Kandi/Sandbox: Difference between revisions

From Linguifex
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 350: Line 350:
| index = 12
| index = 12
}}{{gloss/indexable
}}{{gloss/indexable
|phrase = tēndatšiwī
|phrase = tīndatšiwī
|IPA = [ˈtɛːndat͡ʃɪwɪː]
|IPA = [ˈtɪːndat͡ʃɪwɪː]
| morphemes = tēnda-∅-tši=wī
| morphemes = tīnda-∅-tši=wī
| gloss = know({{sc|IX}})-{{sc|PRED}}-{{sc|DUB}}={{sc|1SG}}
| gloss = know({{sc|IX}})-{{sc|PRED}}-{{sc|DUB}}={{sc|1SG}}
| translation = I am not sure I know
| translation = I am not sure I know

Revision as of 22:40, 2 December 2015

Kandi
Kāndi tsūyi
Pronunciation[[Help:IPA|kaːndɪ t͡suβ̞ʝɪ]]
Created byWaahlis
SettingUnknown conworld
Native speakers4 million (2015)
Jasi-Jivan
  • Tanisi
    • Kandi
Early form
Proto-Kandi
Official status
Regulated byAytšin Tatšūkkāndi
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.

Kāndi, or Tsan (kāndi tsūyi or tsani tsūyi) is a language spoken by the Tsan people. It belongs to the Tanisi language family and is thus distantly related to the Ris language. Kandi 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.

Phonology

Consonants

The Kandi inventory of consonants is very symmetrical. In D'Ivoires first model, he was mistaken and realised the velar approximant /ɰ/ as a variation of the long vowels. Comparative studies of the Ris and Jávva languages proved this to be wrong.

d'Ivoire model
Bilabial Dental Alveolar Dorsal Glottal
central central lateral palatal
Nasals m /m/ n /n/
Stops
voiceless t /t/ k /k/
voiced b /b/ d /d/ g /g/
Affricates ts /t͡s/ tl /t͡ɬ/ /t͡ɕ/
Fricatives s /s/ š /ɕ/ · y /ʝ/ x /x/ h /h/
Approximants w /β̞/ l /l/ ǧ /ɰ/
Trills r /ʀ~r/


D'Ivoire standardised the phonemic inventory of vowels in the language, as per his conclusion that there were three phonemic short vowels, /i/, /a/, /u/, and three phonemic "long" vowels. The quality of the long vowels is however rarely realised as the same as their short counterparts. It is likely that they once only differed in length, but such is no longer the case.

d'Ivoire model
short long
Close front unrounded i /i/ ī /iː/ [iː]
Open back unrounded a /a/ ā /aː/ [ɔ]
Close back rounded u /u/ ū /uː/ [u͜β̞]

Vowels

Morphophonology

Noun class specifers

There are 9 noun classes in Kandi. They are distinguished by the specifier they use, which is one of few grammatical number dependent elements in the language.

Class Singular Dual Plural
I -ma -im -nna -ūnna -yme -imme people, professions
II -n -i animals, pets, cattle
III -uš -waš predators, pejoratives
IV wa- w- plants, nature
V ki- kin- -ūnna -yunna meat, edibles, bodyparts
VI -iš -sse -issa small/round/short/curved objects
VII -teh -teh -yittah -īttah long/straight objects, instruments
VIII -kka -ākka unclear, abstractions
IX -ye -ya -yeh -yeh vast objects, divinity, honorifics

Simple stuff

Predicative expressions

The Kāndi language lacks a clear distinction between nouns and verbs, and exhibits a flexibility between the predicate and argument in a clause. Any Kāndi content word is equivalent to a predicative expression, by default to be + noun. That means that a word like šay would mean (it is a) girl.


katsa
[ˈkat͡sa]
katsa-∅
songbird(II)-PRED

It is a songbird.

(1)

agūrri
[agu͜βrɪ]
agūrri-∅
boy(II)-PRED

It is a boy.

(2)


In a similar fashion there is , yīn (PL), sir; content words for me, you, this, et c., equivalent to English pronouns. In order to create a predicative expression of the type I am + noun/adj, these are fixed to the end of the word. In most circumstances these pronominal predicatives are clitical.


[wɪː]
wī-∅
1SG(I)-PRED

It is I (It is me)

(3)

agūrriwī
[agu͜βrɪwɪː]
katsa-∅=wī
boy(I)-PRED=1SG

I am a boy.

(4)

katsayīn
[ˈkat͡sajɪːn]
katsa-∅=yīn
songbird(II)-PRED=2PL

You are songbirds.

(5)


This is all fine and dandy, but you may ask yourself, what about predicative expressions with adjectives? How do I describe things? Kāndi does not only lack a verb and noun distinction, it does not have adjectives in their own right either. Rather, some content words are more like adjectives than others, confer kirim, something red:

kirim
[kɪˈɾɪm]
kirim-∅
red(IX)-PRED

It is something red (It is red)

(6)

kirimmī
[kɪˈɾɪbmɪː]
kirim-∅=wī
red(IX)-PRED=1SG

I am something red (I am red)

(6)

Specifier

Predicative expressions over more complicated subjects than pronouns and the default are created by means of the specifier (spec). Similarly to Salishan languages, the specifier determines the subject of a clause, amongst other things. The specifier is dependent upon the noun class of the subject, however:

tšanun wušunna
[ˈt͡ʃanun wʊˈʃʊdna]
tšanu-∅-n wušunna-∅
horse(II)-PRED-SPEC sad(IX)-PRED

The horse is sad

(7)

walīlak kirim
[waˈlɪːlak kɪˈɾɪm]
wa-līlak-∅ kirim-∅
SPEC.SG.IV-flower(IV)-PRED red(IX)-PRED

The flower is red

(8)

okūnna amik
[okˈʊːdna aˈmɪk]
ok-∅-ūnna amik-∅
eye(V)-PRED-SPEC.DU.V pebble(VI)-PRED

The eyes are pebbles

(9)

The specifier is difficult to understand, but confer the Salish languages of North America. The specifier is approximated relatively well by the expression that which, which means that tšanun wušunna could be interpreted as That which is a horse, it is sad.

