
! colspan="5" style="text-align: center;" | TERTIARY (LAX) | |||
|- | |||
! style="text-align: center;" | | |||
! style="text-align: center;" | Front | |||
! colspan="2" style="text-align: center;" | Central | |||
! style="text-align: center;" | Back | |||
! style="text-align: center;" | | |||
! style="text-align: center;" | Front | |||
! colspan="2" style="text-align: center;" | Central | |||
! style="text-align: center;" | Back | |||
! style="text-align: center;" | | ! style="text-align: center;" | | ||
! style="text-align: center | ! style="text-align: center;" | Front | ||
! | ! colspan="2" style="text-align: center;" | Central | ||
! style="text-align: center;" | Back | |||
! style="text-align: center | |||
|- | |- | ||
! style="text-align: center; | ! style="text-align: center;" | High | ||
| style="text-align: center;" | | | colspan="2" style="text-align: center;" | iː | ||
| style="text-align: center;" | | | colspan="2" style="text-align: center;" | ɯː | ||
| style="text-align: center;" | | ! style="text-align: center;" | High | ||
| colspan="2" style="text-align: center;" | i | |||
| colspan="2" style="text-align: center;" | ɯ | |||
! style="text-align: center;" | High | |||
| colspan="2" style="text-align: center;" | ɪ | |||
| colspan="2" style="text-align: center;" | ʊ | |||
|- | |- | ||
! style="text-align: center; | ! style="text-align: center;" | Mid | ||
| style="text-align: center;" | | | colspan="2" style="text-align: center;" | eː | ||
| style="text-align: center;" | | | rowspan="2" colspan="2" style="text-align: center;" | ɑː | ||
| style="text-align: center;" | ɑ | ! style="text-align: center;" | Mid | ||
| colspan="2" style="text-align: center;" | e | |||
| rowspan="2" colspan="2" style="text-align: center;" | ɑ | |||
! style="text-align: center;" | Mid | |||
| colspan="2" style="text-align: center;" | | |||
| rowspan="2" colspan="2" style="text-align: center;" | | |||
|- | |- | ||
| colspan=" | ! style="text-align: center;" | Low | ||
| colspan="2" style="text-align: center;" | aː | |||
! style="text-align: center;" | Low | |||
| colspan="2" style="text-align: center;" | a | |||
! style="text-align: center;" | Low | |||
| colspan="2" style="text-align: center;" | ə | |||
|} | |} | ||
* All vowels become breathy after /ɦ/. | * All vowels become breathy after /ɦ/. | ||
* /ɯ/ and /ɑ/ shift to [u] and [ɒ] after /w~βʷ/. | |||
=== | ===Syllable Structure=== | ||
Wistanian has a (C<sub>1</sub>/FA)V(C<sub>2</sub>) syllable structure. (C<sub>1</sub>) can be any phoneme that is a consonant, (FA) can be any fricative (/v/, /z/, /ʒ/, or [ɣ]) immediately followed by an approximate (/w/ or /j/), V is any vowel, and (C<sub>2</sub>) is any consonant that is not an approximate (/w/ or /j/) or /ɦ/. | |||
(C/FA) refers to the optional syllable onset which can either be any consonant or a fricative/approximate cluster (/vj/, /vw/, /zj/, /zw/, /ʒj/, /ʒw/, [ɣj], [ɣw]). V refers to the required syllable nucleus which must be any vowel. (N) is an optional coda, which can be any consonant except /j/, /w ~ βʷ/, or /ɦ/. For example, legal syllables are /vjan/, /pe/, /ai̯l/, and /ɑ/, but syllables like /bjaw/, /zpe/, /ild/ and /r/ are not legal. | |||
===Prosody=== | ===Prosody=== | ||
In | Wistanian speakers are usually soft and clear, as politeness and simplicity are important values in many of their cultures. In most Talivian villages, speaking loudly is considered rude and is, therefore, looked down upon. In the Southwest, the volume is typically louder. Speed also varies as the Northeast prefers slow and careful speech while the Northwest prefers fast-paced speech. | ||
===Orthography=== | ===Orthography=== | ||
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====Romanization==== | ====Romanization==== | ||
Wistanian employs its own script, but it is romanized with a system that reflects the script and its spellings. The romanization rules are as follows: | Wistanian employs its own script, but it is romanized for Earthlings with a system that reflects the script and its spellings. The romanization rules are as follows: | ||
* /m/, /n/, /b/, /d/, /ɡ/, /v/, /z/, and /l/ are represented with the corresponding IPA symbol. | * /m/, /n/, /b/, /d/, /ɡ/, /v/, /z/, and /l/ are represented with the corresponding IPA symbol. | ||
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* /ai̯/ is represented by ⟨ai⟩. | * /ai̯/ is represented by ⟨ai⟩. | ||
* /e/ is represented by ⟨aa⟩. | * /e/ is represented by ⟨aa⟩. | ||
* /ɑ/ and [ɒ] is | * /ɑ/ and [ɒ] is represented by ⟨au⟩. | ||
===Script=== | |||
<big><span style="color:red;">'''ACURATE INFORMATION ENDS HERE.'''</span></big> | |||
====Script==== | ====Script==== | ||
Wistanian has an alphabet which represents the different sounds in Wistanian. The alphabet was inspired by Latin, IPA, and Greek, but is often described as Armenian-looking. The font, based on [[w: Cambria_(typeface)|Cambria]], was created using [https://sketchbook.com/ Autodesk Sketchbook] for the iPad and converted into a font using [https://www.calligraphr.com/en/ Calligraphr] and [https://www.cr8software.net/typelight.html TypeLight]. | Wistanian has an alphabet which represents the different sounds in Wistanian. The alphabet was inspired by Latin, IPA, and Greek, but is often described as Armenian-looking. The font, based on [[w: Cambria_(typeface)|Cambria]], was created using [https://sketchbook.com/ Autodesk Sketchbook] for the iPad and converted into a font using [https://www.calligraphr.com/en/ Calligraphr] and [https://www.cr8software.net/typelight.html TypeLight]. | ||
The script, often referred to as '''araman taliv | The script, often referred to as '''araman taliv''' (lit. "Talivian dishes") began its evolution during the Diwa oppression when the Taliv people were secretly plotting escape by setting their dishes outside their homes in certain orders to convey messages. After their escape and resettlement on the Wistanian island, the dishes gave form to the written language. | ||
Another interesting feature of the script is "compound glyphs." They are /k/, /t/, /p/, /e/, and /ɑ/, and they are made by doubling or combining two different glyphs together. This is why the romanization of Wistanian uses ⟨gg⟩ for /k/, ⟨au⟩ for /ɑ/, as well as the other digraphs. | Another interesting feature of the script is "compound glyphs." They are /k/, /t/, /p/, /e/, and /ɑ/, and they are made by doubling or combining two different glyphs together. This is why the romanization of Wistanian uses ⟨gg⟩ for /k/, ⟨au⟩ for /ɑ/, as well as the other digraphs. The letter for ⟨i⟩ is also normally connected to the consonant before it. | ||
Like the lexicon and grammar, | Like the lexicon and grammar, the Wistanian script has been redesigned multiple times - three, to be exact. The original script was an alphabet, but it did not capture the "spirit" of Wistanian, so it was scrapped for an abugida. The abugida, which was beautiful, was also difficult to learn and write, prompting yet another redesign. The original design is now considered as the old Diwa alphabet, while the abugida is an alternative script used by the Nati. | ||
