Ris

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Ris
Rhánzi ris
Ris.png
Pronunciation[/ˈr̥ʰand͡z͎ɪ rɪs͎/]
Created by
Native toItaly, Cyprus; Sicily
Native speakers301,486 (2012)
Menmer languages
  • Ris
Early form
Proto-Men
Language codes
ISO 639-1ri
ISO 639-2ri
ISO 639-3qri
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.

Ris is my attempt to unite the sketchy constructed languages of mine; those lost forever in incomprehensible grammar, unsatisfying aesthetics and cumbersome phonologies. They stand united by the one shared feature - their relationship to the Greek language; my greatest influence no matter the language.

The Ris language, ῤανζι ρις /r̥ʰand͡z͎ɪ rɪs͎/, is a language isolate, and is thus not known to be related to any extant language. Ris has a normal-sized inventory of consonants and a fair amount of allophony. It is a fusional language and is morphosyntactically active-stative and with a fluid subject. The morphology is evenly split between nominal and verbal inflections.

Information

The Ris language, ῤανζι ρις /r̥ʰand͡z͎ɪ rɪs͎/, is a constructed language, but does have a fictional background set in the real world. It is spoken on Sicily and on Cyprus and has about 300,000 native speakers. Or 1. Depends on how you count.

Grammatically speaking, the Ris language is morphologically fusional with a few agglutinative characteristics. It has enclitic pronouns representing the core arguments of agent and patient.

It also has an unsusual morphosyntactic alignment; the active-stative one, in the fluid subject subtype. This implies a system of control and volition, closely tied to a distinction in animacy.

Phonologically and phonaesthetically, the language is modelled after Greek. Other influences are native American languages, the Shona language and to certain degree Swedish.

Phonology

Consonants

The following is the inventory of consonants in the Ris language. There are 18 contrastive consonants.

Ris consonants
Consonants
Bilabial Denti-alveolar Palatal Velar Glottal
plain apical
Nasals plain m /m/ n /n/ [ŋ]
Plosives aspirated ph /pʰ/ th /tʰ/ kh /kʰ/ [ʔ]
unvoiced p /p/ t /t/ k /k/
ejective b /pʼ/ d /tʼ/ g /kʼ/
Fricatives unvoiced s /s ~ s̺/ h /ç ~ x ~ h/
voiced z /d͡z ~ d͡z̺ ~ z̺ ~ z̺/ [ʝ]
Trills aspirated r /r̥ʰ/
voiced r /r/
Approximants ou, u /w/ i /j/
Laterals l /ʎ/



Consonant allophony

Allophony is common to many consonants, and sandhi forces them to be realised different in different environments.

The glottal fricative

The phoneme /h/, the so called glottal fricative, is in free variation with the unvoiced palatal fricative /ç/ as well as the unvoiced velar fricative /x/.

ντρο
hentro
hɛntrɔ/ = xɛntrɔ/ = çɛntrɔ/
I am normal, okay

The velar fricative is the most common one, but the phones are all affected by palatalisation from front vowels, producing the palatal fricative [ç].

ο στιμι
hyo héstimi
hʉ̩.ɔ/ = hʉ̩.ɔ] heːs͎tɪmɪ/ çeːs͎tɪmɪ]
to leave .ind.m. pride .f
Palatalisation

Palatalisation applies to velar consonants and occurs due to two main factors:

  • Internally: Front vowels and the palatal approximant, /j/, tend to palatalise preceding consonants if the syllable is stressed.
    • C[-pal, +velar] → C[+pal, -velar] / _V[+front, +stress]
  • Externally: A final near-close near-front vowel, /ɪ/, palatalises the initial consonant of the following word.
ρακι τη στιμι τι κατέρριστουας?
raki té héstimi? ti katérristouas?
/ˈrakɪ/ [ˈracɪ] /ˈteː/ [ˈteː] /ˈheːstɪmɪ/ [ˈçeːstɪmɪ] /ˈtɪ kaˈtɛrrɪstwas/ [ˈtɪ caˈtɛrrɪstwas̟]
root .in.gen how pride. .f.pat What are you writing?

Phonological processes

Vowels

There are 7 vowel phonemes in the Ris language. In Ris, the system of vowels are known as ptégna i rhaki - 'the hollow triangle', due to their symmetrical places of articulation.

