Numyut
| Numyut | |
|---|---|
| Numyuchi | |
| замоз нумючүн zamoz numyuchün | |
| Pronunciation | [ˈzɑmoz nuˈmʲutɕyn] |
| Created by | Jukethatbox |
| Date | 2025 |
| Native to | Greater Numyutia |
| Ethnicity | Numyuts |
| Native speakers | 800,000 (2025) |
language isolate
| |
| Official status | |
Official language in | Numyutia |
| Regulated by | AZN |
Numyut[a] or Numyuchi is a language isolate spoken primarily in the region of Greater Numyutia, and is the native language of the Numyuts or Numyuchi people. It is the official and national language of the Socialist People's Republic of Numyutia, where it is regulated by the Academy of the Numyut Language (Ахадемe Замозүн Нумючүн, Axademye Zamozün Numyuchün, AZN or АЗН); it is also the de facto official language of the anarchist breakaway state Bokchun Commune.
Numyut is written in both the Cyrillic and Latin scripts. The Socialist People's Republic only officially uses the Cyrillic script, but both scripts are taught in classrooms;[b] Latin proficiency and use has also found to be higher among younger working-class speakers, as well as in the Bokchun Commune. This article mostly uses Cyrillic throughout for consistency.
Orthography
Numyut can be written in both the Cyrillic script and the Latin script; however, the government of the Socialist People's Republic of Numyutia only uses Cyrillic, and most road signs are written in Cyrillic.
| Phoneme | Cyrillic (кириличи) |
Latin (latini) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| maj. | min. | maj. | min. | |
| /ɑ/ | А | а | A | a |
| /b/ | Б | б | B | b |
| /bʲ/[A] | By | by | ||
| /ç/[B] | Ҳ | ҳ | Xh | xh |
| Х | х | X | x | |
| /d/ | Д | д | D | d |
| /dʑ/ | Дж | дж | Dzh | dzh |
| /e/ | Е | е | E | e |
| /f/ | Ф | ф | F | f |
| /g/ | Г | г | G | g |
| /ɫ/ | Л | л | L | l |
| /m/ | М | м | M | m |
| /mʲ/[A] | My | my | ||
- ^ a b The palatalised consonants /bʲ, ʎ, mʲ, pʲ/ are written as ⟨By-by, Ly-ly, My-my, Py-py⟩ in Latin before anything apart from /i/. In Cyrillic, the "diphthong letters", ⟨я, ю, ё, э⟩ (representing /ʲɑ, ʲu, ʲo, ʲe/ respectively) are used after ⟨Бб, Лл, Мм, Пп⟩ depending on the vowel to indicate palatalisation.
- ^ /ç/ is written ⟨Ҳҳ⟩/⟨Xhxh⟩ when phonemic and as ⟨Xx⟩ when as an allophone of /x/.
Phonology
Consonants
| Labial | Coronal | Dorsal | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alveolar | Postalveolar | Palatal | Velar | ||
| Stop/Affricate | p pʲ b bʲ | t d | tɕ dʑ | g | |
| Nasal | m mʲ | n | ɲ | [ŋ] | |
| Fricative | f | s z | ʃ ʒ | ç | x ɣ |
| Tap/Approximant | w | ɾ | ʎ | ɫ | |
Numyut has three allophonic consonants /ç, ŋ, ɲ/:
- /ŋ/ appears as an allophone of /n/ before /g/, as in енгу [ˈeŋgu] "or". However, in fast or casual speech, these /ng/ clusters may lenite to leave just the /ŋ/ (as in енгу [ˈeŋgu] > [ˈeŋu]), which may give an erroneous impression to some non-native speakers that /ŋ/ is phonemically contrastive in Numyut.
- In a similar fashion, /ɲ/ also appears as an allophone of /n/ before /tɕ, dʑ/, such as in унчу [ˈuɲtɕu] "fox". however, /ɲ/ also occurs as a separate phoneme from /n/, such as between the words муна [ˈmunɐ] "four" and муња [ˈmuɲɐ] "low".
- /ç/ appears as its own phoneme, but also as an allophone of /x/ before /bʲ, dʑ, mʲ, ɲ, pʲ, tɕ/, such as in бөхчө [ˈbøçtɕø] "bowl, container", ахпят [ˈɑçpʲɐt] "grandfather" and мехминла [ˈmeçmʲinlɐ] "Wednesday"
Vowels
| Front | Back | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| unrnd. | rnd. | unrnd. | rnd. | |
| Close | i | y | u | |
| Mid | e | ø | o | |
| Open | ɑ | |||
Numyut vowels are generally split into two categories: rounded vowels (булюзджөpө) and unrounded vowels (абулюзджepe). /o, ø, u, y/ are generally considered the rounded vowels, written ⟨о, ө, у, ү⟩ in Cyrillic and ⟨o, ö, u, ü⟩ in Latin respectively; the rest, /ɑ, e, i/, are the unrounded vowels, written ⟨a, e, и⟩ in Cyrillic and ⟨a, e, i⟩ in Latin. The distinction is important because Numyut incorporates vowel harmony.
Vowel harmony
Numyut incorporates vowel harmony, meaning that vowels in affixes and other lemmas will assimilate with the dominant vowels in a certain word. For example, grammatical case endings change depending on the prevalence of a type of vowel in the root word, such as in the accusative case ending broadly written -dEn:
| example | accusative |
|---|---|
| малча malcha |
малчадeн malchaden |
| көзөб közöb |
көзөбдөн közöbdön |
Because малча malcha "sweet black tea" only has unrounded vowels in it, -dEn becomes -den, yielding малчадeн malchaden. However, because көзөб közöb "corn cob" only has rounded vowels, -dEn instead becomes -dön and yields көзөбдөн közöbdön instead of *közöbden.
Broad writing
Broad writing (Numyut: лигобраст ligobrast, lit. "wide writing") or broad transcription refers to a transcription system for representing vowel-harmonic diaphonemes; i.e. because /i/ becomes /y/ when triggered by a round vowel, broad writing would represent /i/ and /y/ as the single diaphoneme I. Broad writing is primarily only used in Numyut linguistics. Standard Numyut has two diaphonemes, /E/ and /I/, but other dialects tend to have more; all recorded diaphonemes are shown in the table below.
| Diaphoneme | Diallophones | Examples | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| E | /e/ | малчаден malchaden "sweet black tea (acc.)" | Standard |
| /ø/ | көзөбдөн közöbdön "corn cob (acc.)" | ||
| I | /i/ | брастогин brastogin "the novel" | Standard; absent in Krebsuyere, where /I/ is always pronounced /i/. Spelling remains the same as Standard |
| /y/ | нүселүн nüselün "the screw" | ||
| O | /ɤ/, /ə/, /ø/ | пятон pyaton or пятөн pyatön "father's" | Non-standard; found as /ɤ/ in Üchlö and /ø~ə/ in Lunyus; both may be spelt ⟨ө⟩ in eye dialect. |
| /o/ | нургон nurgon "apple's" | Standard | |
| U | /ɨ/ | жамиуд zhamiud "at a park" | Non-standard; found only in the traditional Tungerze-Sedzherze dialects, and primarily among older speakers. |
| /u/ | Музгубуд Muzgubud "in Moscow" | Standard |
Notes
- ^ замоз нумючүн, zamoz numyuchün [ˈzɑmoz nuˈmʲutɕyn]
- ^ The level of proficiency in the Latin alphabet varies nationally; generally, Cyrillic is given priority, and in poorer, rural areas, Latin script proficiency is substantially lower though Cyrillic literacy remains fairly high.