Mannish

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Introduction

Real World Setting

Mannish is Germanic conlang created by Kóði Lý Alísuson Antóníusarson (also known as Cody Lee Ervin), and has been killed off and resuscitated several times over the past year and a half, give or take a little. It's main purpose is to provide entertainment to its creator, as well as help its creator learn more about Linguistics as a whole along the way. Although, it goes without saying that it's mostly just created a lot of frustration. A lot.

Typological Description

Mannish is a heavily inflected, conservative Germanic language with five cases: nominative, accusative, dative, genitive, and instrumental. Mannish nouns can have one of three grammatical genders: masculine, feminine, or neuter, and decline for number and definiteness. Adjectives agree with their head nouns in all of the aforementioned categories, most notably retaining strong and weak declensions mirroring that of a definite-indefinite distinction. Verbs conjugate for 3 tenses (preterite, present, and future), 2 voices (active and passive), 3 moods (indicative, subjunctive, and imperative), person, number, and gender. Periphrastic constructions or adverbs are used for finer nuances.

Pronouns are declined for gender, number, and person. Their usage is not obligatory, however, and as such Mannish is a pro-drop language; a feature that sets it apart from most of its Germanic relatives.

Notable Characteristics

  • Simple future tense derived from the infinitive followed by a conjugated form of the verb "to be" (Mannish wesan): Hó fiþím "I will find him", from Hó fiþ imi, literally "I am to find him".
  • Lack of universal initial syllable stress due to long vowels and diphthongs attracting stress, kwigdóur, [kʋigˈdɔʉɻ] "kingdom", from PrG *kuningadōmaz
  • Complete lack of Germanic umlaut and (as long vowels are not different in quality and not counting diphthongs) a relatively low vowel inventory in comparison to other Germanic languages.

Phonology

Orthography

Mannish uses a variant of the Latin Alphabet consisting of the following letters:

a á b d e é f g h i í j k l m n o ó p r s t þ u ú v w

The letters c, q, x, y, and z are only used in a small number of recent loanwords. Most older loanwords have been assimilated into the standard orthographical conventions, with younger ones retaining their native orthography to one degree or another.

For example, Jinr Notebook "The Notebook" (as in the computer) has yet to be altered due to how recent of a loan it is, while Jinr Twalet "Toilet" has already been altered due to it being an older loanword from French.

The orthography is largely regular, albeit not completely intuitive to speakers of, say, English. The vowels are fairly straightforward, while the consonants have more ambiguities that are not inherently evident at first glance.

Vowels

The short vowels a i e o u represent /ɑ i e ɔ u/, respectively, with their longer counterparts á í é ó ú representing /ɑː iː eː ɔː uː/. Long vowels are always written with the accented graphemes, the only exception being unassimilated loanwords.

Example: Jinr Autobahn /ˈjinr ˈaʉtɔbɑːn/, a German loanword.

There also exist the digraphs au aú ai ói óu which represent the diphthongs [aʉ ɔʏ ɐɪ øʏ ɔʉ], respectively.

Consonants

Some consonant graphemes match their IPA counterparts, with the majority either representing completely different phones or having variable pronunciation based on phonological environment.

Monographs
Graph IPA Comments
a /ɑ/
á /ɑː/
b /b/
d /d/
e /e/
é /eː/
f /f/ Realized as [v] between vowels.
g /g/
h /ç/ Realized as [ʝ] between vowels.
i /i/
í /iː/
j /j/
k /k/
l /l/ Realized as [ɫ] in onset and [ʉ̯] in coda.
m /m/ Realized as [ɱ] before /f/.
n /n/ Realized as [ɱ], [ŋ], and [ɲ] before /f/, /k g/, and /ç/, respectively.
o /ɔ/
ó /ɔː/
r /r/ Realized as [ɻ] in coda.
s /s/ Realized as [z] between vowels.
t /t/
þ /θ/ Realized as [ð] between vowels.
u /u/
ú /uː/
v ɰ Does not occur in coda.
w /w/ Does not occur in coda.

Consonants

Vowels

Prosody

Stress

Intonation

Phonotactics

Morphophonology

Morphology

Syntax

The default word order is SOV, with VSO used for questions. Due to the rich case system and conjugation, speakers can and do stray from this word order, and there is no trace of a V2 requirement.

Constituent order

Noun phrase

Adjectives can come before or after their head nouns, with A-N being the default order and N-A frequently being used to emphasize the adjective.

  • Ruþaú vánar seó - "I see a red car"; vs Vánar ruþaú seó - "I see a car that's red", or "I see a red car".

The former simply states that the speaker sees a car and that they decided to describe the color of said car, while the latter states that the speaker sees a red car and that the color has significance. This order is commonly used in the phrase "I see X, not Y".

  • Vánar ruþaú seó, ni blaú. - "I see a red car, not a blue one."

Verb phrase

Sentence phrase

Dependent clauses

Example texts

Other resources