Heleasic
Heleasic | |
---|---|
ἑλεασικ ʰγλῶττ | |
Pronunciation | [/hlizì glɑ̂t/] |
Created by | IlL |
Setting | Lõis |
Native speakers | 90 million (2015) |
Indo-European
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Heleasic (natively: ἡ ἑλεασικ ʰγλῶττ ha hlizì gglât /hə hlizì glɑ̂t/) is a tonal descendant of Ancient Greek spoken in Lõis's East India, inspired by Khmer, Hebrew and English. It has final stress and 3 tones. The name of the language comes from Heleasia (Ὲλεασία Hiljazía /hlizíə/ < PIE *séles-wn-tih₂, ~ Sanskrit Sarasvatī), a mystical river found in L-Ancient Greek legends.
Numbers: hɛ́n, tʰŷ, trê, tɪsə́ɹ, pɛ́nt, hɛ́s, hɛ̀ft, oxtɑ́, ɪnêɪ, tʰɛ̂
Apology, first sentence:
- /pɑ̂smɪ hɪzê, ɑ̂ ədɪnâɪ əntə̀ɹ, ɪvədɐ̂z hɪvò tɑ̂n kəzɪgorɑ̂nɪm, gɑ́ ù kʰoɹɪzɑ̀/
- how 2PL.NOM, VOC Athenian.PL man.PL.NOM PRET-be_affected by DEF.PL.GEN accuser-PL.GEN-1SG, 1SG.NOM NEG know-PRES.1SG
- How you, O Athenians, have been affected by my accusers, I cannot tell...
- [Ancient Greek: Ὅτι μὲν ὑμεῖς, ὦ ἄνδρες Ἀθηναῖοι, πεπόνθατε ὑπὸ τῶν ἐμῶν κατηγόρων, οὐκ οἶδα]
koɹɪzɑ̀ 'know' is from χωρίζω 'separate, divide, distinguish'
Diachronics
When should stress shift occur? Only certain endings should drop: (-ος, -α, -ον should drop)
πτερόν pterón > πτερ ftèɹ 'wing'
ξηρός xērós > ξηρ sʰæ̀ɹ 'dry'
θέμα théma > θέμ tʰém 'thing'; pl. θέματα thémata > tʰémàð > θεμᾶτ tʰɪmâð 'things'
Phonology
Consonants
Vowels
/ɐ ɛ o ɪ ə ɑ æ e i u y iə uə aɪ eɪ aʊ oʊ əɹ æɹ ɒɹ eɹ iɹ yɹ ʊɹ/
Only /ə əɹ o ɪ/ may occur in unstressed syllables.
Tones
Heleasic has 3 tones: high, low, and falling.
Mutation
Morphology
Pronouns
- 1sg: gá
- 2sg: sý
- 3sg: thós/thǽ/thó
- 4: khéen
- 1pl: mées
- 2pl: sées
- 3pl:
low tone when non-emphatic, high tone when emphatic
Nouns
Declension
Cases: Nominative and oblique
Gender and case marked by mutations: e.g. γλῶττ /klɑ̂t/ 'a language (nom)'; ἡ ʰγλῶττ /hə glɑ̂t/ 'the language (nom)'
NOM: ἄνθρωπος > əntɹɑ̂p; ἄνθρωποι > əntɹobì
OBL: ἀνθρώπου > əntɹobù; ἀνθρώπων > əntɹobɑ̂n
Possessive suffixes
1sg: -(a)m
2sg: -(a)s
3sg: -(a)t
1pl: -man
2pl: -san
3pl: -tan
Adjectives
Verbs
Verbs are inflected for person but are not pro-drop.