Kandi: Difference between revisions

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Revision as of 09:22, 7 March 2014

Tsan
ᏊᏮ Ꮧ:Ꮂ
(Tsani tsúyi)
Asaari.png
Pronunciation[/t͡sʌ̃ʔɪ t͡suwʝɪ/]
Created by
Native toSultanate of Tsandi
Native speakers4 million (2014)
Early form
Dialects
  • Western Tsan
  • Eastern Tsan
  • Kanni
Official status
Regulated byAytshin Sasháatsandi
Language codes
ISO 639-1ts
ISO 639-2ts
ISO 639-3qts
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.

Tsani, or ᏊᏮ Ꮧ:Ꮂ (Tsani tsúyi), pronounced /t͡sʌ̃ʔɪ t͡suwʝɪ/, is a Tanisi language spoken in the Sultanate of Tsandi. The Sultanate is located in the eastern region of Sapirica. The language belongs to the Tanisi language family and is thus distantly related to the Ris language.

Tsani is a heavily agglutinating with a complex verbal morphology. The language has repeatedly been analysed as lacking nouns and adjectives altogether, in favour of verbs. Phonologically it exhibits prenasalised consonants, realised as nasal clusters or voiced consonants in different dialects.

Phonology

The Tsani inventory has been documented and assessed repeatedly since the 19th century, the foremost people in the field being the Belgian linguist Émile d'Ivoire and the Scottish linguist John Glenn Crossing, an expert on Jivan languages.

Consonants

The following is a Tsani inventory of consonants, according to Émile d'Ivoire, a model nowadays serving as standard when analysing the language. Émile analyses the Tsani inventory as unusual in that it has prenasalised consonants, as well as an ill-defined dorsal consonant. The consonantal phonology is fairly symmetrical, with the exception of lacking /p/.

d'Ivoire model
Bilabial Dental Alveolar Dorsal Glottal
central central lateral palatal
Nasals m [m] n [n]
Stops prenasalised mb /ᵐb/ nd /ⁿd/ ng /ᶮɟ ~ ᵑg ~ ᶰɢ/ ʾ /ʔ/
voiceless t /t/ k /c ~ k ~ q/
ejective [pʼ] [tʼ] [cʼ ~ kʼ ~ qʼ]
Affricates ts /t͡s/ tl /t͡ɬ/ tsh /t͡ɕ/
Fricatives th /θ/ s /s/ sh /ɕ/ kh /ɕ ~ x ~ χ/ h /h/
Approximants [β̞] y /j/ w /ɰʷ/
Trills r /r/

Vowels

D'Ivoire also re-analysed and standardised the phonemic inventory of vowels in the language. He divided the five primary vowels into two categories, nasal and oral, these were in divided by length, granting short, long and extra long vowels. D'Ivoire did make clear that the vowels were not phonetically realised as long and extra long in the modern language, but rather as diphthongised and diphthongised with a long non-glide element, respectively.

Traditional model
Orthography and vowels
Oral Nasal
short long extra long short long extra long
i i /i/ í /i:/ íi /i::/ in /ĩn/ ín /ĩ:n/ íin /ĩ::n/
e e /e̞/ é /e̞ː/ ée /e̞ːː/ en /ẽ̞n/ én /ẽ̞ːn/ éen /ẽ̞ːːn/
a a /a/ á /aː/ áa /aːː/ an /ãn/ án /ãːn/ áan /ãːːn/
u u /u/ ú /uː/ úu /uːː/ un /ũn/ ún /ũːn/ úun /ũːːn/
o o /o̞/ ó /o̞ː/ óo /o̞ːː/ on /õ̞/ ón /õ̞ːn/ óon /õ̞ːːn/


Émile's model did coincide with the traditional orthography, but he disputed the realisation of the vowels.

D'Ivoire model
Oral Nasal
short long extra long short long extra long
i [i] [iɨ̯] [i:ɨ̯] [ẽ] [ẽ:] [ẽ:]
e [e̞] [e̞ə̯] [e̞ːə̯] [ə̃] [ə̃ː] [ə̃ː]
a [a] [aː] [aː] [ʌ̃] [ʌ̃ː] [ʌ̃ː]
u [u] [uw] [uːw] [ʊ̃] [ʊ̃ː] [ʊ̃ː]
o [o̞] [o̞ɰʷ] [o̞ːɰʷ] [ɒ̃] [ɒ̃ː] [ɒ̃ː]

See also

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