All vowels may be long, but the phonemes /ɛ/ and /ɔ/ change their quality when long; they are then pronounced /eː/ and /oː/ respectively.

Ris vowels
Front Near-front Central Near-back Back
Close short y /ʉ/
long ý /ʉː/
Near-close short i /ɪ/ ou /ʊ/
long í /ɪː/ /ʊː/
Close-mid é /eː/ ó /oː/
Mid
Open-mid e /ɛ/ o /ɔ/
Near-open
Open short a /ä/
long á /äː/


Other than that, my vowels are rather simple. No mystics quirks at all. Well, that's if you choose to ignore the vowel harmony and umlaut process in the Damian dialect. Makes it a tad more interesting, in my opinion.

Orthography

Ris is primarily written in the Latin alphabet, but the original alphabet was in fact Greek. In its classical and modern form, the alphabet has 24 letters, ordered from alpha to omega; or ai mḗ otḗma in Ris. The below table shows the two alphabets and the Ris names for the letters, as well as the pronunciation in Standard Ris and the colloquial Ouis dialect.

Orthography
Greek Latin Pronunciation
Ris Ouis
Α α άλπα A a ai /a/
Β β βήτα B b bou /b/ /β/
Γ γ γάμμα G g gou /g/ /ɣ/
Δ δ δέλτα D d da /d/ /ð/
Ε ε έψιλαν E e egnás /ɛ/
Ζ ζ ζήτα Z z za /d͡z ~ d͡z͎ ~ z ~ z͎/
Η η ήτα Ē ē etḗma /eː/ /eɪ̯/
Θ θ θήτα Th th tha /tʰ/ /θ/
Ι ι ιότα I i iou /ɪ/
Κ κ κάππα K k kau /k/
Λ λ λάπτα L l la /l/
Μ μ μύα M m ḗma /m/
Ν ν νύα N n ḗna /n/
Ξ ξ ξία X x ḗxa /ks͎ ~ gz͎/
Ο ο ομίκραν O o ognás /ɔ/
Π π πία P p pau /p/
Ρ ρ ρό R r ría /r/ /ɹ/
'Ρ ῤ ῤαυ Rh rh rhau /r̥ʰ/ /r/
Σ σ ς σίγμα S s sa /s͎/
Τ τ τάυ T t tau /t/
Υ υ ύψιλαν Y y hytḗma /ʉ/ /ʏ/
Φ φ φία Ph ph pha /pʰ/ /f/
Χ χ χία Kh kh kha /kʰ/ /x/
Ψ ψ ψία Ps ps ḗpsa /ps͎/
Ω ω ώμεγα Ō ō otḗma /oː/ /oɪ̯/

Diacritics

The Ris alphabets, both the Latin and Greek one, use a few different diacritics to modify the pronunciation. There are five diacritics that mark the following:

  • A stressed vowel in a syllable.
  • A long vowel in a syllable.
  • An aspirated vowel; preceded by /h/. Can also mark the phoneme /r̥ʰ/.
  • A stressed, aspirated vowel.
  • A long, aspirated vowel.

The use of aspiration here does not refer to the co-articulating process, but rather that the vowel is preceded by an /h/, a "glottal fricative".

Stressed vowels

Stressed vowels are marked with an acute accent, <´>, in the Latin script. In the Greek alphabet, the diacritic is the acute accent as well, only slightly different; <΄>. These mark that the syllable with the vowel is to be stressed, and thus articulated stronger, than other syllables.

File:Greek acute.png File:Greek grave.png File:Latin eta.png
Acute Grave Eta
File:Greek asper.png File:Greek asper acute.png File:Latin eta acute.png
Spiritus asper Asper acute Eta acute

Long vowels

Long vowels are vowels pronounced vowels articulated for a longer period of time. These get a grave accent in the Greek alphabet, <`>, and a macron in the Latin script, <¯>. Long vowels grave accent in the Greek script when stressed. In the Latin alphabet, however, the stressed long vowels get a second acute accent above the macron, <' ̄́'>.

