Qulmian

From Linguifex
Revision as of 23:08, 27 January 2015 by Yuv yuv (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Construction}} Qulmian (native name: '''Qulm sihpa''' or '''Qulm usíhpa''') is a language constructed by Yuv yuv for the constructed world of Taercnim. ''...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Qulmian (native name: Qulm sihpa or Qulm usíhpa) is a language constructed by Yuv yuv for the constructed world of Taercnim.

Please note: a large part of this language has already been completed but is currently undergoing heavy revision and rewriting before being published.


Qulmian
Qulm sihpa / Qulm usíhpa
Progress: 40%
Type
Fusional
Alignment
Nominative-accusative
Head direction
Initial Mixed Final
Primary word order
Subject-verb-object
Tonal
No
Declensions
Yes
Conjugations
Yes
Genders
Masculine, feminine
Nouns decline according to...
Case Number
Definiteness Gender
Verbs conjugate according to...
Voice Mood
Person Number
Tense Aspect


Background

The Qulmian language started, like many of my languages, as an experiment in grammar and writing. I put to use some rather unusual grammatical ideas that I had been collecting for a period of several months before starting work on it, combining them with a script that I developed during a boring 11th-grade class.

In the world of Taercnim, Qulmian is spoken by about 55 million people in the southeastern region of Qulma on the continent Lerta. It is also used throughout Lerta as a liturgical language for religious purposes.

Phonology

Consonants

Qulmian has sixteen consonants.

Labial Dental Alveolar Postalv. Uvular Glottal
Nasal m /m/ n /n/ ng /ɴ/
Plosive p /p/

b /b/

t /t/

d /d/

q /q/ /ʔ/
Fricative v /v/ s /s/

z /z/

c /ʃ/

j /ʒ/

h /h/
Approximant l /l/

/ʃ ʒ/ were originally velar stops /k g/ respectively. They were lenited to /x ɣ/ early on and shifted forward to their current values at a later stage. Modern Qulmian has no velar consonant phonemes, though some dialects may occasionally shift /q/ forward to a post-velar or velar position.

Unlike most other languages of Taercnim, Qulmian has no rhotic phonemes. Loanwords containing rhotic sounds have them transcribed as either /ʒ/ or /l/.

Word-final /ɪt/ is often realized as [ɪə̯t̚], with an unreleased [t].

Vowels

Front Back
Close i /ɪ/ y /ɯ/

u /u/

Open a /æ/ o /ɒ/

The phoneme /æ/ is usually realized as [æ] or [a]. In the diphthong ai, it is realized as [ä].

/ɯ/ may be realized as [i] in the diphthong oy.

Vowel length is phonemic. Long vowels are marked in the script with an additional vowel symbol, and in romanization with an acute accent.

Stress

By default, stress in Qulmian is placed on the antepenultimate syllable. If a long vowel is present in the word, it receives the stress. If there are two or more long vowels in the word, the last one of them receives the stress.

Script

Under construction ...

Consonants

Vowels

Long vowels

Punctuation

Grammar

Morphology

Qulmian morphology is fusional and nonconcatenative, using a system of triconsonantal roots placed into patterns to form words.

Verb morphology

Verbs morphologically encode tense and aspect along with the person, gender and number of the subject. Perfective and imperfective aspect are distinguished in the past tense.

There are four different types of conjugation patterns for verbs. Many roots can be placed into more than one pattern, forming verbs with different meanings.

  • Form 1 – XoXXa (using example root hml – to give)
Person/Number/Gender Perf. past Impf. past Present Future
1st person singular homil húmil ahmyl ahmil
2nd person singular homal húmal ahmol ahmal
3rd person masculine singular homla húmla ahmola ahmala
3rd person feminine singular homli húmli ahmoli ahmali
1st person plural homilu húmilu ahmylu ahmilu
2nd person plural homila húmila ahmól ahmila
3rd person masculine plural homlá húmlá ahmólá ahmalá
3rd person feminine plural homlí húmlí ahmólí ahmalí
  • Form 2 – XaiXoXa (using example root hml – to hold someone dear)
Person/Number/Gender Perf. past Impf. past Present Future
1st person singular hómil huimil himyl himil
2nd person singular hómal huimal himol himal
3rd person masculine singular hómla huimla himola himala
3rd person feminine singular hómli huimli himoli himali
1st person plural hómilu huimilu himylu himilu
2nd person plural hómila huimila himól himila
3rd person masculine plural hómlá huimlá himólá himalá
3rd person feminine plural hómlí huimlí himólí himalí
  • Form 3 – XtoXXa (using example root sqt – to have the right to do something)
Person/Number/Gender Perf. past Impf. past Present Future
1st person singular stoqit stúqit stuqyt stuqit
2nd person singular stoqat stúqat stuqot stuqat
3rd person masculine singular stoqta stúqta stuqota stuqata
3rd person feminine singular stoqti stúqti stuqoti stuqati
1st person plural stoqitu stúqitu stuqytu stuqitu
2nd person plural stoqita stúqita stuqót stuqita
3rd person masculine plural stoqtá stúqtá stuqótá stuqatá
3rd person feminine plural stoqtí stúqtí stuqótí stuqatí
  • Form 4 – XtaXoXa (using example root sqt)
Person/Number/Gender Perf. past Impf. past Present Future
1st person singular sitoiqit situiqit sitiqyt sitiqit
2nd person singular sitoiqat situiqat sitiqot sitiqat
3rd person masculine singular sitoiqata situiqata sitiqota sitiqata
3rd person feminine singular sitoiqati situiqati sitiqoti sitiqati
1st person plural sitoiqiti situiqiti sitiqyti sitiqiti
2nd person plural sitoiqita situiqita sitiqót sitiqita
3rd person masculine plural sitoiqitá situiqitá sitiqótá sitiqatá
3rd person feminine plural sitoiqití situiqití sitiqótí sitiqatí
T-mutation

