Paang
Cuam (shlản Củam) is inspired by Irish, Thai and Hmong.
Phonology
Initials: all Irish single consonants plus prenasalized stops and h(n/l/r)-; allow br dr tr gr cr bl dl tl gl cl; p- fl- fr- only occurs in borrowings; stops are +asp/-asp like in Scottish Gaelic
hm- is only used in so-called hm-reduplication which has the same meaning as the English one; Cuam is the source of schm-reduplication in Irta English
Séimhiú should have different outcomes from Irish (th dh should be /tsh ts=/)
In unmutated words, all Irish unmutated initials + séimhiúed initials are permissible
séimhiúed words can't séimhiú again, but when they get urúed it manifests as prenasalization:
- **CV-(initial) > (lexically séimhiúed initial)
- **-n CV-(initial) > n:(initial) > nC (prenasalized initial)
Vowels: all combos of +-pal x vowel allowed in Irish (assuming broad final) but they sound more like Scottish Gaelic versions (á is not backed etc.)
- a ea u i o eo á eá é ao(i) í ó eó ú iú ia ua (slenderizing ua) (written a ea u i o eo aa eaa ee ao ii oo eoo uu iu ia ua iua)
Allowed finals: -b -d -g -dh (-j) -imh (nasalization + -j) -bh (-w) -mh (nasalization + -w) -m -n -il -r (after short vowels written -bb -dd -gg -ddh -immh -bbh -mmh -mm -nn -ill -rr)
- -mhail (nasalization + l) -mhar (nasalization + r) in loans: némhar némhar 'to plot/scheme' (from Irtan Icelando-Sinitic)
Tones are essentially the same as in Thai. "Live syllables" (non-checked) have 5 possible tones: áM áL áF áH áR (mid low falling high rising, as in Thai). "Dead syllables" (open short vowel or stop final) have fewer possible tones.
The following is a minimal set for all 5 tones:
- Mid: laa /lāː/ [l̪ˠaː˧] 'white'
- Low: làa /làː/ [l̪ˠaː˨˩] 'loud'
- Falling: lâa /lâː/ [l̪ˠaː˥˥˩] 'fruit'
- High: láa /láː/ [l̪ˠaː˧˥] 'easy'
- Rising/Dipping: lảa /lǎː/ [l̪ˠaː˨˩˧] 'vase, jar, ceramic jug'
Orthography
Cuam uses an sbugida derived from the Far East Semitic abugida. Far East Semitic loans are written as in the original.
It uses 4 tone marks, like Thai does, but they're named after Far East Semitic numbers:
- deodh chádd - tone B
- chádd is not actually a cognate of Hebrew אחד but a cognate of עשתי in Hebrew עשתי עשר 'eleven'.
- deodh thỉan - tone C
- deodh shlàd - high tone
- deodh arr-fámh - rising tone
Grammar
Nouns
Cuam has absolute and construct states, like Semitic languages. Absolute state is sometimes a floating mutating morpheme that marks gender (marks absolute state, construct state doesn't mutate). Sometimes absolute state manifests as a separate preposed word or syllable which may or may not mutate the word itself. (absolute state comes from a preceding classifier)
1-10: leddh, nàn, feỏ, shlùdd, dâimmh, án, ciûr, shnản, shleiddh, fáoil
leM is used as an indefinite article like Vietnamese một
Pronouns
cûd = I, ùmh = thou, gaè = we (du incl)
Diachronics
Some "possible" syllables should be disallowed bc of historical sound change, like unasp stop initial + nasal coda + 2nd tone syllables in Mandarin
Before having mutations, Cuam had long, short and ultrashort vowels. Mutations come from preceding ultrashort syllables that are lost.
After Cuam gained mutations, it underwent the medieval Sinosphere register/tone split like most other languages in the Sinosphere, resulting in mutation depending on tone. Early Modern Cuam had a very complex system of mutations and tonal ablaut, which Modern Cuam simplified to a finite set of noun genders by analogy.
Tone diachronics
Middle Cuam (before the tone split) had 3 tones, like Middle Chinese, marked in the native script as unmarked, tone 1 and tone 2.
Consonant classes (séimhiú didn't change the consonant class while urú did)
- Mid: *k- series, glottal stop
- High: *kh- series, voiceless fricatives, shR-
- Low: *g- series, voiced fricatives, resonants
- g- series became kh- for tones 0, 1 and entering tone; g- for tone 2
class | ending | unmarked (tone A) | deodh chádd (tone B) | deodh thỉan (tone C) |
---|---|---|---|---|
mid | dead | low | - | fall |
mid | alive | mid | low | fall |
high | dead | low | - | fall |
high | alive | rise | low | fall |
low | dead (short vowel) | high | fall | - |
low | dead (long vowel) | fall | - | high |
low | alive | mid | fall | high |
(Later borrowings can have other initial + tone combinations)