As previously mentioned, all vowels can be long vowels, but there are two vowels that change their quality when elongated; the /ɛ/ and /ɔ/. These are raised to /eː/ and /oː/ respectively. In the Latin script these are marked as expected, <ē> and <ō>. However, in the Greek script, they are replaced by the letters eta <η> and omega <ω> respectively.

Aspiration

Aspiration, when a vowel is preceded by /h/, is marked by a so-called dasia in the Greek script, <>. In the Latin manner of style though, the letter <h> precedes the vowel, as it does phonetically.

In the Greek script, the dasia can be combined with the acute and grave accent, producing <> and <>.

The dasia can also be placed on the Greek ro sign, <ρ>. The pronunciation of <> becomes /r̥ʰ/, an aspirated voiceless alveolo-dental trill.

Morphology

Main article: Ris morphology

Grammar

Morphosyntactic alignment

Ris is a fluid-S active-stative language, and thus different to English, which is nominative-accusative. Compare the following example from Georgian:


Vaxt’angi ekimi iqo Ninom daamtknara Ninom ačvena suratebi Gias
vaxt’ang-i ekim-i iqo nino-m daamtknara nino-m ačvena surat-eb-i gia-s
Vakhtang-pat doktor-pat be aor.3sg Nino-agt yawn aor.3sg Nino-agt show aor.3sg picture-pl-pat Gia-dat
S S VERBintrans S VERBintrans A VERBtrans O OBJECTindirect
'Vakhtang was a doctor.' 'Nino yawned.' 'Nino showed the pictures to Gia.'
A table of the Ris control and volition distinction in the core arguments, illustrating the two-way distinction in the subject of intransitive clauses.

Control

Control, volition or activity marks how much an argument intented for an action. There are two cases in the language to indicate high and low-control:

  • Patientive - low-control; little volition; the patient of an action.
  • Agentive - high-control; high degree of volition; the agent of an action.

The alignment grants that the three core arguments of a verb the agent, subject, and object are marked according to their role as well as the control they have over the action, how active they are.

  • The subject is the sole argument of an intransitive verb: I run or You fall

If the subject is in full control of its actions, it is marked with the so-called agentive case. Compare I run. If the subject cannot help the action, or simply experiences it, the patientive case is used; compare You fall.

  • The agent is the subject of a transitive verb: I hit him or You met her

In most active-stative languages, the agent of a transitive verb is always perceived as active in the action, in full control. However, in Ris, the same distinction as with subjects of intransitives apply. This means that it too may be marked with either the patientive or agentive.

  • The object is never in control of an action, and thus always in the patientive case: I hit him


Number

Ris has three numbers, all of which are equally common in the language. The Ris numbers are different to those of English, instead using a so-called collective-singulative distinction.

The distinction infers that the basic form of a noun is the collective, which is indifferent to the number and unmarked. However, in Ris, the collective form has an additional meaning, and can also signify duals. It is thus the singulative that most often goes unmarked.

Singulative

The singulative (sg) denotes one, single noun, and roughly corresponds to the English equivalent of singular. A singulative noun is a single item, either of a collective noun or even a mass noun.

thyo trēma
/ˈtʰʉ̩ɔ ˈtreːma/
thy-o trē-ma
to want-IND.PRFV.1.SG.M wheat.IV-PAT.SG

I want a grain of wheat.
mnīo koupar mna
/ˈmnɪ̩ːɔ kʊˈpar mna/
mnī-o koupar- mna
to see-IND.PRFV.1.SG.M ram.I.PAT.SG one

I see a ram.
imbrouas pagma?
/ˈɪmpʼrwas ˈpagma/
imbrouas pag-ma
to hold.SUBJ.PRFV.2.SG.M time.IV-PAT.SG

Do you have a minute?
Dual-collective

The dual-collective number (dc) is a special number to the Hrasic language. The dual-collective primarily marks the collective sense, whereas English uses the plural. It does however also signify two nouns, a pair, in certain contexts.

Plurative

The plurative (pl) marks when there are multiple nouns, but more than two. It does not have the collective sense that the English equivalent does.

Gender

There are two genders in the Ris language, the animate (an) and inanimate (inan). The animate gender includes only living animals and insects, as well as supernaturals like spirits and deities. The inanimate gender mainly denotes non-living objects, abstractions as well as flowers and microorganisms.

