Kukʉp
This article is a construction site. This project is currently undergoing significant construction and/or revamp. By all means, take a look around, thank you. |
Kukʉp | |
---|---|
Pinekatʉ | |
Pronunciation | [/pine'kakʉ/] |
Created by | z2a |
Native to | Pinek Leʉv |
Ethnicity | Shunfoh |
Native speakers | 30,835 (111) |
Shunfoh languages
| |
Early form | Old Kukʉp
|
Official status | |
Regulated by | Edwoa Xechode tuv Pluthe (The Sworn Keepers of Memories) |
Kukʉp /kukʉp/ (pronounced /kukup/ in True Ongo, also called Pinekatʉ /pine'kakʉ/), is the native language of the Pineti, a Shunfoh culture that exists primarily at sea. In its modern form, it is a Kukʉp-based Shunfoh utyhuflone, heavily saturated with Ongo vocabulary, but also influenced by Buw, Vasále, and Richi. Although Kukʉp is spoken by almost 117,000 people world wide, less than 31,000 of them are native speakers, as the language has found great popularity being used in trade over the last three decades.
While Kukʉp has a number of features that distinguish it from Ongo, the amount of vocabulary shared allows, in most situations, the languages to be partially mutually intelligible. The usage and education of Kukʉp is seen by some XeShunfoh as controversial, due to a perceived lack of overall cultural unity its continued use displays. Kukʉp is not the only Ongo utyhuflone, but it does have more variance from True Ongo than any other Shunfoh dialect or utyhuflone. The Pineti have showed no signs of reducing or discontinuing its use in favor of True Ongo and some have claimed that its ease of use for the other peoples of the world and its popularity among various major ports of trade has played a major role in gaining XeShunfoh the recognition from the other peoples that they've sought for so long.
Etymology
The word utyhuflone is of True Ongo origin, a term meaning "a familiar stranger." The term was originally used to indicate any Shunfoh that did not speak True Ongo, but eventually came to refer to the mixed language that such Shunfoh passed down to their children.
Pinekatʉ is a term used by the Pineti to refer to their own language. With alleged use dating back to before Old Kukʉp, the word is often translated to mean "water speak" or "wet words". The Pineti have been known to disapprove of and discourage the use of the term by non-native speakers.
Phonology
Consonants
Consonant inventory: /h k l m n p t v w ŋ ɾ ʔ/
Bilabial | Labiodental | Alveolar | Velar | Labio-velar | Glottal | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Stop | p | t1 | k2 | ʔ | |||
Nasal | m | n | ŋ3 | ||||
Fricative | v4 | h | |||||
Approximant | w5 | ||||||
Tap | ɾ | ||||||
Lateral approximant | l |
- /t/ turns into /k/ between vowels
- /k/ turns into /t/ when ending a word
- /ŋ/ turns into /k/ when beginning a word
- /v/ turns into /w/ when beginning a word
- /w/ turns into /v/ between vowels
Vowels
Vowel inventory: /a e i o u ɒ ɛ ʉ/
Front | Central | Back | |
---|---|---|---|
Close | i | ʉ | u |
Close-mid | e | o | |
Open-mid | ɛ | ||
Open | a | ɒ |
Diphthongs: None
Phonotactics
Syllable structure for is, in most cases, (C)V(C). Stress pattern is normally penultimate, meaning stress is placed on the second to last syllable. Because of the extensive use of loan words, exceptions to this rule are relatively common.
- Word initial consonants: h, k, l, m, n, p, t, v, w, ŋ, ɾ
- Mid word consonants : h, k, l, m, n, p, t, v, w, ŋ, ɾ, ʔ
- Word final consonants : k, l, n, p, t, v, w, ɾ, ʔ
Orthography
Grammar
Kukʉp uses Subject-Oblique-Object-Verb for word order, with adjectives placed before nouns and suffixes used when adpositions are necessary.
- "Mary opened the red door with a key" = Mary with a key the red door opened. (or "Marya kep evo wawʉt lil a'o vopuk kutet.")
Nouns
Kukʉp uses gender (Person, Land, Sea, Sky) to indicate the source of nouns. While nouns will be assumed to have a particular gender (ee means wood and is normally Land gendered), gender can be changed to show that a specific noun came from a different source (Sea gendered wood might indicate drift wood, while Person gendered wood would imply that someone shaped or carved the wood in question).
