Verse:Hmøøh/Phormatolide
Hmøøh/Phormatolide | |
---|---|
ꙞΔⱵŦΛLΔΠꝨXꞰ Phormatolide | |
Pronunciation | [/ˈfɔrmatɔɴ̆idɛ/] |
Created by | User:Praimhín, User:IlL |
Setting | Verse:Tricin |
Clofabic
| |
Official status | |
Official language in | Phormatin |
Regulated by | none |
Phormatolide (natively ꙞΔⱵŦΛLΔΠꝨXꞰ /ˈfɔrmatɔɴ̆idɛ/) is a Clofabic language spoken in Talma, inspired by Modern Greek, Hmong, Japanese, User:IlL/Wiobian, and the Romance languages. It preserves a few archaic features that are lost in Clofabosin.
rach = water (< *rask; ~ Clofab raxin)
Todo
- rhy = too (too much); too (also)
- rhyb = two
- abstract noun suffix (not related to Clofab -statin)
- rendaku for compounds (-in becomes construct state)
Phonology
Consonants
p mp~b β t nt~d ð k nk~ŋ~g ɣ f s h z m n r ʟ
Vowels
Front | Central | Back | |
---|---|---|---|
Close | i /ɪ/ | y /ÿ/ | u /u/ |
Mid | e /ɛ/ | ø /ø/ | o /ɔ/ |
Open | a /a/ |
Prosody
Stress
Intonation
Phonotactics
Morphophonology
Morphology
Nouns
Nouns inflect for definiteness, number and case. The definite suffix is -ide or -id- when followed by another suffix.
There is a distinction between inalienable and alienable possession: the former uses -yl [-ÿɰ̃] and the latter uses -ol [-ɔ̃].
Noun cases:
- -ine /i:n/ = accusative
- -one = dative
- -ase = comitative
- -ate = locative (from terin, house in both Clofabosin and Phormatolide)
- -ium = relativizer
Pronouns
cephin, ceph- = this
fluorin, fluoro- = that
glycin, glyco- = who? what?
Verbs
There are two tenses in Phormatolide: past, non-past. The non-past ending is -phen (related to the Clofabosin agentive -fen), and the past ending is -zole.
In the desiderative, the endings are -profen, -prazole.
Attributive verbs
If the subject is the head, the suffix -ol is attached to the inflected form of the verb:
The present tense attributive uses -yl in place of -phen.
- trych chloroyl
- trych chloro-yl
- world-NOM big-PRES.ATTR
- [ˈtrÿkin ˈχɴ̆ɔrɔỹ]
- the big world
- amph phthozolol
- amph phtho-zole-ol
- person-NOM eat-PAST-ATTR
- [ˈaɱf ˈfθɔzɔɴ̆ɔ̃]
- the person who ate
Otherwise, the clitic -ium is attached to the head noun, followed by a relative clause that looks like a finite clause.
- raskium plocazole
- the water I drank
Syntax
Due to Talmic and Windermere influence, Phormatolide is significantly more head-initial than Clofabosin; its basic word order is SVO and uses postpositions.
Constituent order
Noun phrase
Verb phrase
Sentence phrase
Dependent clauses
Numbers
es, rhyb, hall, lop, orph, cyb, xol, thyc, ad, gaphar, phem, chlut = 1 to 12
100dd: san
1000dd: ichth