In the 2nd and 3rd person singular personal pronouns as well as verbs, the animate splits into a feminine (f.an) and masculine (m.an) animate gender. These mark only natural gender.

Case

There are 7 grammatical cases in Ris. Most of these are rather common to the Indo-European languages.

Ris cases
Cases and usage
Case Usage Example
Nominative The independent form of nouns; the lemma. The dog
Subject of high-control intransitive verbs; without a patient. The dog bites.
Subject of high-control intransitive verbs; without a patient. The man fell.
Subject of a transitive verb; with a patient. The dog bit the man.
Accusative Object or patient of a transitive verb. The dog bit the man
Indicates a duration of time. I did it for many years
In indirect statements. He said I was ugly.
To mark location. I am at home.
After certain prepositions. Between one and ten; near you.
Dative Indirect object of a ditransitive verb. He gave the man a pen
Dativus finalis; dative of purpose. I fight for the king! Call for help!
Dativus commodi; dative of benefit or malefic. Open the door for him; this one is not for children.
Dativus lativus; dative of movement. I'm going to Siberia; I come from home.
Dativus modi; dative of manner and cause. He died from a disease.
Dativus possessivus; dative of possession. There is a book to me; I have a book.
After certain prepositions. Get away from me.
Instrumental Instrumentalis instrumenti; the means of the action. He writes with a pen.
Instrumentalis auctoris; the performer of actions. Opened by the mayor; caught by a net.
Instrumentalis modi; the manner of means of an action. Go by the short cut.
Genitive Symbolises ownership The dog's bone
Marks objects related to the subject in composition The group member
Symbolises lacking Go without me
Marks origin of nouns. I moved from the house
Marks origin of nouns It is from France
Marks concerned, associated nouns On the Origin of Species.
Marks concerned, discussed nouns. Talking about films.
Indicates cause It's because of the snow.
Marks abstract cause Thanks to/despite him.
Semblative For comparations, and semblatives. It is like a fish.
For comparative adverbials. I dance like a god; I dance godly.
Vocative Direct address. Hey, John!
Disjoint address. You are right, Mary.
Exclamation. Poor me! Wretched life!

Core cases

The Ris language is an active-stative language with fluid subjects, dependent upon semantic volition or control. This means that it marks the object of a transitive verb and the subject of a intransitive verb with the same patientive case, and marks the agent of the transitive verbs separately, with the agentive case.

In the fluid subtype however, the subject of an intransive verb may be marked like the agent of the transitive, if the subject has sufficient control over the action.

Patientive

The patientive, or undergoing case, (pat) is the case used to indicate both the subject of an intransitive verb and the object of a transitive verb, in addition to being used for the citation form of nouns.

  • As the patientive is the citation form of nouns, there is little consistency in the patientive endings. They differ due to class, gender and etymology.
  • The patientive is also marked on verbs, and agrees with both the subject and object. Although patientive pronouns exist, they are often dropped.


ánkouro grani inistan tagren kérax
/ˈaːŋkʊrɔ/ /ˈgranɪ ˈɪnɪstan/ /ˈtagrɛn ˈkeːraks/
ánkour -o grani inistan tagren kérax
trip.act.ind.perf -pat.1.sg pig.unm.an.pat.dc exist.act.ind.ipfv.3.dc.pat hit.act.imp.perf.2.sg.agt bird.ma.an.pat.sg
I tripped Pigs exist. Hit the bird
Agentative

The agentative (agt) case is used to mark the subject, or agent, of transitive verbs. However, intertwined with the Ris language's distinction on control and volition, there is a distinction on intransitives, marking high control intransitives with the agentative argument.

  • On verbs, the agentive uses the suffix <-in> to agree with a high-control subject, or an agentive noun. It is used if the agentive pronoun is omitted. However, this is not completely true; please see the section on inverse marking.


(eu) katéro kterma toú tethoúri ánkourón
/ˈɛu̩ kaˈteːrɔ ˈktɛrma/ /ˈtʊː tɛˈtʰʊːrɪ/ /ˈaːŋkʊroːn/
eu katér -o kterma toú tethoúr i ónkour- -ón
I.1.agt.sg write.act.ind.perf -pat.1.sg letter.ma.inan.pat.sg you.2.agt.sg run.act.ind.itr -agt.1.sg trip.act.ind.perf -agt.1.sg
I am writing a letter. You are running around. I trip on purpose
Agentive versus patientive

Confer the difference between the English intransitives "He tripped" and "He talked". In Ris, the former argument would be marked with the patientative case, since he is undergoing the verb, and the latter would be marked with the agentative, since he is in full control of his actions and the agent of the verb.

