Tergetian vernaculars: Difference between revisions

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* AuxVOS, with V a verbal noun (from topic final word order in CWdm)
* AuxVOS, with V a verbal noun (from topic final word order in CWdm)
* Verbal nouns treated ergatively like in Irish ("my love to/by-him" means "his love for me") [this should be a Standard Average Talman feature, opposite of SAE or Hebrew]
* Verbal nouns treated ergatively like in Irish ("my love to/by-him" means "his love for me") [this should be a Standard Average Talman feature, opposite of SAE or Hebrew]
* Large but closed class of auxiliaries, e.g. for tense marking, or things like "marbeh lisloach" 'forgives often' (shared by Anbirese)
* Large but closed class of auxiliaries, e.g. for tense marking, or things like "marbeh lisloach" 'forgives often' (shared to some extent by Anbirese)
* As in Modern Tseer, marks pluractionality by pluralizing the verbal noun
* As in Modern Tseer, marks pluractionality by pluralizing the verbal noun
* always using im- or iN- for plurals (this got into Modern Windermere)
* always using im- or iN- for plurals (this got into Modern Windermere)

Revision as of 23:51, 10 January 2022

In Eevo, "Tergetian languages" (Terjedib or łynøñ Terjed) refers to naturally evolved vernacular descendants of Classical Windermere, whereas "Windermere" (Dymeeib or łynøñ Dymee) refers to either Classical Windermere or (Revived) Modern Windermere. Some Trician languages such as Clofabosin only use "Windermere" (dameserotin) for Modern Windermere and use "Tergetian" (tergetoserotin) for the naturally evolved clade rooted in CWdm. Netagin uses Qašenin ("Ashanian") for Classical Windermere, Dameaqin for Modern Windermere, and Tyrgetin for Tergetian vernaculars.

Some Tergetian languages are:

Common features

  • AuxVOS, with V a verbal noun (from topic final word order in CWdm)
  • Verbal nouns treated ergatively like in Irish ("my love to/by-him" means "his love for me") [this should be a Standard Average Talman feature, opposite of SAE or Hebrew]
  • Large but closed class of auxiliaries, e.g. for tense marking, or things like "marbeh lisloach" 'forgives often' (shared to some extent by Anbirese)
  • As in Modern Tseer, marks pluractionality by pluralizing the verbal noun
  • always using im- or iN- for plurals (this got into Modern Windermere)
  • construct state marked by a reflex of the CWdm 3sg.m possessive pronoun in
  • Verb tenses work a lot like like in Jewish Babylonian Aramaic or An Yidis
    • "in VN" or "on VN" for imperfective aspect unmarked for tense
    • "after VN" for perfective aspect
    • an auxiliary can be used to mark tense, which is relative to conjunctions like "before": "before (future aux)", "after (past aux)"