===Dialectal Variation=== | ===Dialectal Variation=== | ||
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The Northern Dialect, spoken by many Katapu, is primarily distinguished through extensive devoicing in both fricatives and plosives so that words such as '''vigaz''' /viɡaz/ are pronounced [fikas]. Standard /p t k/ are ejectivized as /p' t' k'/. This dialect also tends to put nasals and voiced plosives as interchangeable so that '''ani''' could be pronounced as [ani] or [adi]. Vowels also undergo a number of shifts, such as <code>ɯ, ɑ > ʊ, o</code>. Like the Western Dialect, the Northern dialect features different kinship terms, specialized vocabulary, unique figures of speech, and a formal register. In contrast, the Katapu has a large collection of honorifics which are based on age, sex, and occupation. | The Northern Dialect, spoken by many Katapu, is primarily distinguished through extensive devoicing in both fricatives and plosives so that words such as '''vigaz''' /viɡaz/ are pronounced [fikas]. Standard /p t k/ are ejectivized as /p' t' k'/. This dialect also tends to put nasals and voiced plosives as interchangeable so that '''ani''' could be pronounced as [ani] or [adi]. Vowels also undergo a number of shifts, such as <code>ɯ, ɑ > ʊ, o</code>. Like the Western Dialect, the Northern dialect features different kinship terms, specialized vocabulary, unique figures of speech, and a formal register. In contrast, the Katapu has a large collection of honorifics which are based on age, sex, and occupation. | ||
One sound change that varies among the dialects is the qualities of the /a/ and /ɑ/ vowels. In the standard accent, they are supposed to be distinctly [a] and [ɑ], however some speakers broaden the distinction by realizing /a/ as [æ]. Speakers of the Northern Dialect shift /ɑ/ to [o], and speakers of the Western Dialect recognize /ɑ/ as its rounded variant [ɒ]. In the Northeast and scattered regions of the central mountains, /a/ and /ɑ/ tend to merge into [a], making some minimal pairs such as '''bani''' (to make) and '''bauni''' (game) homonyms. | |||
==Syntax== | ==Syntax== | ||
Wistanian follows a fairly rigid syntax | Wistanian follows a fairly rigid syntax due to its recent creolization and standardization at its in-universe conception. In almost all cases, Wistanian is verb-initial, followed by the nominative, accusative, instrumental, then purposive noun phrases. | ||
===Lexical Categories=== | ===Lexical Categories=== | ||
Wistanian has | Wistanian has six lexical categories, the noun, verb, particle, coordinator, honorific, and interjection. | ||
{| class="wikitable" | {| class="wikitable" | ||
! style="text-align: center;" | Nouns | ! style="text-align: center;" | Nouns | ||
| Any word that can act as a subject or object the verb and is able to be either the head or attributive in a compound. | |||
| Any word that | |||
|- | |- | ||
! style="text-align: center;" | Verbs | ! style="text-align: center;" | Verbs | ||
| Any word that takes on verbal morphology and describes a state or action. | |||
| Any word that takes on verbal morphology | |||
|- | |- | ||
! style="text-align: center;" | Particles | ! style="text-align: center;" | Particles | ||
| Any word that has a grammatical role and cannot take on any additional morphemes. | | Any word that has a grammatical role and cannot take on any additional morphemes. | ||
|- | |||
! Coordinator | |||
| Any word that connects two or more words of a similar lexical category or two or more clauses. | |||
|- | |- | ||
! style="text-align: center;" | Honorifics | ! style="text-align: center;" | Honorifics | ||
| A polite title used with many proper nouns. | | A polite title used with many proper nouns. | ||
|- | |||
! style="text-align: center;" | Interjection | |||
| Any word that can stand alone and expresses a feeling or platitude. | |||
|} | |} | ||
===Word Order=== | |||
Wistanian is predominately head-initial and verb-initial. This is manifested in that particles are always expressed first in a particle phrase (PartP), head verbs are expressed first in a verb phrase (VP), and head nouns are expressed first in a noun phrase (NP). | |||
'''viga dari aa garauda bi.''' | |||
vig-a dari aa garauda+bi. | |||
eat-IPV boy ACC food+good | |||
"The boy is eating good food." | |||
This sentence is made up of the following phrases, the heads in '''bold''': | |||
* VP: '''viga'''... garauda | |||
* NP: '''dari'''; '''garauda''' bi | |||
* PartP: '''aa''' garauda | |||
Most of time, declarative and interrogative sentences will be expressed as verb-subject-object (VSO). However, imperative sentences use verb-object-subject (VOS). In the formal register of the Western Dialect, the word order changes dramatically into subject-object-verb (SOV), due to the SOV word order of the Bwolotil language spoken in those areas. | |||
''' | '''auv bimaj daridd, auzunwaj aa ujadi va jin, lu.''' | ||
auv bima-a -j daridd, auzunu-a -j aa ujadi va jin, lu. | |||
TEMP fall-DUR-IRR rain, arrive-DUR-IRR ACC house COP green, 2S.NOM. | |||
" | "When the rain falls, come into the house that is green." | ||
===Questions=== | ===Questions=== | ||
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'''yigai auzi aa a?''' | '''yigai auzi aa a?''' | ||
yiga -i auzi '''aa a'''? | yiga -i auzi '''aa a'''? | ||
speak- | speak-PRF 3Sa.NOM '''ACC Q'''. | ||
"What did he say?" (Lit. "He said...?") | "What did he say?" (Lit. "He said...?") | ||
''' | '''ddaj yaun auv a?''' | ||
dda- | dda-a -j yaun '''auv a'''? | ||
go - | go -DUR-IRR 1P.NOM '''when Q'''? | ||
"When will we go?" (Lit. "We will go when/during...?) | "When will we go?" (Lit. "We will go when/during...?) | ||
'''yi | '''luj va yi ddal a?''' | ||
yi | luj va yi '''ddal a?''' | ||
boat COP 1s.POSS '''LOC Q'''? | |||
"Where is my boat?" (Lit. "My boat is located in...?) | "Where is my boat?" (Lit. "My boat is located in...?) | ||
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'''vigaj aa garauda baul.''' | '''vigaj aa garauda baul.''' | ||
viga-a | viga-a '''-j''' aa garauda '''baul'''. | ||
eat - | eat -DUR '''-IRR''' ACC food '''HON'''. | ||
"Please, eat the food, sir." | "Please, eat the food, sir." | ||
'''viga aa garauda.''' | '''viga aa garauda.''' | ||
viga-a | viga-a '''-∅''' aa garauda '''∅''' | ||
eat - | eat -DUR ACC food | ||
"Eat the food (as a rude demand)." | "Eat the food (as a rude demand)." | ||
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'''mala yaun gaun vizaniya aa ujadi.''' | '''mala yaun gaun vizaniya aa ujadi.''' | ||
mala -a | mala -a yaun gaun '''vizana-iya''' aa ujadi. | ||
fight- | fight-DUR 1P.NOM ACT '''come -STA''' ACC house. | ||
"We fight inside the house." | "We fight inside the house." | ||