Being a fluid-S language, however, the simple "He tripped", might be marked with the agentative, should he intentionally have done so. Most often, this conveys a slight semantic shift, and "He tripped" might be interpreted as "He's faking a fall". Some verbs are are inherently high control, for example, the dynamic action "to cook" can hardly be performed unintentionally, likewise is the word for "to talk" somewhat difficult to perform involuntarily, except for sleep-talking.

  • The semantic shift is illustrated below with the word ánthēro, "to meet", which may be interpreted differently, depending on whether marked with the patientive or agentive pronoun, and wether it has a patientive or agentive suffix.


(eu) anthéroi (ei) anthéroi (eu) anthéróni
/ˈɛw ˈantʰɛrɔɪ̯/ /ˈɛj ˈantʰɛrɔɪ̯/ /ˈɛw ˈantʰɛroːnɪ/
eu anthér -o -i ei anthér -o -i eu anthér -ón -i
I.1.agt.sg meet.act.ind.perf -pat.1.sg -3.pat.sg I.1.pat.sg meet.act.ind.perf -pat.1.sg -3.pat.sg I.1.agt.sg meet.act.ind.perf -agt.1.sg -3.pat.sg
I met him/I met up with him. I bumped into him. I met up with him.
Inverse marking

Both the agentive and the patientive can be the subject or agent of a verb. The choice between the two depend on the degree of control with the subject. High-control subjects get the agentive, low-control subjects get the patientive.

Normally, a verb with a high-control subject would get the agentive enclitic personal pronouns "-in" suffixed. However, in verbs that are inherently high control, this is often omitted in casual speech. "To write" is an example; you rarely write unconsciously, so the agentive suffix is not necessary.

This has led to an interesting phenomenon: If a verb has inherently strong control, instead of being an agentive suffix, the enclitic pronoun instead inverts the control of the verb. For example:

  • The inherently low-control "to fall" becomes "to trip intentionally; to fake a fall", when using the agentive, as expected.
  • The inherently high-control "to speak" becomes "to sleep-talk; to ramble" - which means the control is diminished with the agentive suffix.


This leads to the inverted agentive (in-agt), which works like a patientive, and the agentive-like inverted patientive (in-pat).

ánkouro ánkourón rhao rhaón
/ˈaːŋkʊrɔ/ /ˈaːŋkʊroːn/ /ˈr̥ʰaɔ̩/ /r̥ʰaˈoːn/
ā́nkour -o ā́nkour -ṓn rhá -o rha -ṓn
to fall.act.ind.prf. -pat.1.sg to fall.act.ind.prf. -agt.1.sg to say.act.ind.prf. -inv.pat.1.sg to say.act.ind.prf. -inv.agt.1.sg
PAT - I fall. AGT - I fake a fall. IN-PAT - I speak. IN-AGT - I sleep-talk, ramble.

Instrumental

Instrumental proper

The instrumental (ins) case serves a number of purposes in the Ris language. Primarily, it is used to indicate that a noun is the instrument or means by or with which an action is conducted.


thérouna nasérne napsantan as... kterman katristo tígnan
/tʰeːˈrʊna naˈseːrnɛ/ /naˈpsantan as/ /ˈktɛrman kaˈtrɪsto ˈtɪːkmeːnɛ/
thérouna nasér -ne napsantas -n as kterman katristo tíg -nan
to travel.act.ind.ipfv.1.pl.in-agt boat.ma-inan. -ins.sg to learn.act.pcp -ins.sg this.prox.3.sg letter.ma-inan.pat.dc to write.act.ind.ipfv.1.sg.in-agt pen.ma-inan. -ins.dc
We go by boat By learning this... or By stealing this... I write letters with pens
Inanimate subjective instrumental

Marking the inanimate noun with the agentive is incorrect. This is a distinction quite well known in natural languages, and even the Proto-Indo-European language is supposed to have made the distinction.

