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Adamic Code
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Adamic Code | |
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Adamic | |
אדמס (ādamja) | |
![]() Adam naming the animals | |
Pronunciation | [àːˈdämi̯a] |
Created by | Veno |
Date | c. 25,000-12,000 BP |
Setting | Levant/Africa (?) |
Native speakers | - (2025) |
Pangaean Code
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Early form | Paleolithic Creole
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Map of areas where the Adamic Code is believed to have once been spoken
Levantine model
African model | |
Adamic, (אדמס קףל, ādamja qafl, [àːˈdämi̯a ˈɦäfl]) also referred to as Canonic, is a philosophical ab interiori language of the Mesolithic that consists on naming roots and applying grammatical patterns through introflection.
Etymology
The word ādamja is an adjective/noun superficially decomposed as the lemma ādama "ancestry" and the associative affix -ja-, therefore denoting "belonging to ancestry". Furthermore, without pattern transfixation, the pure root is -’-d-m- "ancestry", whose meaning was influenced by the Hebrew word אדם "Adam", name of the first man in the Old Testament. The Paleolithic Code was named as such due the similarity with the narrative of Genesis, where Adam was tasked to name the animals of Eden[1]:
19 And out of the ground the Lord God formed every beast of the field, and every fowl of the air; and brought them unto Adam to see what he would call them: and whatsoever Adam called every living creature, that was the name thereof.
20 And Adam gave names to all cattle, and to the fowl of the air, and to every beast of the field; but for Adam there was not found an help meet for him.[2]
Introduction
The Adamic Code was created to simulate a pre-afroasiatic language product of the creolization between the Pangaean Code[3] and the Diluvian Code[4]. [...]
Features
The results based on https://wals.info/feature
WALS | Adamic | |
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Consonant Inventories | 1A | Moderately small (15-18) Average (19-25) |
Vowel Quality Inventories | 2A | Small vowel inventory (2-4) / Average vowel inventory (5-6) |
Consonant-Vowel Ratio | 3A | Average (2.75-4.5) / Moderately high (4.5-6.5) |
Voicing in Plosives and Fricatives | 4A | Voicing contrast in both plosives and fricatives |
Voicing and Gaps in Plosive Systems | 5A | None missing in /p t k b d g/ |
Uvular Consonants | 6A | No uvulars |
Glottalized Consonants | 7A | No glottalized consonants |
Lateral Consonants | 8A | /l/, no obstruent laterals |
The Velar Nasal | 9A | No velar nasal |
Vowel Nasalization | 10A | Contrast absent |
Front Rounded Vowels | 11A | None |
Syllable Structure | 12A | Complex syllable structure (≥CCVCC≥) |
Tone | 13A | No tones |
Fixed Stress Locations | 14A | No fixed stress (mostly weight-sensitive stress) |
Weight-Sensitive Stress | 15A | Unbounded: Stress can be anywhere in the word |
Weight Factors in Weight-Sensitive Stress Systems | 16A | Lexical: lexical stress, diacritic weight / Long vowel + Coda: long vowels or closed syllables |
Rhythm Types | 17A | Absent: no rhythmic stress |
Absence of Common Consonants | 18A | All present |
Presence of Uncommon Consonants | 19A | None |
Fusion of Selected Inflectional Formatives | 20A | Ablaut/concatenative |
Exponence of Selected Inflectional Formatives | 21A | Monoexponential case / Case + number, Case + referentiality |
Exponence of Tense-Aspect-Mood Inflection | 21B | TAM-agreement |
Inflectional Synthesis of the Verb | 22A | 2-3 categories per word |
Locus of Marking in the Clause | 23A | Other types |
Locus of Marking in Possessive Noun Phrases | 24A | Other |
Locus of Marking: Whole-language Typology | 25A | Inconsistent or other |
Zero Marking of A and P Arguments | 25B | Non-zero marking |
Prefixing vs. Suffixing in Inflectional Morphology | 26A | Approximately equal amounts of suffixing and prefixing |
Reduplication | 27A | Productive full and partial reduplication |
Case Syncretism | 28A | Inflectional case marking is syncretic Inflectional case marking is never syncretic |
Syncretism in Verbal Person/Number Marking | 29A | Subject person/number marking is syncretic Subject person/number marking is never syncretic |
Number of Genders | 30A | Two Three |
Sex-based and Non-sex-based Gender Systems | 31A | Sex-based |
Systems of Gender Assignment | 32A | Semantic Assignment |
Coding of Nominal Plurality | 33A | Plural suffix Plural stem change |
Occurrence of Nominal Plurality | 34A | Plural in all nouns, always obligatory |
Plurality in Independent Personal Pronouns | 35A | Person stem with a nominal plural affix e.g. nu "I", nuan "I-PLU" |
The Associative Plural | 36A | Associative plural marker also used for additive plurals e.g. zaûl irau "the Sun and the Moon" |
Definite Articles | 37A | Definite word distinct from demonstrative / Definite affix on noun e.g. liviatan iru ~ liviatani "the whale" |
Indefinite Articles | 38A | Indefinite word distinct from numeral for 'one' e.g. liviatan aru ~ liviatana "a whale" |
Inclusive/Exclusive Distinction in Independent Pronouns | 39A | No inclusive/exclusive opposition |
Inclusive/Exclusive Distinction in Verbal Inflection | 40A | No inclusive/exclusive opposition |
Distance Contrasts in Demonstratives | 41A | Five (or more)-way contrast e.g. kiru "this (next)", kīru "this (near)", kāru "this/that (in between)", kūru "that (away)", kuru "that (far away)" |
Pronominal and Adnominal Demonstratives | 42A | Different inflectional features e.g. liviatan kiru "this whale", akiru "this" |
Notes
- The WALS metrics consider solely ejective, implosive, and glottalized sonorants as "glottalized consonants"; agreement to include number and person, and tense/aspect/mood (TAM) to be one category within a "category-per-word value" [...]
Phonology
Adamic can have as many as 24 consonants and 12 vowels, with allophonic tones liable to manifestate depending on the position of the stress. Its syllable structure of C2V2C2/C3(V) supports up to 3 sounds in a consonant cluster intervocalically and 2 elsewhere as onset or coda (e.g. qfál "saying", aktvú "I cut", and ka’n "year"); also, it does not accept triphthongs. The most remarkable phonetic and phonological features include the presence of:
- a simple vowel system composed of i, u, and a, with phonemic length.
- predetermined set of vowels available depending on the speaker's gender.
- systematic sound transitions dictated by a coloration table.
Consonants
Adamic has 24 or 18 phonemic consonants, depending on whether emphatics are disregarded. The special status of the glottalized series is due their phonological equivalence with the plain stops (k, g, p, b, t, d) within the language, despite being genuine inheritances from the ejective/implosive sounds of the Diluvian and Pangaean Codes. Anyhow, even if optionally excluded, they may still appear as allophones of their counterparts, specially next to /ʔ/.
Notes
- Adamic identifies "phonological coordinates" within its consonantal inventory, classifying terms into relevant categories of VOICE, MANNER, and ARTICULATION. Even sequences among its subdivisions follow a predetermined order, being voiceless>voiced in VOICE, occlusive>sonorant>turbulent in MANNER, and guttural>labial>dental in ARTICULATION. As not all members of those sets correspond to the phonetic qualities attributed to them (with the exception of VOICE's members), the last two sequences are respectively referred to as the KHS-type and the IUA-type, with their proper compositions being named as expected: K-type, H-type, S-type, I-type, U-type, and A-type in order.
- /k, g, (kˀ), (gˀ), h, ɦ, s, z/, part of the KIHS-type, is a major subgroup composed by plosive velars, (quasi-implosive emphatics), fricative glottals, and fricative sibilants.
- /k, g/, part of the KI-type, represent the velar series of older paleolithic codes.
- /k/ may be realized as [c] or even [ç] if onset/coda to front vowels.
- /g/ may be realized as [ɟ] or even [ʝ] if onset/coda to front vowels.
- /(kˀ), (gˀ)/ are also considered part of the KI-type, suffering the same phonological effects as their counterparts.
- /kˀ/ may be realized as [kʼ] or [kʰ], or even as [cʼ] or [cʰ] if onset/coda to front vowels.
- /gˀ/ may be realized as [ɠ] or [gʱ], or even as [ʄ] or [ɟʱ] if onset/coda to front vowels.
- /h, ɦ/, part of the HI-type, act as reductions of the laryngeal series of older paleolithic codes.
- /h/ ranges from [h], [ħ], and [χ] to [x]; its Canonic allophone is [kʷ].
- /ɦ/ ranges from [ɦ], [ʕ], and [ʁ] to [ɣ]; its Canonic allophone is [gʷ].
- /s, z/, part of the SI-type, descend from the sibilant series of older paleolithic codes.
- /s/ may be realized as [j̥], or even as [ʃ] or [ɕ] if onset/coda to front vowels; its Canonic allophone is [kʲ].
- /z/ may be realized as [j], or even as [ʒ] or [ʑ] if onset/coda to front vowels; its Canonic allophone is [gʲ].
- /k, g/, part of the KI-type, represent the velar series of older paleolithic codes.
- /p, b, (pˀ), (bˀ), n̥, m, f, v/, part of the KUHS-type, is a major subgroup composed by plosive labials, (quasi-implosive emphatics), nasal dentals/labials, and fricative labio-dentals.
- /p, b/, part of the KU-type, represent the labial series of older paleolithic codes.
- /p/ may be realized as [kʷ].
- /b/ may be realized as [gʷ].
- /(pˀ), (bˀ)/ are also considered part of the KU-type, suffering the same phonological effects as their counterparts.
- /pˀ/ may be realized as [pʼ] or [pʰ], or even as [kʼʷ] or [kʰʷ].
- /bˀ/ may be realized as [ɓ] or [bʱ], or even as [ɠʷ] [gʱʷ].
- /n, m/, part of the HU-type, act as reductions of the nasal series of older paleolithic codes.
- /n̥/ ranges from [n̥], [n], [ŋ̥], [ŋ], and [ɲ̥] to [ɲ]; its Canonic allophone is [pʷ].
- /m/ ranges from [m̥], [m], and [ɱ̥] to [ɱ]; its Canonic allophone is [bʷ].