Noun Morphology
Kukʉp is an ergative-absolutive language, meaning the object of a transitive verb and the single core argument of an intransitive verb are treated the same (absolutive), while the agent of a transitive verb is treated differently (ergative). In English, this would read as follows:
- He (agent) found me (object).
- Him (argument) traveled.
Singular | Plural | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Absolutive | Person | child | nevo /’nevɒ/ | children | Suffix: -(e)t /-(ɛ)t/ nevot /’nevɒt/ |
Land | tree | erku /’ɛɾku/ | trees | Suffix: -(u)ri /-(u)ɾi/ erkuri /ɛɾ’kuɾi/ | |
Sea | fish | ʉre /’ʉɾɛ/ | fishes | Suffix: -(ʉ)p /-(ʉ)p/ ʉrep /’ʉɾɛp/ | |
Sky | bird | roi /’ɾoi/ | birds | Suffix: -(u)re /uɾe/ roire /ɾo’iɾe/ | |
Ergative | Person | child | Suffix: -a /-a/ nevoa /ne’vɒa/ |
children | Suffix: -(ʉ)re /ʉɾe/ nevore /ne’vɒɾe/ |
Land | tree | Suffix: -(i)t /-(i)t/ erkut /ɛɾ’kut/ |
trees | Suffix: -(ʉ)t /-(ʉ)t/ erkut /ɛɾ’kut/ | |
Sea | fish | Suffix: -(o)v /-(ɒ)v/ ʉrev /’ʉɾɛv/ |
fishes | Suffix: -(ʉ)' /-(ʉ)ʔ/ ʉre’ /’ʉɾɛʔ/ | |
Sky | bird | Suffix: -i /-i/ roii /ɾo’ii/ |
birds | Suffix: -(u)p /-(u)p/ roip /’ɾoip/ |
Definite Article
Singular | Plural | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Absolutive | Person | the [child] | lil /lil/ | the [children] | ril /ɾil/ |
Land | the [tree] | hom /hɒm/ | the [trees] | ‘om /ʔɒm/ | |
Sea | the [fish] | nan /nan/ | the [fishes] | nam /nam/ | |
Sky | the [bird] | kow /kow/ | the [birds] | kuw /kuw/ | |
Ergative | Person | the [child] | 'ul /ʔul/ | the [children] | hul /hul/ |
Land | the [tree] | hup /hup/ | the [trees] | rup /ɾup/ | |
Sea | the [fish] | kan /kan/ | the [fishes] | kel /kɛl/ | |
Sky | the [bird] | tow /tow/ | the [birds] | 'aw /ʔaw/ |
Indefinite Article
The numeral for ‘one’, evo, is used as the indefinite article.
Personal Pronouns
Absolutive | Ergative | Genitive | Dative | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1st. Singular | I | lo /lo/ | me | lor /loɾ/ | mine | le /le/ | to me | lo e /lo ɛ/ |
2nd. Singular | you | let /let/ | you | leh /leh/ | yours | lep /lɛp/ | to you | let e /let ɛ/ |
3rd. Singular | he/she/it | pu /pu/ | him/her/it | pʉn /pʉn/ | his/hers/its | pur /pur/ | to him/her/it | pu e /pu ɛ/ |
1st. Plural | we | lʉ /lʉ/ | us | lʉt /lʉt/ | ours | lʉn /lʉn/ | to us | lʉ e /lʉ ɛ/ |
2nd. Plural | you | ʉ /ʉ/ | you | hʉ /hʉ/ | yours | ʉp /ʉp/ | to you | ʉ e /ʉ ɛ/ |
3rd. Plural | they | o /ɒ/ | them | o' /ɒʔ/ | theirs | ho' /hɒʔ/ | to them | o e /ɒ ɛ/ |
Verbs
Kukʉp verbs don't use perfect aspects or indicative mood (past, present, or future tense). Instead, those details are determined through context.
- Progressive aspect -- Suffix: -(i)r /-(i)ɾ/ -- "am studying" or petʉpir
- Imperative -- Suffix: -(e)ni /ɛni/ -- "study!" (as a command) or petʉpeni
- Negation -- Uses the particle u /u/ before main verb phrase