* "fight we who have come into the house" | * "fight we who have come into the house" | ||
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'''yaun vizaniya aa ujadi.''' | '''yaun vizaniya aa ujadi.''' | ||
yaun '''vizana-iya''' aa ujadi. | yaun '''vizana-iya''' aa ujadi. | ||
1P.NOM '''come -STA''' | 1P.NOM '''come -STA''' ACC house. | ||
"We are in the house." | "We are in the house." | ||
* "We have come into the house." | * "We have come into the house." | ||
Many verbs do not need a directional adposition or modifier, since direction is already encoded in many verbs when they are transitive. For example, '''dda''' means "to go to", and '''buda''' means "to walk to". | |||
'''dda yau aa luj.''' | |||
dda -a yau aa luj. | |||
go.to-DUR 1S.NOM ACC boat | |||
"I am going to the boat." | |||
'''nada yau aa luj wi.''' | |||
nada-a yau aa luj wi. | |||
walk.to-DUR 1S.NOM ACC boat ADE. | |||
"I am walking near the boat." | |||
'''nada yau aa luj igza.''' | |||
nada -a yau aa luj igza. | |||
walk.to-DUR 1S.NOM ACC boat DSTV. | |||
"I am walking away from the boat." | |||
===Modification and Description=== | |||
Wistanian does not have a separate lexical category for determiners, adjectives, or adverbs. Rather these roles are replaced entirely by stative verbs, subordinate nouns, and other processes such as productive reduplication. | |||
Since stative verbs describe a state, identity, or condition of a verb, many of them can be used instransitively as 'to be X. For example, '''bimiya''' (<code>fall-STA</code>) means 'to be fallen'; '''haayiya''' (<code>live-STA</code>) means 'to be alive'; '''iyiniya''' (<code>finish-STA</code>) means 'to be done.' This takes care of many phrases that English would use a predicate adjective for. | |||
'''dajiya yau.''' | |||
'''daji-iya''' yau. | |||
'''hide-STA''' 1S.NOM. | |||
"I am hidden" | |||
'''zahuniya yau.''' | |||
'''zahuna-iya''' yau | |||
'''hunger-STA''' 1S.nom | |||
"I am hungry." | |||
In the cases when the stative verb is not the main VP within a sentence, it is attached to its head with the active relativizer particle '''gaun'''. | |||
'''ihilya lima gaun dajiya.''' | |||
ihili-a lima '''gaun''' daji-iya | |||
laugh-DUR girl '''ACT''' hide-STA. | |||
"The hidden girl is laughing." | |||
/"laughing girl who hides." | |||
'''viga dari gaun zahuniya aa garauda.''' | |||
viga-a dari '''gaun''' zahuna-iya aa garauda. | |||
eat -DUR boy '''ACT''' hunger-STA ACC food. | |||
"The hungry boy is eating food" | |||
/"eating boy who hungers (ACC) food." | |||
Wistanian nouns compound often and productively. Compounds are always head initial, followed by the subordinate noun. For example: | |||
'''ariyau garauvi''' | |||
basket water | |||
"water basket" | |||
'''ariz mauddan''' | |||
brush hair | |||
"hairbrush" | |||
(SIDENOTE: Some of the most common compounds are represented orthographically as one word, however this is of little consequence in spoken Wistanian.) | |||
Colors, possessives, numbers, and determiners act as nouns, and therefore can be featured after a noun to be its subordinate. | |||
'''jiyag bayaari''' '''jiyag yi''' | |||
leaf brown leaf mine | |||
"brown leaf "my leaf" | |||
'''jiyag din''' '''jiyag id''' | |||
leaf three leaf this | |||
"three leaves" "this leaf" | |||
Because colors, possessives, numbers, and determiners are nouns, they can effectively act as agents and patients within a sentence, fulfilling any and every role as a normal noun can. | |||
'''duliya yau aa bayaari.''' | |||
dula -iya yau aa '''bayaari.''' | |||
put.on-STA 1S.NOM ACC '''brown.''' | |||
"I am wearing the brown thing." | |||
'''umaadai yi.''' | |||
umaad-ai '''yi''' | |||
sink -PRF '''mine''' | |||
"Mine sank." | |||
'''alalya din aa ujadi.''' | |||
alali -a '''din''' aa ujadi | |||
run.to-DUR '''three''' ACC house. | |||
"The three are running to the house." | |||
'''dajiya id.''' | |||
daji-iya '''id'''. | |||
hide-STA '''this'''. | |||
"This is hidden." | |||
A final option is to use a relativizer particle. This method is favorable is formal contexts. In most cases, the possessive '''na''' is used, but colors, numbers, and possessives can also use the copulative particle '''va'''. This is slightly different than using a subordinate noun, since subordinate nouns help identify the head, whereas ''na'' and ''va'' phrases add new information to the head. | |||
'''magin na lizai.''' | |||
magin '''na lizai'''. | |||
table '''POSS great'''. | |||
"The table is great." | |||
/"The table has greatness." | |||
'''magin va bayaari.''' | |||
magin '''va bayaari'''. | |||
table '''COP brown'''. | |||
"The table is brown" | |||
'''magin na bayaari.''' | |||
magin '''na bayaari'''. | |||
table '''POSS brown'''. | |||
"The table is brown." | |||
/"The table has brown." | |||
'''jwai yau aa garauda ddal magin na bayaari.''' | |||
ju -ai yau aa garauda ddal magin '''na bayaari'''. | |||
set-PRF 1S.NOM ACC food LOC table '''POSS brown'''. | |||
"I put the food on the table, which is brown." | |||
In some instances, nouns refer to a quality such as "loveliness", "peacefulness", "quietness", or "loudness". | |||
'''yigai dari urabaa.''' | |||
yiga -ai dari '''urabaa''' | |||
speak-PRF boy '''loudness''' | |||
"The loud boy spoke." | |||
/"The loudness boy spoke." | |||
'''yigai urabba.''' | |||
yiga -ai '''urabaa'''. | |||
speak-PRF '''loudness'''. | |||
"The loud one spoke." | |||
/"The loudness spoke." | |||
'''yigai dari aa urabaa.''' | |||
yiga -ai dari aa '''urabaa'''. | |||
speak-PRF boy ACC '''loudness'''. | |||
"The boy spoke something loud." | |||
/"The boy spoke loudness." | |||
There are also no adverbs, such as the word "loudly" in "the boy spoke loudly." Since this is a description of how or with what the verb was accomplished, the Wistanian speaker will use the instrumental particle '''il'''. | |||
'''yigai dari il urabaa.''' | |||
yiga -ai dari '''il urabaa'''. | |||
speak-PRF boy '''INST loudness'''. | |||
"The boy spoke loudly." | |||
/"The boy spoke with loudness." | |||
Reduplication is another form of intensifying a verb or indicating a repeated action. To intensify a verb, simply reduplicate the entire verb (favored in formal contexts) or just the final syllable (favored in informal contexts). | |||
'''hadiya hadiya yau.''' | |||
'''hadu-iya hadu-iya''' yau. | |||
'''know-STA know-STA''' 1S.NOM. | |||
"I know very well." (Formal) | |||
''' | '''hadiyaya yau.''' | ||
'''hadu-iya~ya''' yau | |||
'''know-STA~AUG''' 1S.NOM | |||
"I know very well." (Informal) | |||
''' | To indicate a repeated action, reduplicate the verb including the coordinating particles '''ya'''. The reduplicated verbs are often marked the same. | ||
'''ya yiga ya yiga auzi.''' | |||
" | '''ya yiga-a ya yiga-a''' auzi. | ||
'''CO talk-DUR CO talk-DUR''' 3Sa.NOM. | |||
"He keeps talking." | |||
/"He is talking and is talking." | |||
'''ya yigai ya yigai auzi.''' | |||
'''ya yiga-ai ya yiga-ai''' auzi. | |||
'''CO talk-PRF CO talk-PRF''' 3Sa.NOM | |||