- /f, v/, part of the SU-type, are innovations, not descending from older paleolithic codes.
- /f/ may be realized as [w̥], [ɸ], or even [θ]; its Canonic allophone is [pʲ].
- /v/ may be realized as [w], [β], or even [ð]; its Canonic allophone is [bʲ].
- /p, b/, part of the KU-type, represent the labial series of older paleolithic codes.
- /t, d, (tˀ), (dˀ), l̥, r, t͡s, ʔ/, part of the KAHS-type, is a major subgroup composed by plosive velars, (quasi-implosive emphatics), fricative glottals, and fricative sibilants.
- /t, d/, part of the KA-type, represent the dental series of older paleolithic codes.
- /t/ may be realized as [t͡ʃ] or even [t͡ɕ] if onset/coda to front vowels.
- /d/ may be realized as [d͡ʒ] or even [d͡ʑ] if onset/coda to front vowels.
- /(tˀ), (dˀ)/ are also considered part of the KA-type, suffering the same phonological effects as their counterparts.
- /tˀ/ may be realized as [tʼ] or [tʰ], or even as [t͡ʃʼ], [t͡ʃʰ], [t͡ɕʼ], or [t͡ɕʰ] if onset/coda to front vowels.
- /dˀ/ may be realized as [ɗ] or [dʱ], or even as [d͡ʒʱ] or [d͡ʑʱ] if onset/coda to front vowels.
- /l̥, r/, part of the HA-type, act as reductions of the liquid series of older paleolithic codes.
- /l̥/ ranges from [l̥], [l], [ɬ], [ɮ], and [ʎ̥] to [ʎ]; its Canonic allophone is [tʷ].
- /r/ ranges from [r̥], [r], [ɾ̥], [ɾ], and [ɹ̥] to [ɹ] ; its Canonic allophone is [dʷ].
- /t͡s, ʔ/, part of the SA-type, descend partially from older paleolithic codes in the form of /t͡s/, yet innovative with /ʔ/.
- /t͡s/ may be realized as [t͡ɬ], or even as [ʃ], [ɕ], [t͡ʃ] or [t͡ɕ] if onset/coda to front vowels; its Canonic allophone is [tʲ].
- /ʔ/ may be realized as [d͡ɮ], or even as [∅]; its Canonic allophone is [dʲ].
- /t, d/, part of the KA-type, represent the dental series of older paleolithic codes.
- /k, g, (kˀ), (gˀ), h, ɦ, s, z/, part of the KIHS-type, is a major subgroup composed by plosive velars, (quasi-implosive emphatics), fricative glottals, and fricative sibilants.
Vowels
Adamic has a basic 3 vowel system with length distinction yielding 18 units of monophthongs, diphthongs, and long dipthongs. Alternatively, in the poetic register, diphthongs may become monophthongs by introducing the new qualities of /e/, /o/, and /ɨ/~/ʉ/, thus resulting in 6 qualities and 36 vocalic units as a whole. In sequence, the masculine register of Adamic is here treated as possessing the following monophthongs:
Front | Near-front | Central | Near-back | Back | |
Close | |||||
Near‑close | |||||
Close‑mid | |||||
Mid | |||||
Open‑mid | |||||
Near‑open | |||||
Open |
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Notes
- Much like consonants, vowels in Adamic are positioned in the currents front>back>central (POSITION) and short>long (LENGTH); with the process exceptionally being known by the trigrammaton IAU or even the pentagrammaton IEAOU, which may serve as alphabetic recitations when not symbols of cosmic order. Contrary to the consonantal series, though, long vowels tend to carry a non-phonemic rising pitch when stressed, and a falling pitch when unstressed, in order to further distinguish them from plain vowels; they also may generate new articulations of themselves depending on their arrangement and whether one's particular form of the Adamic Code puts prominence on the /i/ (feminine) or the /u/ (masculine) vowels, determined by sex/gender:
- /i, iː/ are the close front unrounded [i, iː].
- /e, eː/ are the close-mid front unrounded [e, eː]. They are the respective products of the monophthongization of /i̯a/ and /ai̯/.
- /u, uː/ are the close back rounded [u, uː]
- /o, oː/ are the close-mid back rounded [o, oː]. They are the respective products of the monophthongization of /u̯a/ and /au̯/.
- /a, aː/ are the open central unrounded [ä, äː], but may be pronounced as the open front unrounded [a, aː] or the open back rounded [ɒ, ɒː] if next to front and back vowels respectively.
- /ɨ, ɨː/~/ʉ, ʉː/ are the close central unrounded~rounded [ɨ, ɨː]~[ʉ, ʉː], but may be pronounced as [y, yː]~[ɯ, ɯː]. They are the respective products of the monophthongization of /i̯u/ and /ui̯/ in the masculine U-register and /u̯i/ and /iu̯/ in the feminine I-register.
- /i, iː/ are the close front unrounded [i, iː].
Coloration Table
In Adamic, sounds possess the property to transition between consonants and vowels. This process is known as "coloration", consisting on the equivalence of consonantal VOICE, MANNER, and ARTICULATION with vocalic LENGTH and POSITION.
-/+ | I Type | U Type | A Type |
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H Type | h ɦ | n̥ m | l̥ r |
S Type | s z | f v | t͡s ʔ |
K Type | k g | p b | t d |
Notes
- Any element of the triconsonantal root may transition when inflected into a word. The exact result depends on the specific morphological attributes associated with said words. In the following table, for example, the medial sound of each root is optionally vocalized after the insertion of a postdiluvian pattern vowel:
Root | Lemma | Gloss |
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־ל־כ־נ־ -l-k-n- |
לכנ luín |
wolf |
־מ־ף־ר־ -m-f-r- |
מףר maúr |
death |
־ג־ל־ל־ -g-l-l- |
גלל gâl |
cosmos |
Writing System
Not only for thematic reasons, Adamic is written with the Hebrew Script due the predicability of vowels in the language, wherein it is in fact more suited for an abjad; nevertheless, it is possible to codify Adamic alphabetically for learning purposes. In the latter case, the code is written with 25 letters of the Latin Script with three diacritics appearing on vowels (circumflex accent, acute accent and macron) and one in consonants (an apostrophe, also treated as an independent letter when representing a glottal stop).
Ortography
Adamic Abjad | |||||||||||||||
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ה h / i |
ק ɦ / iː |
נ n̥ / u |
מ m / uː |
ל l̥ / a |
ר r / aː | ||||||||||
ס s / i |
ז z / iː |
ף f / u |
ו v / uː |
צ t͡s / a |
א ʔ / aː | ||||||||||
כ k / i |
ג g / iː |
פ p / u |
ב b / uː |
ת t / a |
ד d / aː | ||||||||||
כּ kˀ / i |
גּ gˀ / iː |
פּ pˀ / u |
בּ bˀ / uː |
תּ tˀ / a |
דּ dˀ / aː |
Notes
- The symbols <ס> and <ף> may represent the semivowels /i̯/ and /u̯/ respectively when morphemes. An example is the word אדמס /aʔadami̯a/ itself, wherein the particle ־ס־ is not manifested as /s/.
Romanization
Aа /a/ |
Bb /b/ |
Cc /t͡s/ |
Dd /d/ |
Ee /e/ |
Ff /f/ |
Gg /g/ |
Hh /h/ |
Ii /i~i̯/ |
Jj /i̯/ |
Kk /k/ |
Ll /l̥/ |
Mn /m/ |
Nn /n̥/ |
Oo /o/ |
Pp /p/ |
Qq /ɦ/ |
Rr /r/ |
Ss /s/ |
Tt /t/ |
Uu /u~u̯/ |
Vv /v/ |
Ww /u̯/ |
Yy /ɨ~ʉ/ |
Zz /z/ |
Notes
- The letter <’>, representing the glottal stop (ʔ), may be left out, as it often disappears in the spoken language. Alternatively, it could be expressed by the letter <Xx> when alone as onset/coda.
- e.g. drā /draː/ "six".
- c.e.g. drā’ or drāx /draːʔ/ "six".
- e.g. drā /draː/ "six".
- Emphatic consonants use the apostrophe <’>, as <K’k’>, <G’g’>, <P’p’>, <B’b’>, <T’t’>, and <D’d’>.
- e.g. -k’-r-p- "destruction".
- c.e.g. -k-r-p- "detachment".
- e.g. -k’-r-p- "destruction".
- The letter <Qq> is assimilated to <Hh> after a voiced stop.
- e.g. ghīz /gɦiːz/ "four".
- c.e.g. *gqīz /gɦiːz/ "four".
- e.g. ghīz /gɦiːz/ "four".
- The letters <Jj> and <Ww> are exclusively used in derivation particles.
- e.g. -ja /i̯a/ "belonging to".
- c.e.g. *-ia /i̯a/ "belonging to".
- e.g. -ja /i̯a/ "belonging to".
- Short and long vowels, if relevantly stressed, gain an accute (<V́>) and circumflex accent (<V̂>) respectively.
- e.g. -k-f-n- ⇒ /u// ⇒ kúfn /ˈkufn/ or kûn /ˈkuːn/ "dog".
- c.e.g. -k-f-n- ⇒ /-/ ⇒ kun /kun/ "canine".
- e.g. -k-f-n- ⇒ /u// ⇒ kúfn /ˈkufn/ or kûn /ˈkuːn/ "dog".
- If relevantly unstressed, long vowels are marked by macrons (<V̄>).
- e.g. -d-v-n- ⇒ /-/ ⇒ dūv /duːv/ "biological".
- c.e.g. -m-f-r- ⇒ /-/ ⇒ mur /mur/ "dead".
- e.g. -d-v-n- ⇒ /-/ ⇒ dūv /duːv/ "biological".
- In diphthongs, the second element bears the diacritical mark.
- e.g. saíkat /ˈsai̯kat/ "philosopher".
- c.e.g. *sáikat /ˈsai̯kat/ "philosopher".
- e.g. saíkat /ˈsai̯kat/ "philosopher".
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Grammar [...]