On subject of control in the Ris verbs, inanimate agents of transitive verbs: subjects such as "the knife" in the sentence "The knife slices the bread" could impossibly be marked with the agentive case, since the subject has no control of its actions. Nor is it experiencing the slicing, and can as such not be marked with the patientive. Instead a construction with the mediopassive and instrumental used.

Of course if desired, the agent can be reintroduced, which means a switch from passive to active.

lemner me tagines entagio lemnanta tagias me lemnanta
/ʎɛmˈnɛr mɛ takʼɪˈnɛs/ /ˈɛntakʼjɔ ʎɛmˈnanta/ /ˈtakʼjas mɛ ʎɛmˈnanta/
lemner me tagines entagio lemnanta tagia me lemnanta
stone.ma-inan.agt.sg me.1.pat.sg hit.ind.prfv.3.sg.agt} hit.med.ind.prfv.1.sg.pat} stone.ma-inan.ins.sg hit.ind.prfv.2.sg.agt me.1.pat.sg stone.ma-inan.ins.sg
*A stone hit me I am hit with stones You hit me with stones


In the Ris language, an inanimate subject of a verb always has an underlying animate agent.

As ambas mnatier kini akman As ambas ankini mnatian akman
/ˈɡwa ˈr̥ɛɡa aŋˈaɡwan ˈɡøwa/ /uˈwana ˈtutanː/
g -va ury -a a- magv -an gava u⟩vaun⟨un tuta -nn
I.1.sg.m -m.agt bread/col.n. -n.pat m.ins- knife/col.m. -m.ins cut/ind.neu.m.sg n.ins⟩stone/n.coln.ins hit/med.dyn-stat.m.sg --pat.1.sg
Someone cut the bread with the knife The bread was cut with a knife by someone
Comitative instrumental

The Ris instrumental also bears comitative and quantitative senses. It indicates actions in company with other subjects, amounts, as well as lacking:

indroua mena? As mao kana. Inisto nai rágan.
/aˈŋ͡majːa ɡøn/ /ɡwa aˈŋ͡man iŋˈɡiŋ͡ma/ /ˈɡwajːa ˈjar̥ŋunan/
amn -a -yya g -an g -va amn -an imgim -na g -va -yya yarm -un -an
you/2.sg.c -c.pat.sg -cop.act.ind.stat I/1.sg.m -m.ins I/1.sg.m -m.agt.sg you/2.sg.c -m.ins make/act.ind.dyn.c.pl --pat.3.n.sg I/1.sg.m -m.agt.sg -cop.act.ind.stat hair/n.sg -n.ins -n.neg
Are you with me? I make it with you. I am with no hair. or I have no hair.
Animate subjective instrumental

The last use of the instrumental, similarly to Russian and in part to English is to reintroduce a subject in a passive clause, very similarly to the adpositional phrase "by me" in English, as in "He was killed", and later; "He was killed by me". Using the instrumental with a reflexive mediopassive gives a reinforced statement, confer the Spanish disjunct prepositional pronouns:

  • Me lavo - «I wash myself»
  • A mí me lavo - «As for myself, I wash myself»
gva muni minan? mumnayyiz gan ethunann gan
/ɡwa ˈŋ͡muni ˈŋinan/ /ˈmuŋ͡majːiz ˈɡøn/ /ˈθunanː ɡøn/
g -va muni min -an mumnayyiz g -an thuna -nn g -an
I/1.sg.m -m.agt.sg see/med.ind.dyn.c.sg you/2.pl.c -m.ins discover/medpcp I/1.sg.m -m.ins talk/med.ind.dyn.c.sg --m.pat.1.sg I/1.sg.m -m.ins
I'm seen by you

.

Discovered by me Me, I speak of myself.

Locative

Locative proper
See also: Ris possession

The locative case (loc) vaguely corresponds to the English spatial prepositions of "by", "at", "in", and "on". However, the Ris locative also bears a temporal usage, similarly to English "in an hour", "today", "after three o'clock".

The Ris language does have adpositions in the traditional sense, to control the exact location of the locative.

