Elodian

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Elodian
ɂelodīru, gulkā ɂelodīrā
Flag of ʔelodīhūto
Pronunciation[ˈguɬkɑː ʔelɔˈdiːraː]
Created byLili21
DateJul 2022
SettingAlt-Earth
EthnicityElodians (ɂelodī)
Native speakers12,000,000 (2021)
Official status
Official language in
ʔelodīhūto
Regulated byNational Language Academy of ʔelodīhūto
Kalēmīa Mellī twā Gulkā twā ʔelodīhūto
This article contains IPA phonetic symbols. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters. For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA.

Important note: Elodian is, fundamentally, a rethinking of Lifashian intended as a kind of drop-in replacement in its setting.

Elodian, natively referred to as ɂelodīru or gulkā ɂelodīrā, is an Indo-European language, an isolate inside the family, spoken in an alternate timeline of Earth in the northeastern corner of Asia Minor, i.e. the historical region of Pontus and neighboring areas across the Pontic Alps into the Armenian highlands. It is the official language of the republic of ʔelodīhūto, spoken by the majority of its population. Elodian is the native language of about twelve million people in the world, the majority of which in ʔelodīhūto, with smaller communities in Eastern Turkey, Syria, Iran and Iraq.

Elodian developed on its own, distinctly from other Indo-European languages, although it is definitely closer to the Anatolian languages, particularly the Luwian subgroup, than to other languages in the family, despite sharing some traits with Armenian and Greek. It is particularly noteworthy due to its system of split ergativity, which makes it virtually an ergative-absolutive language (although not syntactically ergative) except with first- and second-person referents, which require a nominative-accusative alignment.

Its vocabulary has a substantial number of inherited roots, but through millennia the language absorbed many loanwords, especially from Persian and Arabic (through the former), and to smaller extents from its neighbours Armenian, the Kartvelian languages and Turkish, as well as from Greek and Russian. Long-term Genoese colonization and reciprocal contacts also introduced many Ligurian loans, as well as forming one of the main ethnic minorities in the country, Elodian Ligurians, which had a marked influence on the culture of coastal urban areas.

It is written in the Elodian alphabet, a bicameral script ultimately related to other ancient scripts of Asia Minor like the Lydian alphabet.

Miscellanea

(This section exists mostly as a placeholder for "interesting things" about the language to justify the existence of this page, until I write the full phonology, morphology, syntax sections.)

Proto-Elodian underwent a change similar to Grimm's Law in Proto-Germanic or even closer to the one in Proto-Armenian; however, it did not affect labiovelars. The most strikingly Elodian correspondence is PIE *t > Elodian l, through an intermediate *ð stage.

The endonym ɂelodi is from PIE *h₁léwdʰis.

The PIE case system was drastically simplified, however inflections show some of the inherited complexity. Stems are given with two forms: the nominative/absolutive singular ending and the oblique stem vowel used for all other cases: the case endings are agglutinated to this stem, and generally have postvocalic and postconsonantal allomorphs. There are six cases - nominative/absolutive, ergative, accusative, dative, equative (a likely Hurrian influence) and locative - plus a relic genitive.

Most letters have their IPA values, except c /tʃ/ j /dʒ/ ng /ŋ/, ǝ /ɛ/, /ɽ~ɻ/, š /ʃ/, o /ɔ/. Long vowels are marked with a macron.

Morphology

Nouns

Elodian nouns decline for six cases: nominative-absolutive, ergative, accusative, dative, equative and locative, with a seventh one, the genitive, still found in some relic uses. Nouns are categorized according to the ending of their citation form (nominative-absolutive singular) and the corresponding oblique form, i.e. the stem to which the case endings are added.

Pattern Nominative/Absolutive Oblique Notes
Masculine
I -∅ -∅-
II -a -o- No longer productive
III -or- Same as feminine pattern II
IV -i -i- Moderately productive (borrowings ending in voiced obstruents)
V -o -u- Not productive per se, limited to a few nouns (e.g. hūlo "son", šargo "lion") and the derivational suffix -aždo.
Feminine
I -ā, -īa -eh-V, -ā-C (-īeh-V, -īa-C) -īa nouns are borrowings
I-b -ǝt- or -at- Arabic nouns in tāʾ marbūṭah. In contemporary Elodian these nouns generally follow pattern I, except in compounding.
II -or- Same as masculine pattern III
III -ih-V, -ī-C
IV -uh-V, -ū-C No longer productive
Neuter
I -e -i-
II -u -o-
III -o
IV -mā -mon-
V -mo -mot- Greek nouns in -μα(τ-)
VI -nē -ni- Mostly collectives

The following table shows the case endings. The ergative and accusative singular forms vary depending on whether the stem ends in a consonant or a vowel (feminine patterns I, III and IV use the prevocalic form here); the locative singular is generally -hu, with -šu depending on the preceding sound (historical RUKI law). In the nominative-absolutive plural -i is for masculine and feminine nouns, while for neuters; is exclusively used for masculine pattern IV.

Case Singular Plural
Nominative-absolutive -- -i (-ī) / -ā
Ergative -š, -eš -ex
Accusative -w, -o
Dative -(o)bo
Equative -(e)ɂār -(o)bīṛ
Locative -hu / -šu -ēšu
Genitive (relic) -ay (masculine)
-ē (feminine)
-i (neuter)
-ow

The predominant use of the genitive today is not syntactical, but merely as a derivational element forming nominal compounds. Its use in marking possession has been completely taken by the particle twe, which declines according to the gender of the possessed noun: twe is the masculine singular form; twā the feminine singular; the neuter singular; twī masculine and feminine plural and neuter plural.

See also

Notes