Adamic is highly inflective, derivational, and reduplicative, alternating between fusional and agglutivative morphologies with an overly analytic clause agreement. Its grammar, highly reminiscent of older Paleolithic Codes, can be summarized by 3 classes of morphemes:
- The field stem, consisting on the arrangement consonants (/) and vowels (-) in a predefined order inside the root-pattern fields. Its primary morphological markers are a triliterate segment known as triconsonantal root, and the patterns, which are either modifications of the root structure or the addition of transfixes into the triliterate form, also responsible for the nouns (edenic, prediluvian, and postdiluvian), appositions (adjectives, incorporations, adverbs, expressions, prefixes, and postpositions), and verbs (finite verbs and infinite verbs) of the language.
- The continuous affix, a simple connective with very limited phonotactics. Its primary morphological marker is concatenation, wherein it can be both a prefix and a suffix, beyond responsible for the comparison and alternative derivational procedure of the language.
- The performative clitic, interpreted as a marginal unit whose position is defined by a "vacuum space" (_). Its primary morphological marker is the triptote formula, which is responsible for the pronouns, articles, and particles of the language.
Conjunct | ||||
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Triptote Formula | Concatenation | Root-pattern | Concatenation | Triptote Formula |
Clitic | Affix | Stem | Affix | Clitic |
Root-Pattern
One of the most remarkable features of Adamic is its naming prowess by ackowledging a concept into triliteral form (e.g. the root -d-v-n- denoting "biology/evolution" via the similarity with Darwin). This is due the Triconsonantal Root, whose use may be summarized by including complex ideas within a sequence of consonants. In complement, the Patterns are responsible for specifying a subject within such broader meanings (e.g. the pattern (i)/aí/a/ yielding daívan "biologist").
The process of triliteration can be easily demonstrated by the names of famous figures (fictional or not), due their association of feats. The transfiguration may be boundless and informal, or follow a select list of rules for further organization:
- Rule 0: Consonants are counted as first-class members, then vowels as second-class (except sounds akin to /a/), and finally semivowels as third-class members. All members being susceptible to be substituted by equivalent sounds.
- e.g.1 m and n can be achieved through nasal consonants. Therefore /ŋ/ ⇒ n.
- e.g.2 p, b, p’, b’, t, d, t’, d’, k, g, k’, and g’ can be achieved through plosives, even if secondary characteristics are present. Therefore /pʰ/ ⇒ p’, but /ɸ/ ⇒ f.
- e.g.3 r and l can be achieved through liquid consonants, even if secondary characteristics are present. Therefore /ɾ/ ⇒ r, and /ʎ/ ⇒ l.
- e.g.4 h and q in special can be achieved through laryngeals, with a treatment of q as voiced. Therefore /ħ/ ⇒ h, and /ʁ/ ⇒ q.
- e.g.5 As there is no /j/ and /w/ in the Adamic Code (except as grammatical semivowels), those sounds become z and v if relevantly voiced. On the other hand, if vowels such as /i/, /e/, /u/, /o/, and /a/ are considered, such sounds are represented by s, z, f, v, and ’ respectively.
- Rule 1 (1 syllable): The first and last members take the initial and final positions, the first member in between them is the medial one, and if there is none, it will be a glottal stop.
- e.g.1 Planck yields -p-l-k- "quantum mechanics".
- e.g.2 Grimm yields -g-r-m- and not -g-s-m for "folklore", as /r/ is counted before /ɪ/ in both priority and sequence.
- e.g.3 Gauss yields -g-v-s- and not -g-’-s- for "mathematics", as /a/ has less priority than the semivowel /w/.
- Rule 2 (2 syllables): The first three members are counted to assume their respective positions, except those members that act as closed codas in a consonant cluster.
- e.g.1 Plátōn yields -p-l-t- and not -p-l-n- or -p-t-n- for "metaphysics".
- e.g.2 Caesar yields -k-s-r- for "political/militar might".
- e.g.3 Darwin yields -d-v-n- and not -d-r-v- or -d-r-n- for "biology", because /ɹ/ acts as a closed coda in the consonant cluster /ɹw/.
- 'Rule 3 (3 or more syllables): each first member of the first three syllables takes its respective position.
- e.g.1 Sōkratēs yields -s-k-t- for "philosophy".
- e.g.2 Aristotélēs yields -’-r-t- for "logic", as every bare initial vowel in a syllable is considered to bear a glottal stop in Adamic.
- e.g.3 Lavoisier yields -l-v-z- for "chemistry".
Regarding a less specialized vocabulary, the rules differ. The Diluvian Code, for one, is the main source of the Adamic lexicon, yielding a diverse list of lemmas for the basic vocabulary of the language; lemmas which are straightforward adaptations of its words.
- hocar "fire" [Diluvian] ⇒ -h-v-l- "fire" [Adamic].
- qucar "sound/speech" [Diluvian] ⇒ -q-f-l- "sound/speech" [Adamic].
- yammuhar "sea" [Diluvian] ⇒ -m-f-h- "sea" [Adamic].
In the sample above, the process involving the triliteration of Diluvian words is particular. Besides basic sound changes, such as the laryngeal following the currents /h/ > /h/ and /ħ/ > /ɦ/ (not /h/ in this case), or the particle /-t͡səɾ/ regularly transforming into /-l-/, it is noticeable that vowels are not treated discriminately, but are counted in order as much as consonants; instead, secondary particles such as the ya- and -(c)ar in yammuhar are counted last and even neglected.
Another special class of triconsonantal roots is the one containing those influenced by the Pangaean Code. This class may either be secluded to abstract ideas or actions, or rarely include the borrowing of proper lexicon (e.g. -q-h-f- "animalism" in Adamic being from uħihu "animal" in Pangaean, rather than au "animal" in Diluvian). Diluvian influence is only relevant through phonological filters, which operate under other constraints, such as the medial member of a combination often being reserved to a glottal stop, and an epenthetic -r- or -l- being added in the third position (when not taken by the root) to mark a primordial or non-primordial construction respectively.
- n "instance" [Pangaean] ⇒ -n-’-r- "instance" [Adamic].
- na "nearness/society" [Diluvian] ⇒ -n-’-l- "nearness/society" [Adamic].
- n̠ "ancientness" [Pangaean] ⇒ kna "old age" [Diluvian] ⇒ -k-’-n- "aging" [Adamic].
Other functionalities of triconsonantal roots include fusion, wherein the possessed element has the first member conserved and the second and third erased, while the possessive element has merely the medial member erased.
- -q-h-f- "animalism" + -p-’-r- "bearing" = -q-p-r- "ensnaring".
Regarding the broader formulas with patterns, some remarks can be made. Vowels (-) do not border each other; three consonants (///) will effectively render the medial one a vowel; vowels without a nucleous and/or coda tend to disappear even though relevant; and by all means nouns consist of -/-/-/-, -///-, -/-/-/, /-/-/-, /-//, and //-/; appositions of /-/, -/-, -//, //-, /--, and --/; and verbs of -/-//, //-/-, /-/-/, -///-, /-//-, -//-/, -///, and ///-.
Nouns
Nouns are lexicalized by class, element, density, composition, classifier, and/or formality:
- thirty-six classes: Class 1, Class 2, Class 3, Class 4, Class 5, Class 6, Class 7, Class 8, Class 9, Class 10, Class 11, Class 12, Class 13, Class 14, Class 15, Class 16, Class 17, Class 18, Class 18, Class 19, Class 20, Class 21, Class 22, Class 23, Class 24, Class 25, Class 26, Class 27, Class 28, Class 29, Class 30, Class 31, Class 32, Class 33, Class 34, Class 35, Class 36.
- six elements: solid, current, ethereal, elemental, igneous, and fluid.
- two densities: sparse and dense.
- three compositions: diffuse, insular, and concentrated.
- six classifiers: inanimated inhuman, animated human, diverse, generic, animated human, and animated inhuman.
- two formalities: informal and formal.
They can be divided into Prediluvian Nouns, with 1296 permutations (CLASS x ELEMENT x DENSITY x COMPOSITION), Postdiluvian Nouns with 12 permutations, (CLASSIFIER x FORMALITY), and Edenic Nouns with 2 permutations (∅). In all circumstances, their number may double under an ubiquitious feature referred to as state:
The grammatical state consists on the morphological formation triggered in exceptional syntactic constructions with the Triptote Formula (responsible for articles, pronouns, et cetera), wherein a transfix rearranges the root-pattern in order to fit it. The transfix is always a DEFINITION morpheme (e.g. the first vowel in the article iru "the"), and for this reason, highly abstract nouns such as those pertaining to the formula -/-/-/- and -///- (as well as non-finite verbs of formula -/// and ///-) not only repudiate articles, but lack a proper construct form beyond -///-. To exemplify the existence of articleless words, compare the genitive use against the gerund in adūna muri "biology of dying" and the noun in adūna ari maur "biology of death".
STATE | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Absolute | -/-/-/- | -///- | /-// | //-/ | -/-/-/ | /-/-/- |
Construct | -///- | -///- | /-/V/ | /V/-/ | -/V//, -//V/ | /V//-, //V/- |
Generally, a noun is given in the absolute state, but reformed to the construct state if case-marking is wished to be occulted. The word kûn "dog", for example, in the sentence kûniru "the dog" (ABSOLUTE) contains the article iru "the" attached, which emphasizes the nominative case; however, in kufin "the dog" (CONSTRUCT), there is no such marking, except partially by the inclusion of -i- (the first vowel of the article). This occurs because kûn (kúfn, kúun, et cetera) is actually interpreted as the formula /-// (k-fn), programmed to become /-/V/ (k-fVn). The process may be less straightforward in other instances:
- āvála "humanity" (-'-v-l-) ⇒ aūla "humanity" (-///-).
- (i)saíkat aru "a philosopher" (-s-k-t-) ⇒ iskat "a philosopher" (-//V/).
- babalú aru "an idea of confusion" (-b-b-l-) ⇒ babla "an idea of confusion" (/V//-).
Edenic Nouns
The most fundamental layers of meaning are encompassed by the Edenic Patterns. Through them, roots are easily morphed into abstract terms, such as the lemma ādáma "ancestry" out of the root -’-d-m- "ancestry". There is also a shorter form available with no semantic distinction, which ignores the two intermediary vowels and often vocalizes the medial consonant (except when there is a glottal stop elsewhere, which may disappear instead).