"He kept talking." | |||
/"He talked and talked." | |||
==Morphology== | ==Morphology== | ||
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====Pronouns==== | ====Pronouns==== | ||
''currently being rehauled'' | |||
====Compounding==== | ====Compounding==== | ||
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===Verbs=== | ===Verbs=== | ||
'' | ''needs expansion'' | ||
Verbs, which tend to be expressed at the beginning of a sentence, are defined as any state or action applied to or applied by the subject. Wistanian verbs conjugate between the stative aspect, durative aspect, durative/perfect aspect, and irrealis mood. There are also a number of verbal particles (featured at the beginning of a VP) that denote conditional, telic, gnomic, permissive, obligative, and potential moods. There are a number of suffixes that can derive nouns from verbs. Tense is not marked but rather implied through context. | |||
All verbs possess either an ⟨-a⟩, ⟨-i⟩, or ⟨-u⟩ stem. Nouns or loan words that are added to the Wistanian lexicon are typically given the ⟨-a⟩ stem. Therefore ⟨-i⟩ and ⟨-u⟩ stems are usually attributed to verbs from Taliv unless a non-Talivian verb already ended with ⟨-i⟩ or ⟨-u⟩ (or a similar sound). These stems influence the conjugation paradigms of a verb, mainly by shifting to ⟨y⟩ if the stem is ⟨-i⟩ or ⟨w⟩ if the stem is ⟨-u⟩. Unconjugated, the verb acts as a gerund. | |||
All Wistanian verbs are ambitransitive, meaning that they can be either intransitive or transitive. This is accomplished by assuming a directional semantic role upon a verb. For example, '''buda''' means "walk" as an intransitive durative verb and means "walk to" as a transitive durative verb. '''aadi''' can mean "sit" as an intransitive stative verb or "sit on" as a transitive stative verb. This can also be achieved by allowing phrases such as "I sleep a nap," and "It rained a storm." | |||
====Aspect==== | |||
Aspect is chiefly lexical in Wistanian, conjugating verbs as either stative, which indicated a state of the subject noun, or durative, which indicates the action of a subject. For example, the verb '''hadu''' means "know" in the stative and "learn" in the durative. The verb '''dula''' means "wear" in the stative and "put on" in the durative. The verb '''vaiza''' means "need" in the stative and "run out of" in the durative. | |||
The durative verb can also take on an additional suffix, the perfect ⟨-i⟩, which reacts to the durative ⟨-a⟩, becoming ⟨-ai⟩. | |||
The conjugation paradigm of Wistanian is mostly regular due to pidginization, although some irregularities exist. Typically, the ⟨-a⟩ stem with be replaced with durative ⟨-a⟩, perfect ⟨-ai⟩, and stative ⟨-iya⟩. The ⟨-i⟩ and ⟨-u⟩ stems will shift in ⟨y⟩ and ⟨w⟩ respective before taking on the aspect markers. However, monosyllabic verbs that begin with a non-fricative consonant undergo epenthesis (the addition of a sound). When with the ⟨-a⟩ stem, it will be replaced with durative ⟨-aha⟩, perfect ⟨-ai⟩, and stative ⟨-ahiya⟩. When with the ⟨-i⟩ stem, it is replaced with durative ⟨-aya⟩, perfect ⟨-ayai⟩, and stative ⟨-iya⟩. When with the ⟨-u⟩ stem, it is replaced with durative ⟨-awa⟩, perfect ⟨-awai⟩, and stative ⟨-awiya⟩. Verbs ending in ⟨-iya⟩ also take on an irregular conjugation in which ⟨-iya⟩ is replaced with durative ⟨-a⟩, perfect ⟨-ai⟩, stative ⟨-iya⟩ rather that just the ⟨-a⟩ stem. | |||
The only single vowel verb is '''u''' (to drink) and is conjugated as durative '''wa''', perfect '''wai''', and stative '''wiya'''. | |||
{| class="wikitable" | |||
! style="text-align: center;" | | |||
! style="text-align: center;" | Stative | |||
! style="text-align: center;" | Durative | |||
! style="text-align: center;" | Perfect | |||
|- | |||
! style="text-align: center;" | dula | |||
| style="text-align: center;" | ''duliya''<br />(to be wearing) | |||
| style="text-align: center;" | ''dula''<br />(to be putting on) | |||
| style="text-align: center;" | ''dulai''<br />(to have put on) | |||
|- | |||
! style="text-align: center;" | aadi | |||
| style="text-align: center;" | ''aadiya''<br />(to be sitting) | |||
| style="text-align: center;" | ''aadya''<br />(to be sitting down) | |||
| style="text-align: center;" | ''aadyai''<br />(to have sat down) | |||
|- | |||
! style="text-align: center;" | hadu | |||
| style="text-align: center;" | ''hadiya''<br />(to be knowing) | |||
| style="text-align: center;" | ''hadwa''<br />(to be learning) | |||
| style="text-align: center;" | ''hadwai''<br />(to have learned) | |||
|} | |||
=====Stative===== | |||
Stative verbs (<code>STA</code>) describe a situation or action that is unchanging over a long period of time. Stative verbs do not describe temporary actions, but rather the result of a temporary action or a series of temporary actions that identify the subject. They are marked on a verb by dropping the stem and adding ⟨-iya⟩. | |||
'''yigiya yau anigalilaun.''' | |||
yiga '''-iya''' yau ani -galilaun | |||
speak'''-STA''' 1S.NOM language-peace. | |||
"I speak Wistanian." / "I am a speaker of Wistanian" | |||
The verb in the above sentence informs the listener (or reader) that the subject, the speaker, speaks Wistanian, and does so homogenously and for a long period of time. It is a state that identifies the subject; i.e., it can easily be translated into "I am a speaker of Wistanian." A more dynamic conjugation would likely infer that the speaker is only speaking temporarily. | |||
This can also refer to something called the ''resultative'', which applies to verbs that do not inherently express a stative act. For example, '''bima''' describes the motion from a high place to a low place. This involves movement and change, which the stative conjugation does not mess with. Instead, '''bima''' in the stative means "to be fallen (i.e., lying on the ground after a fall)". Lying on the ground is a stative action, which is also a result of a previous non-stative action. Another example for this is the verb '''dula''', "to put on, clothe", which, in the stative, translates as "to wear" (or in a more roundabout way: "to have put on"). | |||
=====Durative===== | |||
The durative aspect (<code>DUR</code>) is a dynamic aspect which indicates that an action is in progress from one state to another. | |||
'''yiga yau anigalilaun.''' | |||
yiga '''-a''' yau ani -galilaun. | |||
speak'''-DUR''' 1S.NOM language-peace. | |||
"I am speaking Wistanian." | |||
This sentence informs the listener that the speaker is in the process of speaking Wistanian. Unlike in the stative example, which simply indicated that the speaker knows and has the ability to speak Wistanian, the durative is indicating that the speaker is actually speaking it at the present moment. This aspect strongly implies the verb is present and imperfect, grammatically, although context could give more precise details. | |||
