Scellan/Syntax

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A mostly-analytic language, Eevo (Skellan) is strongly head-initial (with exceptions in poetry). It usually uses topic-prominent, V2 word order; the topicalized constituent is fronted.

TODO: topic comment syntax

Faulty accusative

The faulty accusative particle is ym. It is not used when the subject is a pronoun.

A duvwñ, mol a tehd ym ab.
The child thanks the teacher. (lit. The teacher, the child thanks him.)

Negation

The usual negative particle is twm, which is placed before the verb. hob 'don't!' is used for the negative imperative. The word for giving a negative answer is ter. In literary or poetic language, ia (indicative) and daw (irrealis) can also be found.

Negative pronouns

  • twm sahn (lit. not a thing) = nothing
  • twm lias (lit. not a soul) = no one
  • twm tlaw (lit. nowhere) = nowhere
  • fuat = never

On double negation

Double negation usually resolves to a positive, since litotes involving negative pronouns are commonly used for emphasis. For example:

Twm sahn a twm roféelin.
NEG thing A NEG change-PRET
Everything changed. (literally 'Nothing did not change.')
Twm or dia tarsíad a twm slawb o llee.
NEG girl in-SPEC school A NEG good 3SG.M DAT-3SG.F
Every girl in school likes him.('There's no girl in school that doesn't like him.')

Interrogative

The common question particles (placed at the beginning of the sentence) are:

  • sec = interrogative
  • sder = negative interrogative
Sder bo croð niañt dyb çuþ?
NEG.INTERR COL human also in-COL animal
Are humans, too, not animals?

The interrogative particle es may be used in archaic Eevo.

Copular sentences

There are two (non-interchangeable) ways to say 'X is Y' where X, Y are nouns. (Khmer makes a similar distinction.)

  1. Y (COP) DET X - This is used to assert that nouns X and Y refer the same thing.
    Ñen a fawl ry ñiþúin awr dy.
    DEM.DIST DET.SG year REL enter-PRET 3PL in
    That was the year in which they entered.
  2. dyb Y (COP) DET X (lit. X is in the set of all Y's) - This is used to assert that "X is-a Y".
    Dyb croð a Socrátes, paryçtá bo croð. Ceeda paryçtá a Socrátes.
    in-COL human DET.SG Socrates, mortal DET.COL human. therefore mortal DET.SG Socrates
    Socrates is human; humans are mortal. Hence Socrates is mortal.

Example: Sder bo croð niañt dyb çuþ? NEG.INTERR COL human also in-COL animal Are humans, too, not animals?

Noun phrase

Number is marked by a preposed determiner; the determiner is optional for proper nouns.

There is a genitive particle ry, but it is optional.

Determiners can be omitted in elevated language.

Predicates

Eevo has no copula. Instead, the "predicate" or the focused constituent is fronted:

e.g. Dy eell naw ee. = I love her; Ee a (fa) dy eell ren. = It's her that I love

When fronting of a noun occurs, the remaining verb phrase becomes a noun phrase, thus a determiner must be used.

Twm ziráð syrñ bo [toxrorégin] a go þarcǿma að smøøh bo sbenopats.
NEG only new COL evolve-PASS.PART DET PST.IPFV inhabit SG world COL dinosaur
The world of the dinosaurs was not solely occupied by the newly-evolved.

In some tenses (progressive, perfect) the particle fa can be used after the a when fronting.

Dy iant a duvwñ.
The teacher is sleeping.
Duvwñ a (fa) dy iant.
It's the teacher who is sleeping.

Contrasting

Contrastive "partial clauses" just use the topic without repeating the comment.

Sani dy ell ee Maið, ah Hmorill ter.
S. PROG love 3SG.F M., but H. no
Sani loves Maið, but Hmorill does not [love him].
Maið dy ell Sani ym ob, ah Gelli ter.
M. PROG love S. FA 3SG.M, but G. no
Sani loves Maið, but she does not love Gelli.

Existence

The verb room is used for existence.

Clause types

Time clauses

Deranked time clauses can be formed by using a preposition, most commonly dy 'when', ñal 'before', and 'tyn' 'after'. The subject of the time clause is marked with the genitive ry.

Ex.

  • dy cri riav 'when we walk', lit. 'at our walking', or dy cri 'when walking'.

Relative clauses

  • no relativizer is used when the head is the subject in the relative clause
  • ry is used otherwise, possibly with a resumptive pronoun
  • resumptive pronouns are optional - hence relative clauses can end in a preposition as in English
    • This state of affairs came about because the older resumptive pronominal affixes on prepositions elided and the emphatic pronoun remained optional.
  • for places, cah 'there' can be used as a resumptive pronoun
  • in formal writing, the head may be repeated instead of using a resumptive pronoun to eliminate ambiguity (cf. mathematical writing)
  • for relativizing sentences or statements, taw 'what' is used
... taw þwmoñéed emb vyðár tyþ.
what confirm COMP equal two
...which confirms that the two are equal.
dlïahar ry twm go sovl awb ber (awr)
event-PLV REL NEG IPFV hear 1EX about (3PL)
events that we did not hear of

Complement clauses

The complementizer is emb.

Eevo provides other syntaxes for complement clauses which are non-finite...

Conditional clauses

Generally true statement:

I tøøh a ñwi, (coþ) gias a cnoo. [also found in high register: Tøøhor a barah, ...]
If it rains, (then) the grass is wet.

Conditional on a possible future event:

I tøøht a ñwi, faht gias a cnoo.
If it rains [lit. if it will rain] the grass will be wet.
Tahd a fiar a criht, naw a criht.
whither A 2SG A go.FUT, 1SG A go.FUT
Wherever you go, I will go.

Hypothetical supposition/a less likely "if":

If it rained, the grass would be wet.

Counterfactual supposition:

Had it rained, the grass would have been wet.

Time clauses (when, while, before, after) work similarly.

Method clauses

Method clauses ("by X-ing") use the construction nai + VN.

Modal expressions

  • ñiwð naw = I want to
  • Beð ryn a... = I have to (lit. it is my part to)
    • Colloquially: beðyn, beðes, beðeb, beðee, beðyñ, beðiav, beðeg, beðed, beðer, beðy çar
  • Cwllyn a... = I can (< it is open for me to)
    • Conjugation: cwllyn, cwlles, cwlleb, cwllee, cwllyñ, cwlliav, cwlleg, cwlled, cwller, cwlly çar
  • Orr llyn a... = I should...
  • Dewm ryn a... = I may... (lit. it is my right to)
    • The possessive pronoun can be omitted in casual speech.
  • Ulyn naw... = I might... (probabilistic)

Telic verbs

  • asliþda = to fake one's way, to cheat one's way < liþda = to cheat
  • asmiþgwñ = to seduce successfully < miþgwñ = to seduce

Infinitive absolute

In an infinitive absolute construction, the verb is repeated once before being "conjugated" for TAM. There are two variants of this construction.

The first is used to express the meaning of "indeed" or "it's true that", but often a "but" clause follows.

Fyñg fyñgt ob rree ciab.
die.INF die-FUT 3SG.M day one
It's true that he'll die one day. [lit. it is a dying that he will die]

The second, which has a more literary flavor, is used to emphasize that the fact is true. It uses a fossilized cleft clause particle "a(ð)".

Fohor a joll ñal gwad dy hnwil. Ah fyój a fyójt gwad, as fyój a beðeg!
JUSS SG path before 1PL.IN PRED steep. but triumph A triumph 1PL.IN, and triumph A must-1PL.IN
The path before us may be difficult/steep. But triumph we will, and triumph we must! (lit. "[It is] triumphing that we shall triumph")