EDENIC NOUNS | |
---|---|
Plain | a/a/a/a |
Reduced | a///a |
Postdiluvian Nouns
Postdiluvian Nouns usually reinforce basic derivations from the roots, being concerned with concepts such as measurable abstractions and bare concretnesses. For example, from a root such as -q-h-f- "animalism", its essence can be extracted as qâhf "life", with classifier distinctions then expanding further contrast, as -k-’-n- "passage of time" yielding kâ’n "year", kû’n "old person", and kî’n "clock".
POSTDILUVIAN NOUNS | ||
---|---|---|
Formal | Informal | |
a | /á// | //á/ |
au | /ú// | //ú/ |
ao | /û// | //û/ |
aa | /â// | //â/ |
ae | /î// | //î/ |
ai | /í// | //í/ |
Prediluvian Nouns
Prediluvian Nouns are more complex, associated with vast nominal classes. A root such as -m-f-r- "death" can yield ímufar "poison", maífar "deceased", mafaúra "lifespan (until death)", et cetera.
PREDILUVIAN NOUNS (I) | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
h | ɦ | ħ | ʕ | χ | ʁ | |
h | í/-/-/- | -/-/í/- | iá/-/-/- | -/-/iá/- | iú/-/-/- | -/-/iú/- |
ɦ | -/í/-/- | -/-/-/í | -/iá/-/- | -/-/-/iá | -/iú/-/- | -/-/-/iú |
ħ | aí/-/-/- | -/-/aí/- | á/-/-/- | -/-/á/- | aú/-/-/- | -/-/aú/- |
ʕ | -/aí/-/- | -/-/-/aí | -/á/-/- | -/-/-/á | -/aú/-/- | -/-/-/aú |
χ | uí/-/-/- | -/-/uí/- | uá/-/-/- | -/-/uá/- | ú/-/-/- | -/-/ú/- |
ʁ | -/uí/-/- | -/-/-/uí | -/uá/-/- | -/-/-/uá | -/ú/-/- | -/-/-/ú |
PREDILUVIAN NOUNS (II) | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
X̰ | X | X̤ | X̰̃ | X̃ | X̤̃ | |
ə | a<///>u | a<///>a | a<///>i | a<///>ū | a<///>ā | a<///>ī |
u | u<///>u | u<///>a | u<///>i | u<///>ū | u<///>ā | u<///>ī |
o | ū<///>u | ū<///>a | ū<///>i | ū<///>ū | ū<///>ā | ū<///>ī |
a | ā<///>u | ā<///>a | ā<///>i | ā<///>ū | ā<///>ā | ā<///>ī |
e | ī<///>u | ī<///>a | ī<///>i | ī<///>ū | ī<///>ā | ī<///>ī |
i | i<///>u | i<///>a | i<///>i | i<///>ū | i<///>ā | i<///>ī |
Verbs
Verbs are conjugated by voice, person, mood, number, and aspect, or by form:
- six voicesF: causative, obligative, medio-passive, experimental, active, and passive.
- three moods: subjunctive, indicative, and jussive.
- two aspectsF: perfective and imperfective.
- six aspectsN: complete gerund, incomplete gerund, generic lemma, basic lemma, complete infinitive, and incomplete infinitive.
They can be divided into Finite Verbs, with 216 permutations (VOICEF x PERSON x MOOD x NUMBER x ASPECTF), and Non-finite Verbs, with 12 permutations (VOICEN x ASPECTN). In all circumstances, the number of the former may double to give way for participles:
PARTICIPATION | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Verb | -/-// | //-/- | /-/-/ | -///- | /-//- | -//-/ |
Participle | -/-// | //-/- | /-/-/ | -///- | /-//- | -//-/ |
Emphasis marks stress (-), which distinguishes not only verbs and participles, but even minimun pairs with some nouns (e.g. the words asita /aˈsita/ "Philosophy" and ásita /ˈasita/ "been thinking").
Finite Verbs
Finite verbs are the most productive class of verbs, outperforming through their semantic range, capable for example of conjugating -m-f-r- "dying" into mafrú "I (willingly) die", amfúr "I (unwillingly) die", mfarú "I force to kill", 'amúfr "I am forced to kill", amurú "I kill", and mafúr "I am killed".
FINITE VERBS | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Medio-passive | ||||||
Sub.Imp. | Sub.Per. | Ind.Imp. | Ind.Per. | Jus.Imp. | Jus.Per. | |
1st.Sin. | /i//ú | /ī//ú | /a//ú | /ā//ú | /u//ú | /ū//ú |
2nd.Sin. | /i//í | /ī//í | /a//í | /ā//í | /u//í | /ū//í |
3rd.Sin. | /i//á | /ī//á | /a//á | /ā//á | /u//á | /ū//á |
1st.Plu. | /i//û | /ī//û | /a//û | /ā//û | /u//û | /ū//û |
2nd.Plu. | /i//î | /ī//î | /a//î | /ā//î | /u//î | /ū//î |
3rd.Plu. | /i//â | /ī//â | /a//â | /ā//â | /u//â | /ū//â |
Experimental | ||||||
1st.Sin. | i//ú/ | ī//ú/ | a//ú/ | ā//ú/ | u//ú/ | ū//ú/ |
2nd.Sin. | i//í/ | ī//í/ | a//í/ | ā//í/ | u//í/ | ū//í/ |
3rd.Sin. | i//á/ | ī//á/ | a//á | ā//á | u//á | ū//á |
1st.Plu. | i//û/ | ī//û/ | a//û/ | ā//û/ | u//û/ | ū//û/ |
2nd.Plu. | i//î/ | ī//î/ | a//î/ | ā//î/ | u//î/ | ū//î/ |
3rd.Plu. | i//â/ | ī//â/ | a//â/ | ā//â/ | u//â/ | ū//â/ |
Causative | ||||||
1st.Sin. | //i/ú | //ī//ú | //a//ú | //ā//ú | //u//ú | //ū//ú |
2nd.Sin. | //i/í | //ī/í | //a/í | //ā/í | //u/í | //ū/í |
3rd.Sin. | //i/á | //ī/á | //a/á | /ā/á | //u/á | //ū/á |
1st.Plu. | //i/û | //ī/û | //a/û | /ā/û | //u/û | //ū/û |
2nd.Plu. | //i/î | //ī/î | //a/î | /ā/î | //u/î | //ū/î |
3rd.Plu. | //i/â | //ī/â | //a/â | /ā/â | //u/â | //ū/â |
Obligative | ||||||
1st.Sin. | i/ú// | ī/ú// | a/ú// | ā/ú// | u/ú// | ū/ú// |
2nd.Sin. | i/í// | ī/í// | a/í// | ā/í// | u/í// | ū/í// |
3rd.Sin. | i/á// | ī/á// | a/á// | ā/á// | u/á// | ū/á// |
1st.Plu. | i/û// | ī/û// | a/û// | ā/û// | u/û// | ū/û// |
2nd.Plu. | i/î// | ī/î// | a/î// | ā/î// | u/î// | ū/î// |
3rd.Plu. | i/â// | ī/â// | a/â// | ā/â// | u/â// | ū/â// |
Active | ||||||
1st.Sin. | i///ú | ī///ú | a///ú | ā///ú | u///ú | ū///ú |
2nd.Sin. | i///í | ī///í | a///í | ā///í | u///í | ū///í |
3rd.Sin. | i///á | ī///á | a///á | ā///á | u///á | ū///á |
1st.Plu. | i///û | ī///û | a///û | ā///û | u///û | ū///û |
2nd.Plu. | i///î | ī///î | a///î | ā///î | u///î | ū///î |
3rd.Plu. | i///â | ī///â | a///â | ā///â | u///â | ū///â |
Passive | ||||||
1st.Sin. | /i/ú/ | /ī/ú/ | /a/ú/ | /ā/ú/ | /u/ú/ | /ū/ú/ |
2nd.Sin. | /i/í/ | /ī/í/ | /a/í/ | /ā/í/ | /u/í/ | /ū/í/ |
3rd.Sin. | /i/á/ | /ī/á/ | /a/á/ | /ā/á/ | /u/á/ | /ū/á/ |
1st.Plu. | /i/û/ | /ī/û/ | /a/û/ | /ā/û/ | /u/û/ | /ū/û/ |
2nd.Plu. | /i/î/ | /ī/î/ | /a/î/ | /ā/î/ | /u/î/ | /ū/î/ |
3rd.Plu. | /i/â/ | /ī/â/ | /a/â/ | /ā/â/ | /u/â/ | /ū/â/ |
Non-finite Verbs
Non-finite verbs are the least productive class of verbs, underperforming through their semantic range, capable for example of conjugating -m-f-r- "dying" into murí "dying" (gerund), murá "to die" (lemma), murú "to die" (infinitive).
NON-FINITE VERBS | ||
---|---|---|
Active | Passive | |
ʔ | á/// | ///á |
ʔu | ú/// | ///ú |
ʔo | û/// | ///û |
ʔa | â/// | ///â |
ʔe | î/// | ///î |
ʔi | í/// | ///í |
Appositions
Appositions are demarked by effect and amplitude:
- three effects: describer, ascriber, and inscriber.
- two amplitudes: local and universal. The first group works within the word boundary; the second within the phrase.
Adjectives (/-/), incorporations (-//), and prefixes (/--) precede nouns/verbs, whereas adverbs (-/-), expressions (//-), and postpositions (--/) are right-bound. Also, incorporations may equal to adverbs before consonants, as prefixes may equal to adjectives before vowels. Those two word classes distinguish themselves in Adamic by the fact that incorporations modify nouns while prefixes modify verbs. Vide ādūqáfl "proto-language" and ’āmúqul "to foretell since the beginning".
APPOSITIONS | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Adjective | Adverb | Incorporation | Expression | Prefix | Postposition | |
/// ⇒ | /-/ | -/- | -// | //- | /-- | --/ |
Adjectives
Adjectives describe the noun/verb.
- -’-d-m- "ancestry" ⇒ ’ām "ancestral".
Adverbs
Adverbs describe the nominal/verbal phrase.
- -’-d-m- "ancestry" ⇒ ādū "originally".
Incorporations
Incorporations ascribe the noun.
- -’-d-m- "ancestry" ⇒ ādm- "proto-" [incorporation].
Expressions
Expressions ascribe the nominal phrase.
- -’-d-m- "ancestry" ⇒ dū "back then".
