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Ancient Yeldha
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Ancient Yeldha | |
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Common Yeldha, Common Ancient Yeldha, Old Yeldhic, Common, Sciogh | |
chláenn, sciogh chláenn, yeldhagh'n, Sciogh | |
Created by | Jukethatbox |
Date | 2022 |
Era | As a native language, 3,000 UH–1,000 UH — As a liturgical language and otherwise, 10 BH onwards |
Yeldhic
| |
Early form | |
Standard forms | Common
Sabhoc
Tiragii
|
Yeldhic script | |
Official status | |
Regulated by | Caeghdiúll (historical) Lá Ó Sciogh(Sabhoc) |
Ancient Yeldha[a][b] is a classical and liturgical language belonging to the Yeldhic language family. Vigorously documented by a mysterious group of monks known only as the Caeghdiúll /kəjdjuːɫ/ around 2,000 UH, Ancient Yeldha was the lingua franca of Talkoch for several thousand years despite a seeming lack of a significant native speaker group. Its falling out of use in favour of Moshurian as a lingua franca marked the beginning of the BH era, though it remains to this day a significantly used language in Talkoch science alongside Ilda and Moshurian.
Ancient Yeldha is considered sacred in the Sabhoc religion and has been in liturgical use since 10 BH; Sabhoc speakers have since developed their own regulated variety of the language mostly outside of Caeghdiúll influence.
Phonology
Grammar
Verbs
Common verbs
Common verbs(éagam chláere) are always placed at the beginning of a sentence. Tense and mood are conjugated through vocalic infixes while aspect & the interrogative mood are shown through postpositional particles.
Tense & mood
Indicative | Conditional | Potential | Imperative | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Present | - | -ei(gh)- | -á(gh)- | -ú- |
Past | -ia(gh)- | -áe(gh)- | -o(bh)- | |
Future | -io(gh)- | -er- | -au(bh)- |
The inclusion of the flex consonants ⟨gh, bh⟩ is irregular and often depends on the verb. For example, the verb n-thioch "to pour" is inflected without flexes, so theich, thách, thoch, etc. However, the verb n-sciodh "to speak", is inflected with flexes, with apostrophes separating them from coda consonants, as in sceigh'dh, scágh'dh, scobh'dh, etc. There is some phonological differentiation between flexed and non-flexed inflections according to the Caeghdiúll; to take the previous example, thoch may have been pronounced /θux/ while scobh'dh, of the same tense, may have been pronounced /skuwð/.
Aspect
Perfective | Imperfective | Perfect | Imperfect |
---|---|---|---|
- | dá | nó | nabh |
Interrogative mood
The interrogative mood is shown by the postpositional particle ó.
Example text
Present tense:
- Sciodh chláenn.
- "[I] speak Ancient Yeldha."
Past tense:
- Sciagh'dh lá chláenn.
- "He spoke Ancient Yeldha."
Future tense:
- Chrobh'm lá ísthogh.
- "He will be born tomorrow."
Conditional & interrogative:
- Bhleigh'n ó mrug?
- "Would [you] like a drink?"
Conditional & potential; as two infixes cant be used at once, the verb n-dhaom "to be able to" is inflected in the potential and the combined infinitive and conditional second verb is placed after.
- Ea, dheigh'm n-eageir tá.
- "Yes, I would be able to organise that."
Personal pronouns
This table only shows the personal pronouns attested by the Caeghdiúll.
Singular | Plural | ||
---|---|---|---|
1st | - | mós | |
2nd | nominative | í | eair |
vocative | n'í | l'éair | |
3rd | common | ogh | iogh |
neuter | lá | lagh |
"Common" third-person pronouns refer to objects, akin to the use of English "it", while "neuter" third-person pronouns refer to people, akin to the use of English singular and plural "they". Ancient Yeldha has no attested singular first-person pronoun; these are always inferred from the inflection of the verb.
Demonstratives
Ancient Yeldha demonstratives can be used as determiners or pronouns. As determiners, they are placed postpositionally.
Singular | Plural | |
---|---|---|
Proximal | na | ná |
Distal | tá | táe |