Hantza

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Not to be confused with Hadza language.
Hantza
Pronunciation[/ˈhant͡sa/]
Created by
Native toTurkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Afghanistan
EthnicityHantza
Native speakers182,000 (2010)
Standard form
none
Dialect
This article contains IPA phonetic symbols. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters. For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA.

Hantza is pronounced natively as /ˈhant͡sa/ (phonetically [ˈħ̝änt͡sɐ]) and may be Anglicised to /ˈhænt͡sə/.

The language is spoken in Central Asia, predominantly in Turkmenistan (98,000 speakers), but also in Uzbekistan (51,000) and Afghanistan (33,000).

Phonology

Main article: Hantza phonology

Consonants

There are eighteen consonant phonemes in Hantza.

Labial Alveolar Palatal Velar Glottal
Nasal m n ŋ
Plosive p b t d k ʔ
Fricative f s h
Affricate t͡s d͡z
Approx. j w
Liquid r l

In Hantza, /s/ is typically realised as the retracted [s̠] and, for many speakers, it is realised as [ɕ] before /i/. Similarly, /ts/ may become [tɕ] before /i/.

The glottal fricative /h/ is realised differently depending on the vowel that follows it. These allophones are given in the table below:

Before /a/ Before /e, i Before /o, u/
Intervocalic [ɦ̝] [ç] [ɦ̝ʷ]
Word-final [x ~ χ]
Elsewhere [ħ̝] [ç] [ħ̝ʷ]

The single rhotic in Hantza /r/ also has a great many realisations but these differ according to dialect: [ɾ ~ ɹ ~ r ~ ʀ ~ ʁ ~ χ ~ x]. It is also often labialised before /o, u/.

The lateral /l/ is realised as a dark [ɫ] when followed by /k, h/ and as a clear [l] elsewhere.

Vowels

Hantza's vowel inventory is a simple five-vowel system, similar to that of many modern languages, such as Greek and Swahili. Vowel length is not phonemic in Hantza and there are no diphthongs.

Front Back
Close i u
Mid e o
Open a

With the exception of /a/, vowels do not undergo reduction when unstressed; /a/ is phonetically [ä] when stressed and [ɐ] when unstressed. The remaining four vowels /i, u, e, o/ are usually realised as [ɪ, ʉ, ɛ, ɔ].

Orthography

Main article: Hantza alphabet

With the exception of those listed below, all consonant and vowel phonemes are represented orthographically as in IPA.

  • /ŋ/ is written <ng>
  • /ts/ is written <tz>
  • /dz/ is written <zz>
  • /j/ is written <y>
  • /ʔ/ is represented by a grave accent on the preceding vowel

Phonotactics

  • The basic phonotactic template is (C)(C)V(C)
  • Word-initial consonants: only /dz/ is disallowed
  • Permitted word-initial clusters: /p, b, t, d, k/ + /j, w/, /p, t, k/ + /r/ or /s/ + /p, t, k/
  • Permitted word-final consonants: /m, n, ŋ, p, b, t, d, k, ʔ, s, h, ts, r, l/
  • Word-final clusters: none allowed
  • Word-final and word-initial vowels: all are allowed
  • Medial clusters: any combination involving /dz/ is not permitted
  • /ʔ/ can only occur syllable-finally, but not inter-vocalically, and is most common word-finally

Morphophonological processes

  • Reduplication
  • Assimilation
  • Elision
  • Epenthesis
  • Lenition
  • Metathesis
  • Sandhi

Common processes:

  • -tit- > -tz-
  • -` > -k- when a suffix is added that begins with a vowel
  • o-, u- > w- when added to a word that begins with a vowel
  • e-, i- > y- when added to a word that begins with a vowel
  • a- > h- when added to a word that begins with a vowel
  • Metathesis of P+ NV > NPV, e.g. reporatative + negative: -kap- + -mò = -kampò

Prosody

Main article: Hantza prosody

Stress

The primary stress of a word falls on the penultimate syllable of the root. Secondary normally falls on the preceding syllable. In disyllabic words the secondary stress is necessarily on the second syllable.