Prefixes
Prefixes inscribe the verb.
- -’-d-m- "ancestry" ⇒ ’āū- "fore- (since the beginning)".
Postpositions
Postpositions inscribe the verbal phrase.
- -’-d-m- "ancestry" ⇒ ām "before (long ago)".
Concatenation [...]
In Adamic, the root is liable to be modified by extensions, which cover the border of a stem as either prefixes or suffixes. Those may be reduplicative or not.
Replication
By directly extending the stem through repetition, affixes determine its measurements and quantities.
Degree
The affix -(C)V(C)- marks the measurements of stems by extending the nearest consonantal onset/coda, with the vocalic unit between the root-pattern and the reduplicated consonant (or the sound -c- in case a vowel should be reduplicated) being variable. This type of reduplication is often used in comparisons (e.g. gugīgánu-ta "I am bigger than you") and evaluations (e.g. gīgūg kûnaru "a giant dog").
DEGREE | ||
---|---|---|
Relative | Absolute | |
ə | Ca- | -aC |
u | Cu- | -uC |
o | Cū- | -ūC |
a | Cā- | -āC |
e | Cī- | -īC |
i | Ci- | -iC |
In nouns (importance/size):
- -q-h-f- "animalism" ⇒ qáhf "life" ⇒ quhqáhf "(precious) life".
- -k-f-n- "dog" ⇒ kûn "dog" ⇒ kûnin "puppy".
In verbs (frequency/completion):
- -g-f-l- "consumption" ⇒ āgâfl "they did eat" ⇒ gicāgâfl "they did eat less".
- -m-f-r- "death" ⇒ āmâr "they died" ⇒ āmârir "they barely died".
In adjectives (comparison/evaluation):
- -k-’-t- "resistence" ⇒ k’āt "strong" ⇒ kūk’āt "strongest".
- -g-g-g- "great size" ⇒ gīg "big" ⇒ gīgug "big (among big ones)".
In adverbs (comparison/evaluation):
- -k-’-t- "resistence" ⇒ i’a "strongly" ⇒ ’ūci’a "as strong as it can get".
- -g-g-g- "great size" ⇒ īgī "greatly" ⇒ īgīcug "greatly (among great manners)".
In incoporations (comparison/evaluation):
- -k-’-t- "resistence" ⇒ i’t- "strong" ⇒ ’uci’t- "stronger than many".
- -g-g-g- "great size" ⇒ īg- "great" ⇒ īgug- "great (among great ones)".
In expressions (comparison/evaluation):
- -k-’-t- "resistence" ⇒ k’a "being strong enough"" ⇒ kuk’a "being more than strong enough".
- -g-g-g- "great size" ⇒ gī "when great" ⇒ gīcig "when less than great".
In prefixes (comparison/evaluation):
- -k-’-t- "resistence" ⇒ kā- "strong" ⇒ kūkā- "as strong as it can be done".
- -g-g-g- "great size" ⇒ gī- "great" ⇒ gīcug- "great (among great doings)".
In postpositions (comparison/evaluation):
- -k-’-t- "resistence" ⇒ iāt "if" ⇒ tuciāt "if more than enough".
- -g-g-g- "great size" ⇒ īg "(incredibly) as/while" ⇒ gicīg "(incredibly) almost as/while".
Extension
Stems may be replicated (X ⇒ XX) entirely, producing a semantic continuum responsible for conveying the idea of repetitive and cyclical phenomena. Two stems often stand for the repetitive sense (e.g. ), whereas three (e.g. ) for the cyclical one.
EXTENSION | |||
---|---|---|---|
Simplication | Reduplication | Triplication | |
Stem ⇒ | X | XX | XXX |
In nouns (veracity or diffuse plural):
- -q-h-f- "animalism" ⇒ qáhf "life" ⇒ qáhf-qáhf "genuine life".
- -k-f-n- "dog" ⇒ kûn "dog" ⇒ kûn-kûn-kûn "dogs here and there".
In verbs (repetition or habit):
- -g-f-l- "consumption" ⇒ āgâfl "they did eat" ⇒ āgâfl-āgâfl "they repeatedly did eat".
- -m-f-r- "death" ⇒ āmâr "they died" ⇒ āmâr-āmâr-āmâr "they used to die".
In adjectives (excellence or continuation):
- -k-’-t- "resistence" ⇒ k’āt "strong" ⇒ k’āt-k’āt "indeed strong".
- -g-g-g- "great size" ⇒ gīg "big" ⇒ gīg-gīg-gīg "constantly big".
In adverbs (excellence or continuation):
- -k-’-t- "resistence" ⇒ i’a "strongly" ⇒ i’a-i’a "indeed strongly".
- -g-g-g- "great size" ⇒ īgī "greatly" ⇒ īgī-īgī-īgī "constantly great".
In incoporations (excellence or continuation):
- -k-’-t- "resistence" ⇒ i’t- "strong" ⇒ i’ti’t- "indeed strong".
- -g-g-g- "great size" ⇒ īg- "great" ⇒ īgīgīg- "constantly great".
In expressions (excellence or continuation):
- -k-’-t- "resistence" ⇒ k’a "being strong enough"" ⇒ k’a-k’a "indeed being very strong".
- -g-g-g- "great size" ⇒ gī "when great" ⇒ gī-gī-gī "constantly when great"
In prefixes (excellence or continuation):
- -k-’-t- "resistence" ⇒ kā- "strong" ⇒ kākā- "indeed strong".
- -g-g-g- "great size" ⇒ gī- "great" ⇒ gīgīgī- "constantly great".
In postpositions (excellence or continuation):
- -k-’-t- "resistence" ⇒ iāt "if" ⇒ iāt-iāt "indeed if".
- -g-g-g- "great size" ⇒ īg "(incredibly) as/while" ⇒ īg-īg-īg "constantly (incredibly) as/while".
Derivation
haûl "fire" > mahûl "firewood" / hûlma "ashes"
X Derivation
amúram "I mourn" amúraj "I remind of death"
Adamic | English | |
---|---|---|
Postdiluvian Particles | -ka- | (ruler) related to_ _related to (subject) |
-ga- | x | |
-ta- | x | |
-da- | x | |
-pa- | x | |
-ba- | x | |
-nā- | x | |
-na- | x | |
-ma- | cause of_ _caused by | |
-ra- | x | |
-sa- | x | |
-za- | x | |
-ha- | x | |
-qa- | x | |
-ya- | ..._ _belonging to | |
-wa- | ..._ _... | |
-’a- | x | |
-ca- | x |
Y Derivation
Triptote Formula
The Triptote Formula is often secluded to articles and pronouns, which are inflect by case, number, definition and/or gender :
- six cases: nominative, accusative, dative, copulative, ergative, and genitive.
- three referentialities: definite, indefinite, and nomic.
Case, number, and gender are ubiquitous while definition is dropped in pronouns. The result is 108 permutations known to reduce grammatical functions thanks to a trio of particles (i, u, and a) specialized in capturing meaning. Vide:
- -i̯ (dative) [Pangaean] ⇒ _i (dative) [Adamic]
- ∅ (nominative) [Pangaean] ⇒ _u (nominative) [Adamic]
- -ʔ (accusative) [Pangaean] ⇒ _a (accusative) [Adamic]
To serve their purpose, right-led case particles (_Vcas) combine with definition particles (Vdef) in the formula _VdefVcas to generate articles, while pronouns are formed by stacking the former with pronoun roots (Cpro) as in _CproVcas. Furthermore, as articles are treated as clitics but pronouns aren't, the empty space _ is filled by a nominal unit when an article, otherwise the particle a fills this role when a pronoun. Vide:
- _iru (definite article) ⇒ avâla iru "the person" (nominative)
- _nu (1st-person) ⇒ anu "I" (nominative)
When opposite functions are wished, on the other hand, one has solely to invert the empty space:
- iru_ (definite article) ⇒ iru avâla "it's the person" (copulative)
- nu_ (1st-person) ⇒ nua "it's me" (copulative)
Regarding the demarcations of gender and number, the singular, dual, and plural in the masculine are prototypically represented by -u, -au, and -ū, whereas in the feminine by -i, -ai, and -ī, with the plural demarcation actually behaving as V̄ (depending on other terms to define a vowel). The masculine, in special, can often be left unmarked in the singular (∅).
Gender, contrary to last terms, functions as a dual scheme in Adamic. For every word, it is conceived a pair wherein there are "material" (i) and "immaterial" (u) members, in such way that a predictable gender system is formed within the language. "Earthly" concepts such as "earth", "water", and "sea" are always feminine, in contrast with "heavenly" terms akin to "sky", "fire", and "clouds", masculine. Other correspondences clearly extend to objects such as domestic items and abstract phenomena, respectively.
XXX
Pronouns
X Pronouns
Y Pronouns
Articles
X Articles
Y Articles
Particles
X Particles
Y Particles
Agglutination
Continuous Affixation
Adamic is an extremely inflected language.
[...] The language may gain considerable fusional morphology in the Canonic register.
?