Compound predicative expressions

In a similar manner to the enclitical pronomials previously, the predicate may be incorporated into the subject of the clause, and produce a compound of sorts. The compounds are normally accompanied with a suffix -y- for phonological reasons:

okkamik
[okˈkamɪk]
ok-y-amik-∅
eye(V)-COMP pebble(VI)-PRED

The eyes are pebble/The eye is a pebble

(10)

šayyū
[ˈʃajːʊ͜β]
šay-y-yū-∅
girl(V)-COMP-pretty(VIII)-PRED

The girl is pretty

(11)

These compounds are no longer very common, and they are sometimes used attributively, confer the pretty girl, instead of the girl is pretty. Most of them have become fixed phrases, šayyū is a common way to call for a girl, for example. The word okkamik on the other hand is used for especially unempathetic people. Other examples include omōkkānay, God is great, and wānawakāyuma, the sky is endless.

Intransitive clauses

See also: Kandi/Predicative expressions

Intransitive clauses in Kandi are formed in a very similar manner to predicative expressions. In fact, there is no difference at all. Which... Can be tricky. In essence, there is no grammatical difference between I am biking and I am a bike.

sīkawī
[ˈsɪːkawɪː]
sīka-∅=wī
bike(VI)-PRED=1SG

I am a bike/I am biking

(12)

tīndatšiwī
[ˈtɪːndat͡ʃɪwɪː]
tīnda-∅-tši=wī
know(IX)-PRED-DUB=1SG

I am not sure I know

(13)

yūr kānnami
[ˈjʊ͜βɾ ˈkaːdnamɪ]
yūr-∅ kān-∅-yam-i
goat(II)-PRED sight(V)-PRED-INF-II.SPEC

The goat must have seen (been able to see)

(14)


Do note that the specifier is afficed to the predicate-like part of the clause, in the last case kānnam-i. An apt translation would thus be That which is know(-ing), is a goat. Remember that definiteness and tense are not distinguished in the language.

Transitive clauses

Transitive clauses are formed in a few different ways. This is the most common construction,

yūr kingūssa kānnami
[ˈjʊ͜βɾ ˈkɪŋgʊ͜βsːa ˈkɔdnamɪ]
yūr-∅ kin-gūssa-∅ kān-∅-yam-i
goat(II)-PRED V.SPEC-arse(V)-PRED sight(V)-PRED-INF-II.SPEC

The goat must have seen the arse

(15)


Kšammī štaptih!
[ˈkɕabmɪː ˈɕtap͡ftɪ]
kšan-∅=wī štap-∅-tih
writing(IX)-PRED=1SG book(VII)-PRED-VII.SPEC

I'm writing a book!

(16)

which uses a specifier marking on the verb and on the object of the verb. Less idiomatic translations would be That which sees that which is the arse, it is a goat and I write that which is a book!, respectively.

Išawīy!
[ˈɪʃawɪːʝ]
iša-∅=wī=y
hate(IX)-PRED=1SG=2SG

I hate you!

(17)

winnaš wahšūwī!
[wahˈwɪdnaʃ wahˈʃʊ͜βɪː]
winnaš-∅ wah-šū-∅=wī
moose(II)-PRED SURP-eat(III)-PRED=1SG

Gah, the moose is eating me!

(18)


Possession

There are two main methods of expression possession in the language, utilising either the locative LOC or the possessive POSS affixes. The possessive suffix is by far the most common one, but the locative is more prevalent in certain dialects and in more formal registers. The usage is similar to Irish or Finnish, where for example the phrase The book at him most often translates as His book. It is important to note that the locative possession is restricted to animacy; only possessions of people can take the locative, making the phrase The house at the dog purely positional. It also calls into question your suitability as a pet owner.


sīkawīniš
[ˈsɪːkwɪːnɪʃ]
sīka=wī-n-iš
bike(VI)=me(I)-POSS-SPEC

my bike

(18)

kiy wanikānikka?
[ˈkɪj ˈwanɪkaːnɪkːa]
kiy wani=kā-n-ikka
what name(VIII)=you(I)-POSS-SPEC

what is your name?

(18)

wušunnay ixān
[ˈwʊʃʊdnaj ˈɪxaːn]
wušunna-y ixā-n
despair(IX)-(IX.SPEC) child(I)-POSS

the despair of a child

(19)

kamūnne wīyun
[ˈkamʊːdnɛ ˈwɪːjʊn]
kamūn-ye wī-yūn
house(IX)-(IX.SPEC) me(I)-LOC

my house/the house at me

(20)


What's actually inside

  • ᎭᎪᏨ:ᏡᎲᏙᏙᏔᏋᎹ ᎪᏫᏢᎭᎹ:ᎰᎱ;
    yáasúweyikukúusima awushuyamátin?
    [ʝaːsuβ̞ɛʝikuˈkuːβ̞sẽʔa aβ̞uɕuʝʌ̃ˈʔaːtẽ]

    Is that moose crying herring?

(-)