Durative verbs specifically describe the process of going from one state to the other, usually opposite, state. For example, '''yiga''' in the durative describe the process from the beginning of a statement to the end of a statement. The word '''ja''', which means "want" in the stative but "falling in love" in the durative, describes the process from a state of apathy to a state of obsession. This is especially notable with '''hadu'''. In the stative, it means "to know", but in the durative, it describes the process from being ignorant to being informed: "learning." | |||
=====Perfect===== | |||
The Perfect Aspect (<code>PRF</code>) is applied to a dynamic verb that views the action as a completed whole, strongly implying the past tense in the realis and future tense in the irrealis. Although the perfect is formed by adding ⟨-i⟩ to the durative ⟨-a⟩, becoming ⟨-ai⟩, it is glossed only as <code>PRF</code> rather than <code>DUR-PRF</code> for the sake of saving space. | |||
'''yigai yau anigalilaun.''' | |||
yiga '''-ai''' yau ani -galilaun. | |||
speak'''-PRF''' 1S.NOM language-peace. | |||
"I spoke (in) Wistanian." | |||
As perfect, the verb '''yiga''' suggests a specific event that is a completed whole. It is important to understand the difference between the perfect and stative aspects since many stative verbs can be roughly translated as "has been X". Stative verbs are states, while perfect verbs are actions. Stative verbs are also usually still applicable in the moment of utterance while perfect verbs are usually not. | |||
====Mood and Additional Aspects==== | |||
Mood describes the speaker's feelings or motivations toward a verb. Only one mood, the irrealis, is conjugated onto the verb stem, while others are expressed through particles that begin a verb phrase. | |||
Additional aspects refer to aspects that are denoted with particles rather than conjugations. | |||
=====Irrealis===== | |||
Irrealis verbs describe an action that has not occurred. This mood is applied to verbs that refer to a future state or action, interrogative and polite imperative sentences, and conditional, obligative, and potential moods. Irrealis verbs are conjugated with the suffix ⟨-j⟩, which follows after the aspect marking. It is not applied to negated verbs. | |||
Whenever the irrealis is used on a verb without an aspect marker, it is assumed to be indicative of a future action (in most cases). In the following example, the verb "walk" has not literally happened yet, which is why it is in the irrealis. However, the speaker is sure that the action will occur at some time in the future, which is why it is in the unmarked indicative. | |||
'''nadaij yau miram.''' | |||
nada -ai '''-j''' yau miram. | |||
walk.to-PRF'''-IRR''' 1S.NOM store. | |||
"I will walk to the store." | |||
=====Gnomic and Habitual===== | |||
The gnomic and habitual are aspects that denote that the verb refers to a general fact or recurring action related to the subject. Both of these aspects use the particle '''gaun''', which is synonymous with the active relative particle. When the aspect particle is applied to a stative verb, it is gnomic. When applied to a durative, the verb it is habitual. | |||
'''gaun duliya daz aa nibaz.''' | |||
'''gaun''' dula'''-iya''' daz aa nibaz. | |||
'''GNO''' wear'''-STA''' man ACC shirt. | |||
"The man wears shirts." | |||
'''gaun dula daz aa nibaz.''' | |||
'''gaun''' dula '''-a''' daz aa nibaz. | |||
'''HAB''' put.on'''-DUR''' man ACC shirt. | |||
"The man usually puts on shirts." | |||
When applied to a perfect verb, the sentence is translated that the subject has done the action before. | |||
'''gaun dulai daz aa nibaz.''' | |||
'''gaun''' dula '''-ai''' daz aa nibaz. | |||
'''GNO''' put.on'''-PRF''' man ACC shirt. | |||
"The man has put on a shirt before." | |||
=====Conditional===== | |||
The conditional mood (<code>COND</code>) is used to form "if" clauses, such as "if she sings" and "if we go", etc. This is homonymous with the question particle, and they are often considered the same word. The verb head of the conditional particle is always conjugated for the irrealis mood. | |||
'''a murwij ya, junaij lu ddal dim dau.''' | |||
'''a''' muru-i '''-j''' yau, juna-i -j lu ddal dim dau. | |||
'''COND''' die -PRF '''-IRR''' 1S.NOM, bury-PRF-IRR 2S.NOM LOC hill 1S.ACC. | |||
"If I die, you will bury me on the hill." | |||
=====Permissive===== | |||
The permissive mood (<code>PRM</code>) denotes the permission or ability to do an action, corresponding with English "can" and "may". To denote prohibition or incapability, the speaker will attach the negation prefix to the verb. The permissive mood uses the particle '''yaj''', and the irrealis conjugation is not applied to the head verb. | |||
'''yaj laumwa garauda va yi.''' | |||
'''yaj''' laumu-a garauda va yi. | |||
'''PRM''' take -DUR food COP 1S.POSS | |||
"You can take my food." | |||
'''yaj baulaumwa garauda va yi.''' | |||
'''yaj bau-'''laumu-a garauda va yi. | |||
'''POT NEG-'''take -DUR food COP 1S.POSS | |||
"You cannot take my food." | |||
=====Obligative===== | |||
The obligative mood (<code>OBL</code>) denotes an action that should happen, whether by obligation or logical progression. The verb head of an obligative particle is always conjugated for the irrealis mood. The obligative uses the particle '''daaya'''. | |||
'''auv zij, daaya bimaj daridd. diri va luvi va au.''' | |||
auv zij, '''daaya''' bima-a '''-j''' daridd. diri va luvi va au. | |||
TEMP near.future, '''OBL''' fall-DUR'''-IRR''' rain. CAU COP cloud(PL) COP gray. | |||
"Soon, the rain should fall because the clouds are gray." | |||
=====Potential===== | |||
The potential mood (<code>POT</code>) denotes an action that could occur but doesn't, such as "I could go" or even "I could have gone". The verb head of a potential particle is always conjugated for the irrealis mood. The potential mood uses the particle '''zaggu'''. | |||
'''zaggu umaadaij yi luj, a hiyaj yaadd vaddal.''' | |||
'''zaggu''' umaada-i '''-j''' yi luj, a hi -iya-j yaadd ddal. | |||
'''HYP''' sink -PRF'''-IRR''' 1S.POSS boat, COND exist-STA-IRR hole LOC. | |||
"My boat could sink if there is a hole in it." | |||
The potential can also be translated as "would" or "would like to" in contexts without a conditional VP. | |||
zaggu jigani-a -j yau aa liv il zauv. | |||
POT order -DUR-IRR 1S.NOM ACC 2S.ACC INSTR soup. | |||
"I would like to order the soup from you." | |||
(Lit. "I could order you with soup.") | |||
=====Atelic===== | |||
The atelic aspect (<code>ATEL</code>) refers to a verb that does not have an intended endpoint, whether because the action failed or was directionless. The atelic is denoted with the particle '''in''' and can only be applied to durative or perfect verbs. | |||
'''in budai yau miram, auv nu va din.''' | |||
'''in''' buda -ai yau miram, auv nu va din. | |||
'''ATEL''' walk.to-PRF 1S.NOM store, TEMP minute COP three. | |||
"I walked toward the store for three minutes." | |||