MASCULINE ARTICLE DECLENSION | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Singular | Dual | Plural | |||||||
Definite | Indefinite | Nomic | Definite | Indefinite | Nomic | Definite | Indefinite | Nomic | |
Nominative | _iru | _uru | _aru | _irau | _urau | _arau | _irū(N) | _urū(N) | _arū(N) |
Accusative | _ira | _ura | _ara | _irāu | _urāu | _arāu | _irā(N) | _urā(N) | _arā(N) |
Dative | _iri | _uri | _ari | _iraui | _uraui | _araui | _irī(N) | _urī(N) | _arī(N) |
Copulative | iru_ | uru_ | aru_ | irau_ | urau_ | arau_ | irū(N)_ | urū(N)_ | arū(N)_ |
Ergative | ira_ | ura_ | ara_ | irāu_ | urāu_ | arāu_ | irā(N)_ | urā(N)_ | arā(N)_ |
Genitive | iri_ | uri_ | ari_ | iraui_ | uraui_ | araui_ | irī(N)_ | urī(N)_ | arī(N)_ |
FEMININE ARTICLE DECLENSION | |||||||||
Nominative | _irui(C) | _urui(C) | _arui(C) | _iraiu | _uraiu | _araiu | _irūi(N) | _urūi(N) | _arūi(N) |
Accusative | _irai(C) | _urai(C) | _arai(C) | _irāi | _urāi | _arāi | _irā(N) | _urā(N) | _arā(N) |
Dative | _iri(C) | _uri(C) | _ari(C) | _irai | _urai | _arai | _irī(N) | _urī(N) | _arī(N) |
Copulative | irui(C)_ | urui(C)_ | arui(C)_ | iraiu_ | uraiu_ | araiu_ | irū(N)_ | urū(N)_ | arū(N)_ |
Ergative | irai(C)_ | urai(C)_ | arai(C)_ | irāi_ | urāi_ | arāi_ | irāi(N)_ | urāi(N)_ | arāi(N)_ |
Genitive | iri(C)_ | uri(C)_ | ari(C)_ | irai_ | urai_ | arai_ | irīa(N)_ | urīa(N)_ | arīa(N)_ |
MASCULINE PERSONAL PRONOUN DECLENSION (EURASIAN) | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Singular | Dual | Plural | |||||||
2nd-person | 1st-person | 3rd-person | 2nd-person | 1st-person | 3rd-person | 2nd-person | 1st-person | 3rd-person | |
Nominative | atu | anu | asu | atau | anau | asau | atū(N) | anū(N) | asū(N) |
Accusative | ata | ana | asa | atāu | anāu | asāu | atā(N) | anā(N) | asā(N) |
Dative | ati | ani | asi | ataui | anaui | asaui | atī(N) | anī(N) | asī(N) |
Copulative | tua | nua | sua | tau(a) | nau(a) | sau(a) | tūa(N) | nūa(N) | sūa(N) |
Ergative | tā(u) | nā(u) | sā(u) | tāu(a) | nāu(a) | sāu(a) | tā(uaN) | nā(uaN) | sā(uaN) |
Genitive | tia | nia | sia | taui(a) | naui(a) | saui(a) | tīa(N) | nīa(N) | sīa(N) |
FEMININE PERSONAL PRONOUN DECLENSION (EURASIAN) | |||||||||
Nominative | atui(C) | anui(C) | asui(C) | ataiu | anaiu | asaiu | atūi(N) | anūi(N) | asūi(N) |
Accusative | atai(C) | anai(C) | asai(C) | atāi | anāi | asāi | atāi(N) | anāi(N) | asāi(N) |
Dative | ati(C) | ani(C) | asi(C) | atai | anai | asai | atī(N) | anī(N) | asī(N) |
Copulative | tiua(C) | niua(C) | siua(C) | taiu(a) | naiu(a) | saiu(a) | tūia(N) | nūia(N) | sūia(N) |
Ergative | tāi(C) | nāi(C) | sāi(C) | tāi(a) | nāi(a) | sāi(a) | tāia(N) | nāia(N) | sāia(N) |
Genitive | tia(C) | nia(C) | sia(C) | tai(a) | nai(a) | sai(a) | tīa(N) | nīa(N) | sīa(N) |
MASCULINE PERSONAL PRONOUN DECLENSION (LAURENTIAN) | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Singular | Dual | Plural | |||||||
2nd-person | 1st-person | 3rd-person | 2nd-person | 1st-person | 3rd-person | 2nd-person | 1st-person | 3rd-person | |
Nominative | apu | aku | au | apau | akau | āu | apū(N) | akū(N) | aū(N) |
Accusative | apa | aka | ā | apāu | akāu | āu | apā(N) | akā(N) | ā(N) |
Dative | api | aki | ai | apaui | akaui | āui | apī(N) | akī(N) | aī(N) |
Copulative | pua | kua | ua | pau(a) | kau(a) | au(a) | pūa(N) | kūa(N) | ūa(N) |
Ergative | pā(u) | kā(u) | ā(u) | pāu(a) | kāu(a) | āu(a) | pā(uaN) | kā(uaN) | ā(uaN) |
Genitive | pia | kia | ia | paui(a) | kaui(a) | aui(a) | pīa(N) | kīa(N) | īa(N) |
FEMININE PERSONAL PRONOUN DECLENSION (LAURENTIAN) | |||||||||
Nominative | apui(C) | akui(C) | aui(C) | apaiu | akaiu | āiu | apūi(N) | akūi(N) | aūi(N) |
Accusative | apai(C) | akai(C) | āi(C) | apāi | akāi | āi | apāi(N) | akāi(N) | āi(N) |
Dative | api(C) | aki(C) | ai(C) | apai | akai | āi | apī(N) | akī(N) | aī(N) |
Copulative | piua(C) | kiua(C) | iua(C) | paiu(a) | kaiu(a) | aiu(a) | pūia(N) | kūia(N) | ūia(N) |
Ergative | pāi(C) | kāi(C) | āi(C) | pāi(a) | kāi(a) | āi(a) | pāia(N) | kāia(N) | āia(N) |
Genitive | pia(C) | kia(C) | ia(C) | pai(a) | kai(a) | ai(a) | pīa(N) | kīa(N) | īa(N) |
- The term (C) refers to feminine constructions other than -i, such as combinations with Diluvian particles: -’a, -i’a, -a’i, -ica’, and -’aci.
- The term (N) refers to plural constructions with Diluvian particles. Vide -ūan and -ūn in the masculine, whereas -īan, -īn, -ī'an, -a’īn, -a’īan, -īca’an, -’acīan, -īca’n, and -’acīn in the feminine.
- Eurasian and Laurentian paradigms would roughly address the two sets of pronoun patterns (m-T and n-m) historically associated with Northern Eurasia and Western America[5]; however, they merely catalogue the most common used consonants for pronouns in the Diluvian Code, and therefore in Adamic. Compare Diluvian naocar "the near person", taocar "the person of reference", yaocar "that person (3rd-person)", kaocar "this person", phaocar "the present person", and aocar "person".
[...]
ENCLITIC PRONOUN DECLENSION
POSSESSIVE PRONOUN DECLENSION
INTERROGATIVE PRONOUN DECLENSION
RELATIVE PRONOUN DECLENSION
Atomic Affixation
Root + root (derivation) dm + qhf = ādmīhf dm + -kp = ādmakp kpādm
[...]
Reduplicative Inflection
Canonic Inflection
In the Canonic register of Adamic, affixes are modified according to the Coloration Table and the Triptote Table in order to assign fusional significance to its phonemes. [...] There are 150 possibilities out of 36 permutations.
CANONIC DECLENSION | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Singular | Plural | |||||
Definite | Indefinite | Nomic | Definite | Indefinite | Nomic | |
Nominative | -h[0][1][2][3], -∅[4], -ay[A][B] | -n[0][1][2][3], -∅[4], -aw[A][B] | -l[0][1][2][3], -∅[4], -a[A][B] | -q[0][1][2][3], -∅[4], -āy[A], -ēia[B] | -m[0][1][2][3], -∅[4], -āw[A], -ōua[B] | -r[0][1][2][3], -∅[4], -ā[A][B] |
Accusative | -s[0][1], -∅[2][3][4], -i[A][B] | -f[0][2], -∅[1][3][4], -u[A][B] | -c[0][3], -∅[1][2][4], -a[A] | -z[0], -za[1][2][3], -∅[4], -ī[A][B] | -v[0], -va[1][2][3], -∅[4], -ū[A][B] | -'[0], -'a[1][2][3], -∅[4], -ā[A] |
Dative | -k[0][3], -s[1], -h[2], -∅[4], -ya[A], -e[B] | -p[0][3], -n[1], -f[2], -∅[4], -wa[A], -o[B] | -t[0][3], -l[2], -∅[1][4], -a[A][B] | -g[0], -za[1], -q[2], -ga[3], -∅[4], -yā[A][B] | -b[0], -m[1], -va[2], -ba[3], -∅[4], -wā[A][B] | -d[0], -'a[1], -r[2], -da[3], -∅[4], -ā[A][B] |
Copulative | a-X-h[0][1][2][3], a-X-∅[4], ay-[A][B] | a-X-n[0][1][2][3], a-X-∅[4], aw-[A][B] | a-X-l[0][1][2][3], a-X-∅[4], a-[A][B] | a-X-q[0][1][2][3], a-X-∅[4], āy-[A], ēi-[B] | a-X-m[0][1][2][3], a-X-∅[4], āw-[A], ōu-[B] | a-X-r[0][1][2][3], a-X-∅[4], ā-[A][B] |
Ergative | a-X-s[0][1], a-X-∅[2][3][4], i-[A][B] | a-X-f[0][2], a-X-∅[1][3][4], u-[A][B] | a-X-c[0][3], a-X-∅[1][2][4], a-[A] | a-X-z[0], a-X-za[1][2][3], a-X-∅[4], ī-[A][B] | a-X-v[0], -va[1][2][3], a-X-∅[4], ū-[A][B] | a-X-'[0], a-X-'a[1][2][3], a-X-∅[4], ā-[A] |
Genitive | a-X-k[0][3], a-X-s[1], a-X-h[2], a-X-∅[4], ya-[A], e-[B] | a-X-p[0][3], a-X-n[1], -f[2], a-X-∅[4], wa-[A], o-[B] | a-X-t[0][3], a-X-l[2], a-X-∅[1][4], a-[A][B] | a-X-g[0], a-X-za[1], a-X-q[2], a-X-ga[3], a-X-∅[4], yā-[A][B] | a-X-b[0], a-X-m[1], a-X-va[2], a-X-ba[3], a-X-∅[4], wā-[A][B] | a-X-d[0], a-X-'a[1], a-X-r[2], a-X-da[3], a-X-∅[4], ā-[A][B] |
^0 Consonantal stem; ^1 I-stem; ^2 U-stem; ^3 A-stem; ^4 Repeated stem; ^A Vocalic stem; ^B Irregular stem.
