User:IlL/A Danified analytic Neo-Arabic
IlL/A Danified analytic Neo-Arabic/Lexicon
IlL/A Danified analytic Neo-Arabic/Swadesh list
This article is a construction site. This project is currently undergoing significant construction and/or revamp. By all means, take a look around, thank you. |
Cubrite | |
---|---|
כﬞנאַאנידﬞ IlL/A Danified analytic Neo-Arabic | |
Pronunciation | [/xnaːnið/] |
Created by | IlL |
Setting | Verse:AETHER |
Afro-Asiatic
|
Cubrite (Cubrite: כﬞנאַאנידﬞ Xnánið /xnɛːnið/ or נומא כﬞנאַאן núm Xnán /niːm xnɛːn/) is a Canaanite language in Verse:AETHER, spoken by the Cubrites in Sicily. Genetic studies have shown that the Cubrites are descendants of Celtic speakers who adopted a Canaanite language. The language preserves quite a few quasi-Biblical words and phrases, but its grammar was completely restructured to use auxiliaries instead of the older Hebrew tense conjugations.
It's inspired grammatically by Welsh, and aesthetically by Cockney English, Icelandic and Khmer.
Numbers: 0-10: efes, óð (inanimate)/áð (animate), šnay, šluš, arvą, homiš, šeš, šebą, šmun, þešą, ngašr
11-20: óðąš/áðąš, šnayąš, šlušąš, arvąš, homišąš, šešąš, šebąš, šmunąš, þešąš, ngašri
40: štay ngašri
60: šluš ngašri
...
100: míø
10000: rúø
before: kkorm
History
TODO
- Icelandify/Samify?
- Swadesh list
- bel-, ble- is a common prefix (conflation of ben- and ba3al-)
- biuth or šą še... = when...
- Many adverbs are froma infinitive absolute
- likkori = to die (lit. be called [by God])
- šovuą = week
- mødbár = conference
- נא becomes a focus marker =nø
- question marker a ... [FOCUS]=nø
- Philippi should be weaker: i > e, instead of the TibH i > a (*bint > bett 'daughter'; TibH baṫ)
- Makhin yo ngalekh likkori? = Why did you have to die?
Some sound changes
- non-rhoticity, H-dropping
- ħ > h; *gt, kt, ᴋt, ħt > kht
- ś > usually f
- dt, tt > st
- -ø (mainly from ACub -ā) becomes silent and lengthens the vowel before it
- ACub ā ō ū > OCub ó ú í
- OCub ó ú í > Modern Cub. aɤ i: əi
Phonology
Consonants
- /m n ŋ h l w j ɹ~ʋ/ ⟨m n η h l w y r⟩
- /p b f v t⁼ d ʔtʰ θ ð k⁼ g ʔkʰ x/ ⟨p b f v t d tt þ ð k g kk x⟩
- /s z ts ʃ/ ⟨s z ts š⟩
(capital η is И)
Ancient Cubrite /l/ became /w/ in some places, especially before C.
Mutations
Words can undergo initial voicing mutation.
Vowels
IlL/A Danified analytic Neo-Arabic has the largest vowel inventory of any Semitic language in its timeline:
/a e ɪ ɔ ʊ ɛ̃ː iə əɪ äɤ iː ɑ̃ː ɛ̃ː ɪɤ̃ ɔ̃ː æː aw ɛw ɪw ɔw ʊw ɑː(ɹ) ɛː(ɹ) eː(ɹ) oʊ~oː(ɹ) ɜː(ɹ) ə(ɹ)/ = ⟨a e i o u á é í ó ú ą ę į ų aw ew iw ow uw ar er ir or ur ø/r⟩
Word-final /ə/ is pronounced [ɐ(ɹ)] and is transcribed as a syllabic r, or ør after r.
The following is the traditional classification of vowels:
- Shva: ø
- Short vowels: a e i o u
- Long vowels: á é í ó ú
- Nasal vowels: ą ę į ų
- L-colored vowels: aw ew iw ow uw
- R-colored vowels: ar er ir or ur r
Prosody
Stress
Stress tends penultimate or final.
