Old Gaju

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Old Gaju
Gaju
Pronunciation[[Help:IPA|'gaɟu]]
Created by
SettingRttirria
Native toEast Rttirria
Rttirrian
  • South Rttirrian
    • Old Gaju

Old Gaju (English: /'gɑːd͡ʒuː/, Old Gaju: ['gaɟu], Rttirri: [ˈkɑcu]) was an old form of the Gaju language, spoken by the Gaju people in eastern Rttirria around the 14th century CE. It was spoken over a much larger area than modern Gaju is: over most of eastern Rttirria. It is a member of the Rttirrian language family, descended from the Proto-South-Rttirrian langauge that is also the ancestor of modern Rttirri, the nation's official language.

Phonology

Consonants

Labial Alveolar Palatal Velar Glottal
Nasal m /m/ n /n/ ny /ɲ/
Plosive p /p/
b /b/
t /t/
d /d/
ty /c/
j /ɟ/
k /k/
g /g/
Fricative f /f/
v /v/
s /s/
sh /ʃ/
sy /ç/ kh /x/ h /h/
Affricate ts /t͡s/
ch /t͡ʃ/
Approximant l /l/

In addition, the following consonants were allowed in loanwords: ng /ŋ/, z /z/, hh /ʔ/, w /w/, y /j/.

Vowels

Front Back
High i /i/ u /u/
Mid e /e/ o /o/
Low a /a/ aa /ɑ/
  • Front vowels were allophonically lowered after palatal consonants: /i/ to [ɪ], /e/ to [ɛ].

Tones

Old Gaju distinguished two tones: high and low. In addition, two contour tones were allowed in loanwords: rising and falling. The high tone was by far the most common, so low tones are distinguished in the Latin script with a grave accent: à àà è ì ò ù. Rising and falling tones are distinguished as follows: â ââ ê î ô û ǎ ǎǎ ě ǐ ǒ ǔ.

Grammar

Verbs

The Old Gaju verb was somewhat agglutinative, but did not have the inflectional complexity that had developed in Classical Rttirri by this point. However, an aspect and politeness system, which have not existed in any form of Rttirri, developed from the Proto-South-Rttirrian evidentiality system. There were four classes of verbs, each of which took different prefixes for the past and future tenses; this system exists in only a very vestigial form in modern Rttirri.

The following slots were allowed for affixes on the verb.

Verb Slot Allowable Inputs
Aspect/Politeness na- (perfective)
nyev- (polite perfective)
shu- (habitual)
tya- (polite habitual)
Mood -fta- (adhortative)
-nag- (subjunctive)
-kanag- (conditional)
-khtaa- (imperative)
-kamu- (generic)
Tense -bu-/-du-/-do-/-ju- (past)
-mi-/-ni-/-ne-/-nyi- (future)
Verb Root any verb
Auxiliary Verb -kàki ("to be able to")
-kà ("to need to")
-dèka ("to want to")
-gùki ("to force to")
and others

Nouns

Nouns could take the following cases:

Case Suffix
nominative (none)
accusative (none)
dative -khtya
ablative -da
locative -li
comitative -daa
instrumental -wàtyev
vocative -chastaa

They were also pluralized with ma, a particle that came after any case suffixes.

Pronouns

The following pronouns were used. They were not affixed to the verb, but stood in the place of other nouns.

Singular Plural
Nominative Accusative Nominative Accusative
1st person na ni ma mi
2nd person kov ki tsa tsi
3rd person la ge daa di

Genitive pronouns take the low tone to distinguish themselves from the nominative pronouns. Like other noun-modifying particles, they follow the noun.

English Old Gaju
my
your kòv
his/her/its
our
all of your tsà
their dàà
Nuspa mìchu kòv ìtsevki skalag tèv.
hut filthy 2SG.GEN castle glorious 1SG.GEN be
Your filthy hut is my glorious castle.

Questions

The following question words were used:

English Old Gaju
who/whom ta
what ti
when dìti
where dìtag
why dìtà
how dìtug

Syntax

Word order was subject-object-verb (SOV), although nouns in one of the cases other than nominative or accusative could be positioned anywhere before the verb. All adjectives came after their pertinent nouns. The question particle was tyi.

Sample text

Old Gaju:

Na shnevnu-daa nà Dòpa Chalà-li tyùtsu.
1SG family-COM 1SG.GEN Rtuha kingdom-LOC live
I live in the kingdom of Rtuha with my family.

Modern Rttirri:

Ni-syutu-nu Rtuha Tesapu na-snenu-rta.
1SG.ABS-live-DRPAC Rtuha kingdom-LOC 1SG.GEN-family-COM