Without the atelic particle, that sentence would translate as, "I walked to the store in three minutes." | |||
====Gerunds==== | |||
''under construction'' | |||
====Derivational Suffixes==== | |||
Root + ⟨-zaun⟩ = Agentive (one who does X) | |||
viga > vigazaun | |||
eat > eater | |||
Root + ⟨-huz⟩ or ⟨-hani⟩ = Place of X | |||
viga > vigahuz | |||
eat > dining room | |||
Root - stem + ⟨-aun⟩ = Act/Idea of X | |||
viga > vigaun | |||
eat > the act of eating | |||
===Particles=== | ===Particles=== | ||
Line 592: | Line 833: | ||
'''maniyai ami aa umbu va zi.''' | '''maniyai ami aa umbu va zi.''' | ||
mayiya-i ami '''aa''' umbu va zi. | mayiya-i ami '''aa''' umbu va zi. | ||
break - | break -PRF friend '''ACC''' bone COP 3S.POSS | ||
"The friend broke their bone." | "The friend broke their bone." | ||
Line 599: | Line 840: | ||
'''vigai dari vai.''' | '''vigai dari vai.''' | ||
viga-i dari '''vai'''. | viga-i dari '''vai'''. | ||
eat - | eat -PRF boy '''3Si.ACC'''. | ||
"The boy ate it." | "The boy ate it." | ||
'''yiga yau dau.''' | '''yiga yau dau.''' | ||
yiga -a | yiga -a yau '''dau'''. | ||
speak.to- | speak.to-DUR 1S.NOM '''1S.ACC'''. | ||
"I speak to myself." | "I speak to myself." | ||
Line 611: | Line 852: | ||
'''dduwi auzi auzi''' | '''dduwi auzi auzi''' | ||
ddu-(w)i auzi '''auzi'''. | ddu-(w)i auzi '''auzi'''. | ||
hit- | hit-PRF 3Sa.NOM '''3Sa.ACC''' | ||
"He hit himself." | "He hit himself." | ||
'''dduwi auzi aa auzi.''' | '''dduwi auzi aa auzi.''' | ||
ddu-(w)i auzi '''aa auzi'''. | ddu-(w)i auzi '''aa auzi'''. | ||
hit- | hit-PRF 3Sa.NOM '''ACC 3Sa.ACC'''. | ||
"He hit him." | "He hit him." | ||
Line 639: | Line 880: | ||
"I work with a hammer." | "I work with a hammer." | ||
The instrumental particle is also used to mark the theme of | The instrumental particle is also used to mark the theme of the verbs '''dazji''' (to give), '''viru''' (to send), and '''azavi''' (to carry), that is the item that is being given, sent, or carried. The goal is marked as accusative (i.e., what or who the theme is being given, sent, or carried to). Wistanian does not employ a dative marker. | ||
'''dazjyi yau liv il jauni.''' | '''dazjyi yau liv il jauni.''' | ||
dazji-i yau liv '''il''' jauni. | dazji-i yau liv '''il''' jauni. | ||
give- | give-PRF 1S.NOM 2S.ACC '''INSTR''' flower. | ||
"I gave you a flower." (Lit. "I give you with a flower.") | "I gave you a flower." (Lit. "I give you with a flower.") | ||
'''azavyi yau aa miram il naulam id.''' | |||
azavi-i yau aa miram '''il''' maulam id. | |||
carry-DUR 1S.NOM ACC store '''INSTR''' melon PROX. | |||
"I am carrying this melon to the store." (Lit. "I carry (to) the store with this melon.") | |||
The instrumental particle is used for emphatic reflexives by complimenting the accusative form of the subject pronoun. | The instrumental particle is used for emphatic reflexives by complimenting the accusative form of the subject pronoun. | ||
Line 650: | Line 896: | ||
'''rainaij yau aa duvij il dau.''' | '''rainaij yau aa duvij il dau.''' | ||
raina-i -j yau aa duvij '''il''' dau. | raina-i -j yau aa duvij '''il''' dau. | ||
dig - | dig -DUR-IRR 1S.NOM ACC hole '''INSTR''' 1S.ACC | ||
"I will dig the hole myself." | "I will dig the hole myself." | ||
Line 659: | Line 905: | ||
'''murwi auzi ggaun liv.''' | '''murwi auzi ggaun liv.''' | ||
muru-i auzi '''ggaun''' liv. | muru-i auzi '''ggaun''' liv. | ||
die - | die -PRF 3S.NOM '''BEN''' 2S.ACC. | ||
"He died for you." / "He died for your benefit." | "He died for you." / "He died for your benefit." | ||
'''murwi auzi diri liv.''' | '''murwi auzi diri liv.''' | ||
muru-i auzi '''diri''' liv. | muru-i auzi '''diri''' liv. | ||
die - | die -PRF 3S.NOM '''CAU''' 2S.ACC. | ||
"He died because of you." / "It was your fault he died." | "He died because of you." / "It was your fault he died." | ||
Line 672: | Line 918: | ||
====Modal Particles==== | ====Modal Particles==== | ||
'' | ''See [[Wistanian#Mood_and_Additional_Aspects|Mood and Additional Aspects]] for now.'' | ||
====Relativizer Particles==== | ====Relativizer Particles==== | ||
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'''wizddaniya ddal vimanbbaggu''' | '''wizddaniya ddal vimanbbaggu''' | ||
wizddaniya ddal viman- | wizddaniya ddal viman-zanju. | ||
Wistania LOC sky - | Wistania LOC sky -foot. | ||
"Wistania is under the sky." | "Wistania is under the sky." | ||
"Wistania, which is located under the sky,..." | "Wistania, which is located under the sky,..." | ||
Technically, these are incomplete sentences, indicating only a noun and a relative clause without a compliment. However, they are considered perfectly viable | Technically, these are incomplete sentences, indicating only a noun and a relative clause without a compliment. However, they are considered perfectly viable and grammatical in Wistanian. | ||
====Coordinating Particles==== | ====Coordinating Particles==== | ||
Line 802: | Line 984: | ||
'''dajyi ya dari ya lari.''' | '''dajyi ya dari ya lari.''' | ||
daji-i '''ya''' dari '''ya''' lari. | daji-i '''ya''' dari '''ya''' lari. | ||
hide- | hide-PRF '''CO''' boy '''CO''' girl. | ||
"The boy and the girl hid." | "The boy and the girl hid." | ||
Weak coordination (<code>WCO</code>) refers to a co-actor in the sentence while keeping the focus on a specific item of the list, which is usually featured at the beginning of the list and without a particle. It is denoted with the word '''vil'''. | Weak coordination (<code>WCO</code>) refers to a co-actor in the sentence while keeping the focus on a specific item of the list, which is usually featured at the beginning of the list and without a particle. It is denoted with the word '''vil''' (from the word '''viluba''': "to touch"). | ||
'''dajyi dari | '''dajyi dari vil lari.''' | ||
daji-i dari '''vil''' lari. | daji-i dari '''vil''' lari. | ||
hide- | hide-PRF boy '''WCO''' girl. | ||
"The boy hid with the girl." | "The boy hid with the girl." | ||
Contrastive coordination (<code>CCO</code>) is equivalent to the English "but" and is expressed through the particle '''bbal'''. | Contrastive coordination (<code>CCO</code>) is equivalent to the English "but" and is expressed through the particle '''bbal'''. | ||
''' | '''gaun liyiya auvi, bbal gaun bauliyiya gaunun.''' | ||
auvi-n | gaun liya-iya auvi-n, '''bbal''' gaun bau-liya-iya gaunu-n. | ||
GNO fly -STA bird-PL, '''CCO''' GNO NEG-fly -STA fish -PL | |||
"Birds fly, but fish do not fly." | "Birds fly, but fish do not fly." | ||
Line 822: | Line 1,004: | ||
'''ja lu aa i garauvi i diyan a.''' | '''ja lu aa i garauvi i diyan a.''' | ||
ja -a | ja -a lu aa '''i''' garauvi '''i''' diyan a. | ||
want- | want-DUR 2S.NOM ACC '''ALTCO''' water '''ALTCO''' juice Q. | ||
"Do you want water or juice?" | "Do you want water or juice?" | ||
This alternative coordinating particle is also used to answer a multiple choice question. | This alternative coordinating particle is also used to answer a multiple choice question. Parentheses indicate an optional expression. | ||