Intonation
Phonotactics
Morphophonology
Orthography
Modern Cubrite is written in the Jewish Hebrew square script, in a spelling based on Tiberian Hebrew. (The resulting spelling is not etymological, since Cubrite reflects the original Hebrew consonants differently.) This is because most earlier works in Modern Cubrite were written by Jews, mainly educational materials in Judaism.
Consonants
- /m n ŋ h l w j ɹ~ʋ Ø/ ⟨מ נ ׆ ה ל ו י ר א⟩
- /p b f v t⁼ d tʰ θ ð k⁼ g kʰ x/ ⟨פ ב פﬞ בﬞ ט ד ת ת◌ﬞ דﬞ ק ג כ כﬞ⟩
- /s z ts ʃ (sj-sound)/ ⟨ס ז צ ש שׂ⟩
Consonant correspondences (by default):
- Hebrew ד ~ Cubrite ט/ד
- Hebrew ת ~ Cubrite ת◌ﬞ/דﬞ
- Hebrew ט ~ Cubrite ת
Vowels
- Word final /ə/ is always written ר, regardless of etymology.
- The five basic vowel symbols, written after the initial consonant:
- אַ = a
- יֶ = e
- י = i
- אָ = o
- ו = u
- The lengthened vowels are written with an alef. If possible the alef is written after the coda; if there is no coda or if there is a post-coda suffix, it is written right after the vowel symbol. For example: núm 'language' = נומא; númr 'languages' = נואמר.
- The L- and R-colored vowels are written with lamed or resh after the vowel symbol.
- The nasalized vowels are written with ayin after the vowel symbol, but ą is usually written just with ayin.
Morphology
IlL/A Danified analytic Neo-Arabic has lost the verbal inflections and triconsonantal morphology of Ancient Cubrite.
Nouns and adjectives
Nouns inflect for number and definiteness. Adjectives agree with nouns in number.
IlL/A Danified analytic Neo-Arabic has regularized all plurals to ־ר -r (from a merger of Ancient Cubrite -īm and -ōδ). It also lost grammatical gender, although animates still have natural gender.
Words ending in a nasal vowel or an R-colored vowel add an intrusive R between the final vowel and the plural suffix: פדע pdą 'tree', פדערר pdąrør 'trees'.
Some irregular plurals: בנוס, בלנוס benus, blenus = human
Canaanite has lost the construct state.
Degree markers:
- Equative: de- = as X as; equally X (~ BH די day 'enough')
- Emphatic: ro- = too (inherited from Ancient Cubrite, which borrowed it from Celtic)
- Comparative/Superlative: -ðr = more X or most X; comparandum takes פרידﬞ prið 'than' (from Ancient Cubrite בראותי את pirʔūðī jūð 'when I see ACC')
Example: קרוא kkrú 'big', דגרוא degrú 'as big as'; ראָגרוא rogrú 'very big indeed', קרואדﬞר kkrúðør 'bigger/biggest'
Verbs
Almost all verbs use only one form, usually the inherited Biblical infinitive construct. The infinitive form may or may not have a prefixed l-, depending on the verb; however, even verbs without l- displays a voicing mutation. Even for imperatives: ðett lomi hi! = 'Give it to her!' Some verbs instead are derived from other nouns derived from the triconsonantal root rather than the infinitive of a particular verb.
Inflected lexical verbs
There are only five inflected lexical verbs (i.e. verbs with inflected past and future forms):
- fuð 'to do'
- ðuð 'to come' (w/ suppletion!)