Stress is not distinctive and is also relatively weak, unlike that of, for example, Russian. It is not indicated in the orthography.

Rhythm

Hantza is a syllable-timed language, that is to say that the duration of every syllable is equal.

Intonation

Intonation is the variation pitch indicating the attitudes and emotions of the speaker, signalling the difference between statements and questions, between different types of question, focusing attention on important elements speech and helping to regulate conversational interaction.

Typology

  • Morphology: heavy on the verbal morphology, minimal on the nominal
  • Morphosyntactic alignment: nom-acc?
  • Agency, animacy
  • No gender
  • Verbs: polypersonal agreement
  • No case marking
  • Relational nouns?
  • Inalienable possession, possessive prefixes
  • Plurals only for animates
  • Default word order: VSO
  • Non-configurational (new news before the verb (often definite), old news after the verb (often indefinite))
  • Topic-comment/thème-rhème & focus
  • Head-marking
  • Infixes?

Morphology

Broadly speaking, there are three parts of speech in Hantza: nouns, verbs and particles.

Nouns

Main article: Hantza nouns

The category of "noun" (more properly "nominal") in Hantza encompasses what are thought of in English as nouns, attributive adjectives, pronouns and numerals. What correspond to adjectives in English are essentially nouns used in apposition.

Nouns are not marked for case and it is usually only animate nouns that are inflected for plurality. However, nouns are inflected for possession by prefixing. Indeed, in some cases this is mandatory (see possession).

Some nouns are in fact verb phrases that have been nominalised by way of an enclitic.

Infixes are sometimes used to derive adjective-like nouns from noun-like nouns, e.g. "sandy" from "sand".

Verbs

Main article: Hantza verbs

The term "verb" in Hantza also includes predicative adjectives. Predicative adjectives are essentially verbalised nouns.

The verb paradigm is Hantza is heavily prefixing; these prefixes come in a strict order. Hantza verbs exhibit polypersonal agreement, as such they are conjugated for subject, direct object and indirect object. As a result Hantza is pro-drop language. Only the grammatical persons that are used with animate nouns distinguish plural from singular.

Grammatical tense is not a significant category in Hantza verbs (though there is an overt morphological future/non-future distinction). Verbs are instead aspect and mood heavy. This conflation is termed called "mode" in Hantza; there are thirteen modes.

Hantza is extremely fastidious regarding the transitivity and valency of a verb and its required prefixes.

The mediopassive voice is formed by an infix inserted in the verb stem.

Negativity and evidentiality are marked on the verb by suffixes.

Particles

Main article: Hantza particles

Adverbs, postpositions, interrogatives, demonstratives, conjunctions and interjections come under "particles".

There is a three-way distance distinction in Hantza demonstratives: proximal, distal and obviative.

No indefinite article; invariable definite article: do.

Syntax and discourse

Main article: Hantza syntax
  • Animacy and agency
  • Definiteness

Focus and topic (thème/rhème)

  • Relative clauses
  • Subordination and coordination
  • Discourse particles

Word order

  • Default word order: VSO
  • Non-configurational (new news before the verb (often definite)?, old news after the verb (often indefinite)?)

Deixis

Anaphora, cataphora and deixis.

The obviative is used to discuss something that is either not present or not at the centre of the discourse.

Derivational morphology

Main article: Derivational morphology

Lexicon

Example texts

Short examples and sentences:

The Hantza Language (VTE)
Orthography Hantza alphabet (Latin script)
Phonology IPA for HantzaPhonologyProsody
Grammar NounsNumeralsVerbsParticlesSyntaxDerivational morphology
Vocabulary Basic phrasesKinshipSwadesh list
Texts Test Case SentencesThe North Wind and the SunThe Lord's PrayerThe Tower of Babel
Other DialectsEthnologyDemography