Verbs in forms 3 and 4 may undergo a phonological process called T-mutation. All verbs in these forms have a T sound after the first radical, and when the two consonants are not separated by a vowel, the T may either change its phonetic value or switch places with the first radical.

There are two kinds of T-mutation: some apply in all positions, others apply only word-initially.

Mutation Position Example Notes
No mutation stoqta
mt – mp Anywhere *mtosqamposqa Some dialects may realize the mutated consonant as b word-initially, but it is always written as p
nt – ng Word-initially *ntamodangamoda The two sounds fuse into a single uvular nasal /ɴ/ represented by ng. (/g/ as a phoneme does not exist in Qulmian.)
ngt – ngq Anywhere ...
tt – ts, qt – qs Word-initially *ttonqatsonqa

*qtaqtaqsaqta

dt – dz Word-initially ...
bt – bd, dt – dd, jt – jd Anywhere *idtalomaiddaloma

*jtovdajdovda

ht – th, ‘t – t‘ Anywhere *htostathosta

*‘tanonat‘anona

Noun morphology

Like verb morphology, Qulmian noun morphology is highly fusional and only partially concatenative. Qulmian nouns are mostly formed by placing verb roots into nominalization patterns. Different patterns indicate different meanings, and each verb form has its own set of patterns.

Structure of a noun

A Qulmian noun has the following fixed structure:

1. Prefix indicating class and (in some cases) definiteness. This prefix takes the form of a single short vowel.

Class: There are two separately functioning sets of noun classes.

  • Gender: Nouns can be either masculine or feminine. Often, gender acts as a way to create a subtle variation on a word, differentiating pairs of otherwise identical words describing similar or related concepts.
  • Weight: Nouns can be either “light” or “heavy”. Places and people are usually heavy nouns, while other nouns are light, but this is not a hard rule and many exceptions exist.
Light Heavy
Masculine u– o–
Feminine i– a–

Definiteness: Light masculine nouns only receive the prefix if they are definite. If not, the prefix is dropped entirely: compare umíspa 'the day', mispa 'a day'.

2. Verb root placed into a nominalization pattern. Each verb form has its own set of patterns. Some patterns may only form light nouns, some only form heavy nouns, and some change their meaning depending on the weight of the noun.

Form 1 Form 2 Form 3 Form 4 Light meaning Heavy meaning
XoXX XaiXoX XtoXX XtaXoX The act of <verb>ing
XaXX XoXaX XtaXX XtoXaX Something that <verb>s A person who <verb>s
XuXX XuXoX XtuXX XtuXoX The act of being <verb>ed
XiXX XoiXoX XtiXX XtoXaX Something that is <verb>ed A person who is <verb>ed
nXaXX, nXiXX XoXnaX, XuXnoX naXtaXX, naXtiXX XatoXnaX, XatiXnaX A place where the act of <verb>ing is done
XoXnaX, XuXnoX XatoXnaX, XatiXnaX A place where the act of <verb>ing is done (forms 2, 4 only)

3. Case suffix, usually consisting of a single short vowel. See Cases below.

4. Plural suffix: –m for masculine nouns, –q for feminine nouns.

Cases

While most languages use a system of cases with more or less fixed meanings and roles, Qulmian uses a system of five “numbered cases”, where the role of each case is determined by the verb in the sentence. In other words, each verb can be described as having its own set of multiple “parameters”.

A sixth case, called “case T”, exists and functions alongside the numbered cases. This case is the only one with an inherent meaning, and is usually equivalent to the inessive or temporal cases. It is used mostly for adverbials.

Case Suffix
1 –a
2 –i
3 –o
4 –y
5 –u
T –it
  • Note: in plural nouns in case T, the suffix –it fuses with the plural marker: –imp for masculine nouns, –iqs for feminine.

In most verbs with only two parameters, case 1 is the nominative case and case 2 is the accusative case:

ca amnyq malni
1s.1 hold-1s-PRES pen.2
“I am holding a pen.”

Some verbs with more parameters may differ. For example, the verb homla (to give) defines case 2 as the dative (the person to whom the object is given), and case 3 as the accusative (the object that is given):

ca ahmil di malno
1s.1 give-1s-FUT 2s.2 pen.3
“I will give you a pen.”

Adjectives

Under construction ...

Syntax

Under construction ...