'''(ja yau) i diyan.''' | '''(ja yau) i diyan.''' | ||
ja -a | (ja -a yau) i diyan. | ||
want- | (want-DUR 1S.NOM) ALTCO juice. | ||
"I want the juice." | "(I want) the juice." | ||
===Honorifics=== | ===Honorifics=== | ||
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==Semantics== | ==Semantics== | ||
The [[Wistanian/Lexicon|Wistanian Lexicon]] currently stands at 600 words as of October 2018 | The [[Wistanian/Lexicon|Wistanian Lexicon]] currently stands at 600 words as of October 2018. | ||
[[File:WistanianFamily.png|thumb|right|A typical Wistanian family]] | [[File:WistanianFamily.png|thumb|right|A typical Wistanian family from the Taliv group]] | ||
===Kinship=== | ===Kinship=== | ||
Wistanian kinship is a modified version of the [[w: Hawaiian_kinship|Hawaiian system]] common in most Malayo-Polynesian languages. In this system, siblings and first cousins share terms with only a gender and age distinction. Mothers are usually given a term of endearment by their children (usually '''mu'''), but a child's aunts will also be called "mother" and the father and uncles will share terms as well. Most of Wistanian culture is [[w: Ambilineality|ambilineal]] and [[w: Matrifocal_family|matrifocal]], so that children live and associate closest to their mother and her side of the family. For this reason, a child's mother's brother will often be just as much of a father figure as the child's biological father, who may or may not be involved in the family. | Wistanian kinship is a modified version of the [[w: Hawaiian_kinship|Hawaiian system]] common in most Malayo-Polynesian languages. In this system, siblings and first cousins share terms with only a gender and age distinction. Mothers are usually given a term of endearment by their children (usually '''mu'''), but a child's aunts will also be called "mother" and the father and uncles will share terms as well. Most of Wistanian culture is [[w: Ambilineality|ambilineal]] and [[w: Matrifocal_family|matrifocal]], so that children live and associate closest to their mother and her side of the family. For this reason, a child's mother's brother will often be just as much of a father figure as the child's biological father, who may or may not be involved in the family. Some parts of Wistania has abandoned the concept of marriage, and rather focus on cohabitation and parenthood. The terms for "husband" and "wife" are semantically light and can refer to a close friendship or a sexual partner. Literally, they mean "my man" and "my woman". | ||
{| class="wikitable" | {| class="wikitable" | ||
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|} | |} | ||
The Bwolotil people are more [[w: Nuclear_family|nuclear]], consisting of only a mother, father, and one or two children. They have their own kinship terms from their language. Some Katapu people share the typical family structure and kinship terms. However, most family structures are [[W: Extended_family|extended]] so that families live amongst the mother's extended family, and fathers are usually present in the home. Most of their kinship terms also come from the Katapu language, but some Wistanian terms are borrowed as well. | The Bwolotil people are more [[w: Nuclear_family|nuclear]], consisting of only a mother, father, and one or two children. They have their own kinship terms from their language. Some Katapu people share the typical family structure and kinship terms. However, most family structures in that people group are [[W: Extended_family|extended]] so that families live amongst the mother's extended family, and fathers are usually present in the home. Most of their kinship terms also come from the Katapu language, but some Wistanian terms are borrowed as well. | ||
===Colors=== | ===Colors=== | ||
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| style="text-align: center; font-style:italic; background-color:#333333; color:#ffffff;" | auzna | | style="text-align: center; font-style:italic; background-color:#333333; color:#ffffff;" | auzna | ||
| style="text-align: center; font-style:italic; background-color:#cb0000; color:#ffffff;" | iraa | | style="text-align: center; font-style:italic; background-color:#cb0000; color:#ffffff;" | iraa | ||
| style="text-align: center; font-style:italic; background-color:#993300; color:#ffffff;" | zuvil<br> jaaru | | style="text-align: center; font-style:italic; background-color:#993300; color:#ffffff;" | zuvil<br /> jaaru | ||
| style="text-align: center; font-style:italic; background-color:#990000; color:#ffffff;" | bayaari | | style="text-align: center; font-style:italic; background-color:#990000; color:#ffffff;" | bayaari | ||
| style="text-align: center; font-style:italic; background-color:#999900; color:#ffffff;" | zuwi | | style="text-align: center; font-style:italic; background-color:#999900; color:#ffffff;" | zuwi | ||
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| style="text-align: center; font-style:italic; background-color:#990066; color:#ffffff;" | aana | | style="text-align: center; font-style:italic; background-color:#990066; color:#ffffff;" | aana | ||
|- | |- | ||
| style="text-align: center; font-style:italic; background-color:#9b9b9b;" | au<br> garaji | | style="text-align: center; font-style:italic; background-color:#9b9b9b;" | au<br /> garaji | ||
| style="text-align: center; font-style:italic; background-color:#fe0000;" | raul<br> nidda <br> hagg | | style="text-align: center; font-style:italic; background-color:#fe0000;" | raul<br /> nidda <br /> hagg | ||
| style="text-align: center; font-style:italic; background-color:#ff6600;" | aurin | | style="text-align: center; font-style:italic; background-color:#ff6600;" | aurin | ||
| style="text-align: center; font-style:italic; background-color:#ff9900;" | auwu | | style="text-align: center; font-style:italic; background-color:#ff9900;" | auwu | ||
| style="text-align: center; font-style:italic; background-color:#ffff00;" | luz<br> aubra | | style="text-align: center; font-style:italic; background-color:#ffff00;" | luz<br /> aubra | ||
| style="text-align: center; font-style:italic; background-color:#ccff00;" | luamiz | | style="text-align: center; font-style:italic; background-color:#ccff00;" | luamiz | ||
| style="text-align: center; font-style:italic; background-color:#33ff33;" | jan<br> bazu | | style="text-align: center; font-style:italic; background-color:#33ff33;" | jan<br /> bazu | ||
| style="text-align: center; font-style:italic; background-color:#00ffcc;" | ddi | | style="text-align: center; font-style:italic; background-color:#00ffcc;" | ddi | ||
| style="text-align: center; font-style:italic; background-color:#0033ff;" | zaz<br> iyad | | style="text-align: center; font-style:italic; background-color:#0033ff;" | zaz<br /> iyad | ||
| style="text-align: center; font-style:italic; background-color:#9900ff;" | ivau | | style="text-align: center; font-style:italic; background-color:#9900ff;" | ivau | ||