- laxt 'to go'
- kaxt 'to get'
- ðett 'to give'
→ Person | I | thou (m) | thou (f) | you (polite) | he/it | she | we | you (plural) | they | Non-pronominal | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
fuð | future | ąf i | þąf ta | þąf te | þąf Hi | yąf u | þąf hi | nąf nu | þąfu tem | yąfu'm | yąf/tąf |
past | fið i | fis ta | fis te | fto Hi | fo u | fto hi | fin nu | fis tem | fu'm | fo/fto | |
ðuð | future | éð i | þés ta | þés te | þéð Hi | yéð u | þéð hi | néð nu | þéðu tem | yéðu'm | yéð/téð |
past | powð i | pows ta | pows te | pól Hi | pow u | pól hi | pown nu | pows tem | polu'm | pow/pól | |
laxt | future | ley ni | tley ta | tley te | tley Hi | ley u | tley hi | ley nu | tleyu tem | leyu'm | ley/tley |
past | laxt i | laxt ta | laxt te | lál Hi | law u | lál hi | layn nu | laxt tem | lalu'm | law/lál | |
kaxt | future | key ni | tkey ta | tkey te | tkey Hi | key u | tkey hi | key nu | tkeyu tem | keyu'm | key/tkey |
past | kaxt i | kaxt ta | kaxt te | kál Hi | kaw u | kál hi | kayn nu | kaxt tem | kayu'm | kaw/kál | |
ðett | future | þey ni | tney ta | tney te | þen Hi | þen u | þen hi | þey nu | tneyu tem | tneyu'm | þen |
past | naxt i | naxt ta | naxt te | nál Hi | naw u | nál hi | nayn nu | naxt tem | nalu'm | naw/nál |
Non-pronominal forms agree in gender only with a singular subject; the feminine is only used with women and females. With plural nominal subjects and the masculine singular form is used.
Regular pa3al verbs
The regular pattern is *liCCuC.
-t verbs
Many of these verbs got the glottally reinforced -tt from -ʔt. The -tt then analogically spread to other verbs.
- lakht /ˈlaxt/ = to go
- kakht /ˈkaxt/ = to take
- sakht /saxt/ = to go back
- šaft /ʃaft/ = to sit
- ðett /ðeʔt/ = to give
- lost /ˈlost/ = to be born
- sett /seʔt/ = to carry
- tsett /tseʔt/ = to go out
- sątt /sãːʔt/ = to travel
- gątt /gãːʔt/ = to hit
- dątt /dãːʔt/ = to know
- tątt /tãːʔt/ = to plant
Regular nif3al
The regular pattern is *liCoCiC where the first C is not lenited.
Regular pi3el
The regular pattern is *løCaCiC or *løCiCuC where the middle C is not lenited.
Regular hif3il
The regular pattern is *laCCiC, *leCCeC, or *laCCoCø.
Regular hithpa3el
The regular pattern is *lithCaCiC where the middle C is not lenited.
Other verbs
Other verbs come from noun derivation patterns, or from earlier verb + noun collocations.
Any noun can also be verbed by prefixing lø-.
Auxiliaries
IlL/A Danified analytic Neo-Arabic has an auxiliary verb system similar to Colloquial Welsh. In addition, there is a T-V distinction: the 2nd person plural tem is also used as a polite pronoun.
- Re Dovíð ngaw šun. = David is about to sleep.
- Biuth Dovíð ngaw šun = When David is about to sleep
→ Person | I | thou (m) | thou (f) | he/it | she | we | blotp | they | Non-pronominal |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Present (re, r' is from רְאֵה *rVʔē 'look!') | i, ni | ta | te | u | hi | nu | tem | em | re, r' before V |
Present emphatic (inflected forms of עוֹד) | ngud i | ngud ta | ngud te | nguden u | nguden hi | ngud nu | ngud tem | ngud em | ngud |
Interrogative (from הַאִם, -nø must be added to the focused word) | am ni, am i | am ta | am te | am u | am hi | am nu | am tem | am em | am |
Passive present (from imperfect of עָבַר 'to pass') | ur ni, ur i | tur ta | tri te | yur u | tur hi | nur nu | tru tem | ru'm | yur/tur |
Passive past (from perfect of עָבַר 'to pass') | var ni, var i, vart i | vart ta | vart te | var u | vro hi | varn nu | vart tem | vru'm | var/vro |
"May" (from imperfect of לָקַח 'to take') | kekh i | tkekh ta | tkekh te | kekh u | tkekh hi | kekh nu | tkekhu tem | kekhu'm | kekh/tkekh/kekhu |
"Do X more" - present (from imperfect of הוֹסִיף 'to add') | usif i | tusif ta | tusif te | yusif u | tusif hi | nusif nu | tusif tem | yusifu'm | usift/tusif/yusifu |
"Do X more" - past (from perfect of הוֹסִיף 'to add') | seft i | seft ta | seft te | sif u | sifø hi | sef nu | seft tem | sifu'm | sif/sifu |
Cautionary (from imperfect of זָמַם 'to scheme') | zum i | tøzum ta | tøzum te | zum u | tøzum hi | nøzum nu | tøzmu tem | zmu'm | zum/tøzum/zmu |
"X well" - present (from imperfect of הֵיטִיב 'to do well') | attev i | tattev ta | tattvi te | yattev u | tattev hi | nattev nu | tattev tem | yattevu'm | yattev/tattev/yattevu |
"X well" - past (from perfect of הֵיטִיב 'to do well') | ettevt i | ettevt ta | ettevt te | ettev u | ettivø hi | ettev nu | ettevt tem | ettevu'm | ettev |
Cautionary future
The auxiliary for the cautionary future comes from the Ancient Cubrite verb *zāmam 'to scheme'. It's used to:
- warn the listener of a future event or contingency:
- Zum sąraz tha lovu fu kol ngeth. = 'The storm might come here any moment.'