The canonic conjugation, for lacking the subjunctive and junctive functions or a finite verb, and the presence of non-finite forms, is relegated as a class of enunciative constructions often associated with literary practices. That is: canonic verbs appear in narration solely, or when an event is being described without biases. Vide the translation of "'I think that he is dead,' he said":
- "murá-su, askút," quat
CANONIC CONJUGATION | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Singular | Plural | |||||
2nd-person | 1st-person | 3rd-person | 2nd-person | 1st-person | 3rd-person | |
Active Future | -h[0][1][2][3], -∅[4], -ay[A][B] | -n[0][1][2][3], -∅[4], -aw[A][B] | -l[0][1][2][3], -∅[4], -a[A][B] | -q[0][1][2][3], -∅[4], -āy[A], -ēia[B] | -m[0][1][2][3], -∅[4], -āw[A], -ōua[B] | -r[0][1][2][3], -∅[4], -ā[A][B] |
Active Present | -s[0][1], -∅[2][3][4], -i[A][B] | -f[0][2], -∅[1][3][4], -u[A][B] | -c[0][3], -∅[1][2][4], -a[A] | -z[0], -za[1][2][3], -∅[4], -ī[A][B] | -v[0], -va[1][2][3], -∅[4], -ū[A][B] | -'[0], -'a[1][2][3], -∅[4], -ā[A] |
Active Past | -k[0][3], -s[1], -h[2], -∅[4], -ya[A], -e[B] | -p[0][3], -n[1], -f[2], -∅[4], -wa[A], -o[B] | -t[0][3], -l[2], -∅[1][4], -a[A][B] | -g[0], -za[1], -q[2], -ga[3], -∅[4], -yā[A][B] | -b[0], -m[1], -va[2], -ba[3], -∅[4], -wā[A][B] | -d[0], -'a[1], -r[2], -da[3], -∅[4], -ā[A][B] |
Passive Future | h-X-a[0][1][2][3], ∅-X-a[4], ay-[A][B] | n-X-a[0][1][2][3], a-X-∅[4], aw-[A][B] | l-X-a[0][1][2][3], ∅-X-a[4], a-[A][B] | q-X-a[0][1][2][3], ∅-X-a[4], āy-[A], ēi-[B] | m-X-a[0][1][2][3], ∅-X-a[4], āw-[A], ōu-[B] | r-X-a[0][1][2][3], ∅-X-a[4], ā-[A][B] |
Passive Present | s-X-a[0][1], ∅-X-a[2][3][4], i-[A][B] | f-X-a[0][2], ∅-X-a[1][3][4], u-[A][B] | c-X-a[0][3], ∅-X-a[1][2][4], a-[A] | z-X-a[0], za-X-a[1][2][3], ∅-X-a[4], ī-[A][B] | v-X-a[0], va-X-a[1][2][3], ∅-X-a[4], ū-[A][B] | '-X-a[0], 'a-X-a[1][2][3], ∅-X-a[4], ā-[A] |
Passive Past | k-X-a[0][3], s-X-a[1], h-X-a[2], ∅-X-a[4], ya-[A], e-[B] | p-X-a[0][3], n-X-a[1], f-X-a[2], ∅-X-a[4], wa-[A], o-[B] | t-X-a[0][3], l-X-a[2], ∅-X-a[1][4], a-[A][B] | g-X-a[0], za-X-a[1], q-X-a[2], ga-X-a[3], ∅-X-a[4], yā-[A][B] | b-X-a[0], m-X-a[1], va-X-a[2], ba-X-a[3], ∅-X-a[4], wā-[A][B] | d-X-a[0], 'a-X-a[1], r-X-a[2], da-X-a[3], ∅-X-a[4], ā-[A][B] |
^0 Consonantal stem; ^1 I-stem; ^2 U-stem; ^3 A-stem; ^4 Repeated stem; ^A Vocalic stem; ^B Irregular stem.
The Canonic Declension distinguishes itself from the Canonic Conjugation merely by inverting the inclusion of -a-. Compare the pair zīs "to the giant" / azīs "the giant's" with kāuf "I kill" / iāpa "I am killed".
nun/nȳō, lih/sȳē, al/sȳa (nom)
nuf/nȳu, lis/sȳi, ac/sȳa (acc)
nuf/nȳua, lis/sȳia, at/sȳa (dat)
mū (n > m-u-u)
ry (l > r-i-u)
zō (∅ > z-a-u)
Syntax
Adamic syntax is strict [...]
Construct State
The so called Construct State plays an important role in adamic syntax, being responsible for distinguishing compositions among themselves in order to make sense of a select class of grammatical cases in the articles. The nominative, oblique, accusative, ergative, dative, and genitive for once, trigger the Construct State below:
סכת
skt
saíkat
philosophy.intorg
ר
r
iru
the.nom
אול
'vl
aval
person.idt.cons
"The philosopher is a person"
סכת
skt
iskit
philosophy.intorg.ddt.cons
ר
r
aru
a.obl
ואל
'vl
al
person
"It's a person, the philosopher"
סכת
skt
saíkat
philosophy.intorg
ר
r
ira
the.acc
ואל
'vl
aval
person.idt.cons
"The philosopher is influenced by a person"
סכת
skt
iskit
philosophy.intorg.ddt.cons
ר
r
ara
a.erg
ואל
'vl
al
person
"A person influences the philosopher"
סכת
skt
saíkat
philosophy.intorg
ר
r
iri
the.dat
ואל
'vl
aval
person.idt.cons
"A person to the philosopher"
סכת
skt
iskit
philosophy.intorg.ddt.cons
ר
r
ari
a.gen
ואל
'vl
al
person
"A person's philosopher"
With secondary cases, syntax remains the same, although more complex senses are conveyed. Compare datasyú irut iskit "in the library, is the philosopher" and ditsa irut saíkat "the philosopher is in the library".
Verbal Constructions
Default OSV in the active voice, except when the object is a pronoun, wherein it takes the SVO form:
דתס
dts
dîtis
writing.inhu.ddt.cons
ר
r
ira
the.erg
סכת
skt
saíkat
philosophy.intorg
בבל
bbl
ābūlá
book.vac.perf.3s
"The philosopher read the book"
Default SPV in the passive voice, except when the predicate is a pronoun, wherein it takes the SVP form:
דתס
dts
dîts
writing.inhu
ר
r
ira
the.acc
סכת
skt
iskit
philosophy.intorg.ddt.cons
בבל
bbl
bābál
book.vpa.perf.3s
"The book was read by the philosopher"
Default OSV in the medio-passive voice:
דתס
dts
ditsa
writing.ddt.cons
רת
rt
irat
the.erg.loc
סכת
skt
saíkat
philosophy.intorg
בבל
bbl
ābbál
book.vmp.perf.3s
"The philosopher read in the library"
Default OSVP in the experimental voice:
דתס
dts
ditsa
writing.ddt.cons
רת
rt
irat
the.erg.loc
סכת
skt
saíkat
philosophy.intorg
בבל
bbl
bālá
book.vex.perf.3s
"The philosopher happened to have read in the library"
Default O2O1SV in the causative voice:
דתס
dts
ditsa
writing.inhu.ddt.cons
אול
v'l
avil
person.ddt.cons
ר
r
ira
the.erg
סכת
skt
saíkat
philosophy.intorg
בבל
bbl
bāblá
book.vca.perf.3s
"The philosopher made the person to have read the book"
Default OSPV in the obligative voice:
דתס
dts
dîtis
writing.inhu.ddt.cons
אול
'vl
al
person
ר
r
ira
the.acc
סכת
skt
iskit
philosophy.intorg.ddt.cons
בבל
bbl
ābábl
book.vob.perf.3s
"The person was forced by the philosopher to have read the book"
It is important to notice the difference between dîtis adtís irat saíkat abūlá and datasyú irut dîtis ira saíkat abūlá, which although both signify "the philosopher reads the book in the library", only the former implies the action of reading occurs there, whereas the latter implies the book was in the library aforementioned.
Pronominal Constructions
Unlike nouns, pronouns don't require articles (ones says anu valár "I am a person" and not *anu iru valár). Also, when in construct state, they become clitics, either attached to nouns or the verbs they are objects/predicates of:
דתס
dts
dîts
writing.inhu
ר
r
ira
the.acc
בבלת
bblt
bābál-at
book.vpa.perf.3s-you.cons
"The book was read by you"
ר
r
ira
the.erg
סכת
skt
saíkat
philosophy.intorg
קסלת
qslt
āqilá-ta
vision.vac.perf.3s-you.cons
"The philosopher saw you"
Furthermore, there is an exceptional construction which always involves pronouns; being the case when something is attributed to a noun.
מפרנ
mfrn
murá-nu
death.adj-I
"I am dead"
סכת
skt
saíkat
philosophy.intorg
מפרס
mfrs
murá-su
death.adj-they
"the philosopher is dead"
Subordinate Clauses
bîbliru "the book" babál sa bîblira "the book which is being read' bîblira, sa babál "the book, which is being read"
they say that I want to work tommorrow, in order to earn money; me, who knew nothing about it
mur su saíkat iru "the philosopher who is dead" saíkat su mur iru "the philosopher, who is dead"
abbál sa saíkat "the philosopher who reads" saíkat sa abbál "the philosopher, who reads"
nāk āqfúl-as "I spoke with him" abbál sa saíkat irak āqfúl "I spoke with the philosopher who reads" sak āqfúl "whom I spoke with" subject pronoun ommitted
sa abbál "he reads" saíkat sa abbál
murásu, askút "I think he is dead"
tu nuī "you and me" murátu ī muránu "you are dead and I am dead"
saíkat bûlū "philosopher or fool" sitátu ū būlátu
Have him to do it
Babla
'u'rá "so that he makes them do it"
Canonic
[...]
Canonic onset clusters: [...]
Canonic coda clusters: [...]
The Adamic Code can be spoken in a poetic register, called Canonic, where the Coloration Table is almost abused in grammatical restructuration. In this register, for example, sound laws follow coloration rules, as well as cases and verbal conjugations, in such form that another language is created within the language after abandoning the system of patterns. Vide the translation of "I think the person is dead":
- avâla murá-su, askút (Adamic) > ālbai muris, sia (Canonic)
table... diphthongs to monophthongs iu > y, ui > ȳ ia > e, ai > ē ua > o, au > ō
triphthongs to diphthongs ui-u > ȳu, iu-u > yu, u-ui > uȳ, u-iu > uy ia-u > eu, ai-u > ēu, u-ia > ue, u-ai > uē ua-i > oi, au-i > ōi, i-ua > io, i-au > iō
in case of incompatibility, the repeated vowel is lost (EX: ia-i > e, and not ei); also, when a long dipthong is reduced, a central vowel is added (EX: āi > ēa).