| style="text-align: center; font-style:italic; background-color:#ff0099;" | liwa | | style="text-align: center; font-style:italic; background-color:#ff0099;" | liwa | ||
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===Numbers=== | ===Numbers=== | ||
''needs expansion'' | |||
Classically, the Taliv only counted up to five, including a single word that meant "more than five" (this term is now obsolete, however, it has fossilized as the plural marker '''-(a)n''') They also had names for sets of five: five was a hand (5), five hands were an arm (25), five arms were a body (125), five bodies were a family (625), five families were a village (3,125), three villages were a city (15,625), and five cities were a nation (78,125). So, for example, the number 20,708 would be explained as "one city, one village, three families, three arms, one hand, and three." Counting that high, however, was not very common in Talivian culture, since resources were normally plentiful and the economy was a basic bartering system of trading goods. The highest a regular person would need to count would be "two hands and four" when reporting to their friends how many fish they caught that day. | Classically, the Taliv only counted up to five, including a single word that meant "more than five" (this term is now obsolete, however, it has fossilized as the plural marker '''-(a)n''') They also had names for sets of five: five was a hand (5), five hands were an arm (25), five arms were a body (125), five bodies were a family (625), five families were a village (3,125), three villages were a city (15,625), and five cities were a nation (78,125). So, for example, the number 20,708 would be explained as "one city, one village, three families, three arms, one hand, and three." Counting that high, however, was not very common in Talivian culture, since resources were normally plentiful and the economy was a basic bartering system of trading goods. The highest a regular person would need to count would be "two hands and four" when reporting to their friends how many fish they caught that day. | ||
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! style="text-align: center;" | 92 | ! style="text-align: center;" | 92 | ||
| style="text-align: center; font-style:italic;" | nuvaayaa vil vai | | style="text-align: center; font-style:italic;" | nuvaayaa vil vai | ||
| style="text-align: center;" | 9, 0* with | | style="text-align: center;" | 9, 0* with 2 | ||
|- | |- | ||
! style="text-align: center;" | 13 | ! style="text-align: center;" | 13 | ||
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| style="text-align: center;" | 9, 0* with 9 | | style="text-align: center;" | 9, 0* with 9 | ||
|} | |} | ||
===Seat of Emotion=== | ===Seat of Emotion=== | ||
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Direction and Time are closely interrelated in the Wistanian language. They correspond with the terms '''mija''' (rising) and '''hina''' (setting), which describe the rising and setting of the sun. Wistanian has two cardinal directions, the rising east and setting west. Time is likewise measured by the rising past and the setting future. This leads to phrases such as "think east" and "go towards the setting" as opposed to English "think back" and "go west". Wistanian has an intrinsic and relative frame of reference, in that when giving directions, they will use the destination's location as described in relation to another object ("towards the lake", in front of my house") as well as using terms for "front", "back", "left" and "right". There is a limited absolute frame of reference with terms for "east" and "west", but no terms for "north" or "south." | Direction and Time are closely interrelated in the Wistanian language. They correspond with the terms '''mija''' (rising) and '''hina''' (setting), which describe the rising and setting of the sun. Wistanian has two cardinal directions, the rising east and setting west. Time is likewise measured by the rising past and the setting future. This leads to phrases such as "think east" and "go towards the setting" as opposed to English "think back" and "go west". Wistanian has an intrinsic and relative frame of reference, in that when giving directions, they will use the destination's location as described in relation to another object ("towards the lake", in front of my house") as well as using terms for "front", "back", "left" and "right". There is a limited absolute frame of reference with terms for "east" and "west", but no terms for "north" or "south." | ||
=== | ===Vulgarity and Taboos=== | ||
Every culture possesses a strong taboo against slurs, which is partly due to the rocky history of racism during the post-war era of the country. Some slurs include '''baubau''', a diminutive of the word Bwolotil, often used to describe things that are dark and ugly. Holding the '''u''' sound can also get a young Wistanian in trouble for its history as a chant against the Uzin. Terms referring to religion are also taboo when used out of context, especially in the Katapu tribes; for example, calling something '''ggauduvahi''' ("great" or "grand") is considered offensive since that term should only be applied to a place of worship. Terms referring to sex or bodily functions are only taboo in the Katapu and, to a smaller extent, the Bwolotil cultures | Every culture possesses a strong taboo against slurs, which is partly due to the rocky history of racism during the post-war era of the country. Some slurs include '''baubau''', a diminutive of the word Bwolotil, often used to describe things that are dark and ugly. Holding the '''u''' sound can also get a young Wistanian in trouble for its history as a chant against the Uzin. Terms referring to religion are also taboo when used out of context, especially in the Katapu tribes; for example, calling something '''ggauduvahi''' ("great" or "grand") is considered offensive since that term should only be applied to a place of worship. Terms referring to sex or bodily functions are only taboo in the Katapu and, to a smaller extent, the Bwolotil and Uzin cultures while the Taliv and Nati are rather comfortable with those topics. | ||
It is considered vulgar over the entire nation to use the name of a family member in vain, especially if that family member is deceased. | It is considered vulgar over the entire nation to use the name of a family member in vain, especially if that family member is deceased. | ||
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[[Category:A priori]] | [[Category:A priori]] | ||
[[Category:Conscripts]] | [[Category:Conscripts]] | ||
[[Category:Analytic | [[Category:Analytic languages]] | ||
[[Category:Conscripts]] | [[Category:Conscripts]] | ||
[[Category:Nominative- | [[Category:Nominative-accusative languages]] |
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