- Zum tafkestaz mul lith kovuą hettev! = 'The map might not be well-defined! [in a hypothetical math lecture, cautioning against a tacit assumption the audience might make]'
- often used in a threatening manner, for example: Lakh to mul yedhą ma zum i ląsuth lakh to! = 'You have no idea what I'm gonna do to you!'
Object pronouns
Object pronouns are not different from subject pronouns, except kho/khe/khem may be found instead of to/te/tem in some dialects.
Prepositions
Prepositions inflect like in Welsh: for pronominal prepositional objects, usually the preposition is inflected and is followed by the independent pronoun.
example of a IlL/A Danified analytic Neo-Arabic inflected preposition: lø "for"; bø 'in, at', min 'from' are inflected similarly
- 1sg: li, li ni
- 2sg.m: lakh to
- 2sg.f: lakh te
- 3sg.m: lomu hu
- 3sg.f: lomi hi
- 1pl. lonu nu
- 2pl. lakhøm tem
- 3pl. lomu'm
Other prepositions:
- túb lø = for
- yán = because of
- ngøli = on, above
- yax = with (both inst. and com.)
- pøngé = inside, within
- sim. løngé, møngé 'into, out of'
- pølip = amidst
- wén = without
- møné = before, in front of
- hár = after
- møngál = above
- møþál = below
- þaxt = instead of
- túl = like, as
- hakr = until
- gu = up to
Syntax
Constituent order
The order is tense-subject-verb-object.
- R'išaz p'él avlaz.
- The man is eating the apple.
- Re béð u pø de-rul xmó liyoðøn.
- His house is as big as a crocodile.
- Sto hi ða ląsuth halkkbetho hi pø ro-múhr.
- She did her homework too late.
The negative particle mul (from mə'umâ lo 'not anything') comes after the subject pronoun and before the verb.
Faulty accusative
IlL/A Danified analytic Neo-Arabic has the faulty accusative particle ða or ð' (from Ancient Cubrite ʔet ha-). It is not used for all direct objects, but only for constituents that are separated from their heads. Đa must also be used before the verbal noun when using an auxiliary: היֶטבר הי דﬞאַ ליתפﬞוס טאָגר Hettvø hi ða litfus togø. = She was good at catching fish.
Noun phrase
The definite article is a clitic:
- Singular: =as (after C) or =su (after V)
- Plural: =iw (replacing the plural suffix -r if any)
Examples:
- hadr = a room
- hadras = the room
- hadrør = rooms
- hadriw = the rooms
- hadr grú = a big room
- hadr grulas = the big room (< hah-hadr hag-gâdhol haz-ze)
- botr grulr = big houses
- botr gruliw = the big houses
There is no construct state, unlike in Biblical Hebrew. Genitives are expressed with concatenation: šem-mawkaz = the king's name.
To say "this X" or "that X", X-az fu and X-az šom (lit. "the X here" and "the X there") are used. To say "this" and "that", you say ze fu and ze šom (where the ze becomes ilø in the plural).
The abstract demonstrative is zuth.
