Hantza
Hantza is pronounced natively as /ˈhant͡sa/ (phonetically [ˈħ̝änt͡sɐ]) and may be Anglicised to /ˈhænt͡sə/.
I have yet to even begin to imagine the world that this language belongs to. However, as it is 99% of the time with me, it will most likely be a modified version of the real world, not an a priori fantasy world.
Phonology
Consonants
Labial | Alveolar | Palatal | Velar | Glottal | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nasal | m | n | ŋ | ||
Plosive | p b | t d | k | ʔ | |
Fricative | f | s | h | ||
Affricate | t͡s d͡z | ||||
Approx. | j | w | |||
Liquid | r l |
Vowels
Front | Back | |
---|---|---|
Close | i | u |
Mid | e | o |
Open | a |
Orthography
The orthography needs to go here!
Phonotactics
- The basic phonotactic template is (C)(C)V(C)
- Word-initial consonants: only /dz/ is disallowed
- Permitted word-initial clusters: any plosive + /j, w, r, l/ or /s/ + /p, t, k/
- Permitted word-final consonants: /m, n, ŋ, t, d, k, ʔ, s, h, ts, r, l/
- Word-final clusters: none allowed
- Word-final and word-initial vowels: all are allowed
- Medial clusters: any combination involving /dz/ is not permitted
Morphological processes
elision, lenition, reduplication, metathesis
Morphophonology
Morphophonology needs to go here!
Prosody
Stress
As with Czech and Hungarian, the primary stress of a word falls on its first syllable. Secondary normally falls on the first closed syllable thereafter or, failing that, the third syllable of a word. Evidently in disyllabic word the secondary stress is placed on the second syllable.
Stress is not distinctive and is also relatively weak, unlike that of, for example, Russian. It is not indicated in the orthography.
Rhythm
Hantza is a syllable-timed language, that is to say that the duration of every syllable is equal.
Intonation
Intonation is the variation pitch indicating the attitudes and emotions of the speaker, signalling the difference between statements and questions, between different types of question, focusing attention on important elements speech and helping to regulate conversational interaction.
Typology
- Morphology: heavy on the verbal morphology, minimal on the nominal
- Morphosyntactic alignment: nom-acc?
- Agency, animacy
- No gender
- Verbs: polypersonal agreement
- No case marking
- Relational nouns?
- Inalienable possession, possessive prefixes
- Plurals only for animates
- Default word order: VSO
- Non-configurational (new news before the verb (often definite), old news after the verb (often indefinite))
- Head-marking
- Topic-comment/thème-rhème & focus
- How are adjectives got rid of?
- Infixes?
Morphology
Broadly speaking, there are three parts of speech in Hantza: nouns, verbs and particles.
Nouns
Pronouns act identically to common nouns
Nouns are not marked for case
Verbs
Verb paradigm is prefixing
Hantza modes combine tense, aspect and mood:
- Imperfective (unmarked)
- Iterative
- Delimitative
- Perfective
- Retrospective
- Future
- Inchoative
- Cessative
- Irrealis
- Optative
- Cohortative
- Imperative
- Jussive
Fastidious with transitivity and valency
Hantza verbs mark for subject, direct object and indirect object:
- 1sg
- 2sg
- 3sg/pl animate
- 3sg/pl inanimate
- 4sg/pl aka obviative
- indefinite
- reflexive
- reciprocal
Hantza is pro-drop
There is a mediopassive voice
Evidentiality is marked on the verb
Verb phrases can be nominalised
Particles
Adverbs, demonstratives and postpositions come under "particles".