Antarctican/Sprachbund

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As mentioned before, it is much less common for regional varieties of Antarctican to differ in their syntax and phonology. This is because the local languages of Antarctica form a very strong Sprachbund Sprachbund[*], which have converged to have very similar phonologies and syntactic systems. Some examples of these areal features are:


Phonology

  • A pitch register system Register[*].
  • Consonant voicing only being phonemic under certain specific conditions. In particular, a total lack of phonemic voicing of non-coronal fricatives.
  • Some kind of fortis / lenis contrast in obstruents, which often interacts with the pitch register system in some way. This contrast may be glottalisation (ejective or implosive), gemination or aspiration.
  • Two sets of nasal consonants (this can be plain vs. prestopped, or involve a voicing contrast).
  • A very restricted range of syllable shapes.


Morphology

  • Ergative-absolutive cas marking on nouns (if any is present at all).
  • A complete lack of number agreement on verbs, and no comprehensive marking of plurality on nouns (only ever specific categories of nouns).
  • Tense and aspect are not consistently marked on verbs, if they are marked at all.
  • A lack of infinitive verb forms. Antarctican languages use a variety of ways to compensate for this.
  • Transitivity marked on verbs.


Syntax

  • Syntactic ergativity.
  • Topic-comment structure to sentences.
  • Inclusive and exclusive 'we', with no distinction made between exclusive 'we' and 'I'.
  • Head initial syntax.