Words for yes and no
- ent (from אמת "truth") = present 'yes'
- ay (from איה "where?") = present 'no'
- ríð (from ראיתי "I saw") = past 'yes'
- lu ðo (from לא עשה, inflected) = past 'no'
- yąð (from יעשה, inflected) = future 'yes'
- lu yąð (inflected) = future 'no'
- aw (from אל "don't!") = imperative 'no'
Verb phrase
VN constructions
- re Parm pø laxt = Parm is going, goes
- re Parm þax laxt = Parm is about to go
- re Parm hár laxt = Parm has gone
- re Parm hár yið pø laxt = Parm has been going
- re Parm døs laxt = Parm just went
- re Parm wén laxt = Parm hasn't went
- sto Parm ða laxt = Parm went
- þąs Parm ða laxt = Parm will go
- Laxt! = Go! (number neutral)
- Tenu laxt! = Let's go!
Sentence phrase
Complementizer
There is a complementizer mur /mɐ/ (from לאמר lēmōr) or yuð /əð/ (from conflation of hajōδ 'to be' and hiyyōδ accusative marker) depending on dialect.
Relativizer
Relative clauses use the relativizer ar (from a merger of אשר *ʔašir and ה- ha-). Re is not used in relative clauses in present tense.
- Ni p'él avlaz ar pø hadr i = I am eating the apple which is in my room.
Vocabulary
Canaanite has the following vocabulary layers:
- Most of the common words are inherited from Ancient Cubrite, however they often show drastic semantic drift or compounding. Example: sngúd 'a lot' comes from סעודה 'feast'.
- Celtic substrates
- Ancient Greek, Old Togarmite and Aramaic loans
- L-Arabic loans
- Modern loans from other Levantine sprachbund languages, such as Togarmite, and Modern Greek
Although it is attested in Biblical Hebrew, the *CăCiCâ verbal noun pattern is not as productive as in Mishnaic Hebrew.
Many words are formed form earlier construct state combinations, and are sometimes unrecognizable as such:
- ambin 'brick' from אבני בניין *ʔabanē binyan 'building stones'
- søvgom '(slang) debacle, fiasco; a mess' from שפך דם *šapk dam 'spilling of blood'
- ngénøm 'source' from עין מים ʕēn mayim 'spring of water'
- løseppin 'to like' from נשא פני lit. 'lift the face of' meaning 'to favor'
- klalib 'conscience' from קול הלב lit. 'voice of the heart'
Some productive affixes are:
- ben-/ble- = agentive
- פנאַר pnar 'wolf' comes from pre-Cubrite *בן הר 'son-of mountain'
- beδ- = place noun
- bəd-/pd- = singulative of a collective noun
- פדע pdą = tree, from *batt ya3r 'daughter of forest'
- -əl = transitivizer or causative of verbs (from a -w ~ -l alternation in some intransitive-transitive verb pairs)
Example texts
UDHR, Article 1
- Xol plenušiw bru'm lalest kø hofsr; hem sowr ηa kovdaz ke tsrokkuthiw. Vru'm lifkudh pø þbín ke gulaliv, ke re ηalem laxt yax šuthif bø nøšóm ahwr.
- all human/PL-DEF.PL.M PASS.PRES-3PL be_born as free-M.PL; 3PL equal-PL on dignity-DEF.SG and right-DEF.F.PL. PASS.PRES-3PL entrust with understanding and conscience, and PRES on-3PL walk with one_another with spirit brotherhood.
- All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights. They are endowed with reason and conscience and should act toward one another in a spirit of brotherhood.
Tower of Babel
Cubrite | Masoretic Hebrew (translit.) |
---|---|
|
|
Schleicher's Fable
Phrasebook
When three forms are given, the forms are respectively for addressing one male informally, one female informally, and multiple people or formal language.
- Soløm! [ˈsɔləm] = Hello! / Goodbye!
- Hakr gorv! = See you!
- Ebí Hi! = Welcome! (etym. [God] has brought you)
- Parg lo Hi! = Thank you!
- imtsøhém Hi = Please (etym. if it finds favor in your eyes)
- also plíz [pləɪz] (from English)
- ngeth tuv [ŋɛθ tuv] = have fun