Sound Changes
With the generative notation developed in the 20th Century by Noam Chomsky and Morris Halle[6]...
-/+ | I-type | U-type | A-type |
---|---|---|---|
H-type | C → 0 ⧸ _# | C → 0 ⧸ _# | C → 0 ⧸ _# |
S-type | C → 0 ⧸ _# | C → 0 ⧸ _# | C → 0 ⧸ _# |
K-type | C → 0 ⧸ _# | C → 0 ⧸ _# | C → 0 ⧸ _# |
-/+ | I-type | U-type | A-type | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
H-type |
is |
is |
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{V// <low>} → {V// nasal // <low>} ⧸ {V// nasal // <glottalized>}C0_
Coherent with Index Diachronica...
In Sca2
Sets: (non-supported)
Z=ẞÞÐ (different from S, as it is a sequence) G=JWR (different from V, as it is a sequence) ẞ=sz, Þ=fv, Ð=c' ẞ→/#_/#_J S→/#_/#_JWR
Categories:
V=yaeiouȳāēīōū Y=yaeiou Ȳ=ȳāēīōū J=ieīē W=uoūō R=yaȳā C=kpthnlsfcgbdqmrzv' -=kpthnlsfc +=gbdqmrzv' K=kgpbtd S=szfvc' H=hqnmlr Q=123456 1=kghqsz 2=pbnmfv 3=tdlrc' I=khs Ī=gqz U=pnf Ū=bmv A=tlc Ā=dr'
Rewrite rules:
i|1 u|2 nd|3 mb|4 lb|5 rd|6
Sound Changes:
V→/#_CVVCVVCVV V→/#_CVCVVCVV V→/#_CVVCVCVV V→/#_CVVCVVCV V→/#_CVCVCVV V→/#_CVCVVCV V→/#_CVVCVCV V→/#_CVCVCV V→/#_CVVCVV V→/#_CVCVV V→/#_CVVCV V→/#_CVCV CV→/CV_CV V→/CVCVC_# V→/CVCVCC_# ia→e/_ ai→ē/_ uo→o/_ au→ō/_ ui→ȳ/_ iu→y/_ K→S/[īē]_ K→H/[ūō]_ K→S/_J K→H/_W H→Q/R_R C→/_# [sz]→/#_/#_J [sz]→/_#/J_# [fv]→/#_/#_W [fv]→/_#/W_# [c']→/#_/#_R [c']→/_#/R_# +→-/_# -→+/V_V
- asakata > *_sakata > *sa_ta > *sata > *ata > ada
- asakasta > *_sakasta > *sakast_ > *sakast > *akast > *akas > *aka > aga
- asakastar > *_sakastar > *sakastar > *akastar > *agastar > agasta
gīg
bībl
kun
saikat
daitas
būl
agalala
datasiu
avāla
>
zī
ī
hu
sēza
ē'a
mū
galba
dazy
ālba
stemic harmony in canonic:
sikūtí (-s-k-t-) > siqūl- (-s-k-l-) *third member harmonized
(-k-p-g-) > (-k-n-z-) *second and third members harmonized
vocalic change
ka > ho, ky > hu
pa > fe, py > fi
Alternation
Accrescence (...): type-1 consonants extend to ...
Excrescence (H → Q ⧸ V_R): type-2 consonants extend to i, u, nd, mb, lb, and rd respectively when intervovalic as onset to A-vowels.
Decrescence (Z → ∅ ⧸ [#]_[#]/[G]_[G]): type-3 consonants disappear when marginal, except when in contact with their respective dominant vowel.
Elision
Apocape (1): in a word with three syllables or more, the initial unstressed syllable is lost if it lacks an onset or a long vowel.
Syncope (2): in a word with three syllables or more, the middle unstressed syllable is lost if it is not closed by a coda or possesses a long vowel.
Aphaeresis (3): in a word with three syllables or more, the last unstressed syllable is lost if it lacks a coda or a long vowel.
Epenthesis
Prothesis: in a word with two or just one syllable, if there is an initial consonant cluster, a vowel (depending on the nature of the consonant) is added. EX: ...
Anaptyxis: in a word with two or just one syllable, if there is a middle consonant cluster, the vowel /a/ is added. EX: 'atlya > adalyal
Paragoge: in a word with two or just one syllable, if there is a final consonant cluster, a vowel (depending on the nature of the consonant). EX: palk > palsil
Harmony
(used in special cases of other laws)
Haplology: dadasa > dasa
Compensatory lengthening bûl (*bbûl) > *uvvūl > ūvūl gal (*gall) > *galla > gāla
Metathesis: glides only where the stress is garda, gráda, gadrá
adtís > addís
Final devoicing (-sonorant → -voice ⧸ _#)
Initial voicing
a → y ⧸ _{iu}
dad > dat
Intervocalic voicing ata > ada
/ai̯/ > /eː/
/i̯a/ > /e/
/au̯/ > /oː/
/u̯a/ > /o/
/u̯i/~/ui̯/ > /ɯ/~/yː/
/i̯u/~/iu̯/ > /y/~/ɯː/
/e/ > /i/
/o/ > /u/
Word derivation is less intricate in Canonic.
skt > saga, sazēia (-) / sia, siēia / kada, kaēia (+)
gll > galba, gallēia (-) / galba, gallēia / alba, allēia (+)
krp > karda, karrēia (-) / kāba, kāmēia / raba, ramēia (+)
qfl > qava, qavēia (-) / qulba, qullēia / falba, fallēia (+)
karda "murder" > karri "murderer" / karru "victim", raba "execution" > rami "executioner" / ravu "prisoner"
i (concrete, active terms) / u (abstract, passive terms)
qiat azīs hu "he saw the giant's dog"
avāda sazēia "the temptations of humans"
k’ālú "to be in a place"
∅ = sēzu "I philosophize", sēgau "I will philosophize"
Íz > IgÁ
Úq > UgÁ
Í' > IdÁ
Úr > UdÁ
Ím > IbÁ
Úv > UbÁ
Meter
Canonic extends the concepts of "short" and "long" in Adamic grammar to the syllable as a whole, identifying the following segments:
- (C)2V(C̥) (light)
- (C)2VV(C̥) ~ (C)2V̄(C̥) ~ (C)2VC̬(C̥) (heavy)
- (C)2V̄V(C̥) ~ (C)2VVC̬(C̥) ~ (C)2V̄C̬(C̥) (superheavy)
Any other arrangement, such as (C)(C)V̄VC̬, is forbidden. [...] Non-sonorant consonants if [...] C̬ = one sonorant or two non-sonorant consonants, C̥ = one non-sonorant consonant
light (μ1) heavy (μ2) superheavy (μ3)
A line of 36 morae ranges from 12 superheavy syllables up to 36 light syllables [...]
Caesura
Elision
KH- KH/HK -HK
monosyllabic stressed word attracts article bîbl /ˈbiːbl/ + iru /iru/ = bîbliru ... = bîbliru
canonic allophones kʲ kʷ kʰ gʲ gʷ gʱ pʲ pʷ pʰ bʲ bʷ bʱ tʲ tʷ tʰ bʲ bʷ bʱ
canonic clusters hk ɦg hp ɦb ht ɦd / ŋk ŋg mp mb nt nd / lk rk lg rg lp rp lb rb lt rt ld rd kh gɦ ph bɦ th dɦ / kŋ gŋ pm bm tn dn / kl kr gl gr pl pr bl br tl tr dl dr
the equivalent of lucifer "lightbearer" would be haípar (h’l + p'r X i/aí/a/)
āvala aru k’a agaúl "if a man is strong he eats"
k’ātásu āvala aru agaúl iāt "if a man eats he is strong"
āvala iru imfar murásu āvala
combinations such as *sr (SH/HS) and *sp (SK/KS) are not possible, and will trigger the insertion of vowels
EX: ask > asak
-k-h-s- "one" kis ~ ksi ~ iks ... káhs -p-n-f- "two" puf ~ pfu ~ upf ... pánf -t-l-c- "three" tac ~ tca ~ atc ... tálc -g-q-z- "four" gīz ... gaíz -b-m-v- "five" būv ~ bvū ~ ūbv ... baúv -d-r-'- "six" dā' ~ d'ā ~ ād' ... dâ'
khis, nuf, tlac, ghīz, mūv, drā
kihs 1 punf 2 talc 3 qīz 4 nūv 5 drā 6 drāsi 7 nūca 8 qīfu 9 unū 10 unūs 11 udrā 12 udrās 13 udrāf 14 anū 15 anūs 16 anūf 17 adrā 18 adrās 19 īnū 20 īnūs 21 īnūf 22 īnūc 23 īdrā 24 ūnū 25 ūnūs 26 ūnūf 27 ūnūc 28 ūnūzi 29 ūdrā/ānū 30 ... ādrā 36 ... upādrā 72 ... īqādrā 144 ... ādupādrā 432
ikh/si up/fu at/ca īq/zī ūn/vū ād/ā
kihs ghīz ikh hzī punf bmūv upn mvū talc drā' atl r'ā / drāikh 7 ghīzu 8 talcatl 9 mūvu 10 ... drā'atl 18 drā'rā 36
drā’ikh 7, drā’upn 12, drā’atl 18, drā’zī 24, drā’vū 30, drā’’ā 36
Non-finite verbs are (despite the name) more treated as defective nouns. They lack article yet behave as if were regulated by them
murú appúral "I do not pretend to die" ígul mārasu "eating is good
liviatan "whale" maubidik "sperm whale" bailzaibub "fly" drakula "bat" ganaisa "elephant"
aran bailzaibub gulí amārâ-la, qaut babaiaga "flies don't like getting eaten, said the witch"
3 genders, but the masculine can be treated as the neuter
mostly synthetic
Example texts
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References
- ^ De Eloquentia Vulgari
- ^ Genesis 2:19, 2:20 (KJV)
- ^ Os Códigos
- ^ Grammaire Diluvienne
- ^ Johanna Nichols, David A. Peterson. 2013. N-M Pronouns. In: Dryer, Matthew S. & Haspelmath, Martin (eds.) WALS Online (v2020.4) [Data set]. Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13950591 (Available online at http://wals.info/chapter/137, Accessed on 2025-01-20.)
- ^ The Sound Pattern of English (1968).