Amnayya azimat? ʔineyna enazamut. amagyat
/aˈŋ͡majːa azˈiŋ͡mat/ /ˈʔinɛjna ɛnˈazaŋut/ /aŋaɡˈjat/
amna -yya azima -t ʔiney -na en- azama -ut am- agy -at
you/2.sg.c.pat -cop.act.ind.stat home/sg.n -n.loc lie/act.ind.stat.n.sg -it/n.pat.3.sg below.locp- house/2.sg.c -n.loc after/behind.locp- hour/f.sg -f.loc
Are you at home? It lies below the house. In an hour
Lative locative

Related to location is movement, and the locative can through a construction with the lative particle ‹a› /a/, transform the locative meaning to a lative or translative one. Before a null-onset, it is pronounced /aɦ/.

The particle and the proclitic adpositions will be marked green.

Gam a azimat! ʔinena a enazamut. Ann erʔit.
/ɡøŋ aɦazˈiŋat/ /ˈʔinɛna aɦ ɛnˈazaŋut/ /anː erˈʔit/
gam a azima -t ʔine -na a en- azama -ut a- -nn erʔi -t
come/act.dir.pos.m latp home/sg.f -f.loc lay/act.ind.dyn.n.sg -it/n.pat.3.sg latp below.locp- house/n.sg -n.loc latp -m.pat.1.sg anger/f.sg -f.loc
Come home! Put it below the house. I am getting angry.
Possessive locative

The third purpose of the locative case is that it is also the main tool to express possession, a construction very close to the Celtic and Finnish equivalents, confer:

  • Minulla on talo - I have a house (literally: There is a house at me)

This is the one of the ways of expressing alienable possession in Ris, and it is as such never used for inalienable constructions.

gat azamayya Manim gat azamayya!
/ˈɡ͡bøt aˈzaŋajːa/ /ˈŋ͡mønin ˈɡ͡bøt aˈzaŋajːa/
g -at azama -yya emin g -āt azama -yya
I/1.sg.m -c.loc home/sg.n.pat -cop.act.ind.stat see/act.dir.pos.c.pl I/1.sg.m -c.loc home/sg.n.pat -cop.act.ind.stat
My house Behold my house!
azamayya gat ta trasino Atnvayya gat girgemn.
/ aˈzaŋajːa ˈɡ͡bøt wa taˈtr̥asino/ / atˈŋ͡majːa ˈɡ͡bøt ˈɡirɡemn/
azama -yya g -at ta trasino atn -va -yya g -at girge -mn
home/sg.n.pat -cop.act.ind.stat I/1.sg.m -f.loc def art.n green(n.sg.pat) dog/sg.n -agt.n.sg -cop.act.ind.stat I/1.sg.m -f.loc see/act.ind.dyn.n.sg -you.m.pat.2.sg
My green house My dog barks at you.

Animacy

A table of the different Attian stages of animacy and salency.

Just as the Ris language makes a difference regarding gender, a fairly strong distinction in animacy[*] is made, mainly for semantical and grammatical reasons, since there is no morphological distinction.

The Ris rules of animacy dictates that no inanimate objects may stand in the agentative case. Inanimate nouns are perceived as incapable of actually performing deliberate actions. Inanimates that are the subjects of an action are therefore most often marked with the instrumental case. This construction forces the speaker to directly name an animate agent, use a passive construction, or to use an indefinite pronoun. Inanimate, or less animate nouns also have a lesser probability to be compatible with verbs connected with higher degrees of animacy, like the words for "to talk", "to think" and "control".

There are several different degrees of animacy, which at times also intertwine with salency. The grading goes from Very high to Very low and spans 7 degrees. The top and most animate nouns are humans, and especially men and leaders. Women normally rank as at least as animate as men, but they can in certain circumstances be degraded to indicate inferiority. The least animate substantives are minerals, abstraction and in part; plants.

Don't blame the stone

Quote.png
Men vathim vana.
—Anathir t'Armavir, Descriptions of the language, p. 35

Don't blame the stone is a well known Attian saying, invented by the Attian grammarian Athanir t'Armavir. It's idiomatic meaning is that one should not blame the tool when it is not the master of its own actions. It also carries grammatical significance, since the Attian language does not allow inanimate nouns to be the agent of a verb. An equivalent phrase in English would be: It isn't the gun that kills, but the one who pulled the trigger.

Below is an example of someone hit with stones. Here, the subject impossibly could be marked with the agentive, taking their inanimacy in regard. Instead, you may put the subject in the instrumental case, and mediopassivise the verb. Alternatively the subject is degraded to an oblique, and a new subject is introduced.

vanev ittimann vanun tutinn yatva vanum titann
/ˈwanɛw itˈtiŋanː/ /ˈwanun ˈtutinː/ /ˈjatwa ˈwanuŋ ˈtitanː/
vana -ev ittim -ann vana -un tuti -nn yat -va vana -um tita -nn
stone/n.pl. -n.pl.agt hit/ind.dyn.n.pl --m.pat.1.sg stone/n.pl -n.pl.ins hit/med.dyn-stat.m.sg --m.pat.1.sg someone/m.sg -m.agt stone/n.pl -n.pl.ins hit/ind.dyn.m.sg --m.pat.1.sg
*Stones hit me I am hit with stones Some guy hits me with stones

Both verbs and nouns have different inherent animacy. Both the type of noun and verb are thus essential to interpret whether it can be the in the agentative case. Some verbs are more inherently animate than others in the Ris language, determining whether inanimate subjects may perform them; the word "to speak", thana, is used unexclusively for humans. Less animate subjects cannot perform this verb and are therefore coupled with another, more appropriate, one. Please note that only because inanimate nouns are less likely to perform more animate actions, more animate nouns may act out inanimate verbs.

Below is table with example nouns and verbs with their respective animacy. Please note that the first two degrees most often intertwine. It is common for slightly sexistic or separatistic speakers to use work-arounds when speaking about women or children: Instead of saying that they are capable, they would say they can do (it). In other terms; stative or generic verbs describing characteristics are less likely to be used with women. They have to satisfy with the appropriate dynamic verb.

Degrees of Animacy
Very High High Medium high Medium Medium low Low Very low
man women, children infants, pets animals, weather plants minerals abstractions
to talk to communicate to bark, to be noisy to be green to be heavy to be complicated

Classes

There are a multitude of declensional classes in the Hrasic languages, below are the four most common ones. These decline with either a marked dual-collective or a marked singulative number.

Morphology

Nominal

Declension

Declension of gýtē
Animate marked collective
ma.an gýtē - fish
singulative dual-collective plurative
Patientive gýtē gytḗn gytḗr
Agentive gytḗr gytḗrne gytḗra
Dative gytḗs gytḗnse gytḗi
Instrumental gytḗn gytḗnne gytḗs
Genitive gýtēa gýtēan gytēái
Locative gýtēia gýtēian gýtēiar
Vocative gýta gýtan gytár

Verbal

Conjugation

Active verbs

The active Ris verbs are conjugated as follows. These are the roots of all active verb forms, on which personal suffixes are added.

káter- - to write
Indicative Subjunctive Jussive Imperative
Perfective kátero katérro katerévo káterro
Imperfective káterto1 katérratho kateréutho2 katérratho
Inceptive hékatro hékatro hékatrevo hékatro
Cessative kateráskho katérraskho katerépso katérraskho
Causative katerazo katérrazo katerépso katérrazo
Iterative kékatro hékhatro kékatrevo hékhatro
  1. káteratho is an alternative form.
  2. katerépto is an alternative form.

Pronouns

Declension

Independent
Enclitic
Ris pronominal enclitics
singular dual plural
1st 2nd 3rd 1st 2nd 3rd 1st 2nd 3rd
Indicative
Subject Patientive -o -i -a -on -in -an -ouna -ia -asi
Agentive -ōn -īn -en -ōne -īne -ene -ounen -ien -asīn
Object Patientive -mi -s -i -min -ns -in -mou -tsa -as
Subjunctive
Subject Patientive -a -ei -ai -an -ēn -en -ouna -ia -asi
Agentive -en -ēn -ēn -ene -ēne -ēne -ounen -ien -asīn
Object Patientive -mi -s -i -min -ns -in -mou -tsa -as

Samples

  • thýo hā́ katḗrrazas
  • tḗ rhánzatha
  • gytḗra ouārathí ērikí
  • inḗ gýtē mna.
  • Atḗ, inḗ gytḗn ~ Atḗ, inḗ gýtē ne!