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molaigh séid -> molaid "ye thank"
molaigh séid -> molaid "ye thank"
molaigh hár -> molar "they thank"
molaigh hár -> molar "they thank"
molaigh mé -> molam "... who/that thank(s)"
Impersonal: molaobh "one thanks"
Impersonal: molaobh "one thanks"
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===Relative clauses===
===Relative clauses===


Relative clauses work similarly:
Relative clauses work similarly. The resumptive pronoun 'mè' is used to refer back to the head of the relative clause.
 
Dhùbhòinn ri mhola shos (mè) - The teacher who the man thanked (lit: the teacher REL the man thanked RES)
 
Dhùbhòinn ri mholam shos - The teacher who thanked the man (lit: the teacher REL RES thanked the man)
 
Shois ri h-aoncam hàr - The men who fed them (lit: the men REL RES fed them)
 
Shois ri h-aoncar mè - The men who they fed (lit: the men REL they fed RES)


Dhùbhòinn ri mhola shos hù - The teacher who the man thanked (lit: the teacher REL the man thanked him)


Dhùbhòinn ri mholù shos - The teacher who thanked the man (lit: the teacher REL he thanked the man)


===Constituent order===
===Constituent order===

Revision as of 16:44, 15 June 2017

Bhadhagha (native name An Bhadhagha /a bʰadʰagʰa/, or colloquially just Bhadhagha; bhadhagha is from a Camalic language) is a Talmic language closely related to Tíogall. It's inspired by Scottish Gaelic, Irish and Sanskrit.

Todo

  • sphùrta = curiosity
  • sthàna = Sie
  • Lanna srasandhacht de h-aofrann cheallò = I'm a specialist in cello playing
  • 's laobh = is there? (interrogative)
  • camhna, sos, car = woman, man, person
  • dèic (VN), deàmha (present tense, nonpronominal subject) = eat
  • Shos h-aonca tua hù? = Who fed the man? Shos h-aoncù tua? = Whom did the man feed?

Phonology

Based on "literally read Irish".

Consonants

Labial Alveolar Retroflex Velar Glottal
Nasal plain m m n n
geminate nn
aspirated mh nh
Stop tenuis p p t t c k
aspirated ph th ch
prenasalized bp ᵐp dt ⁿt gc ᵑk
voiced b b d d g g
breathy voiced bh dh gh
voiced prenasalized mb ᵐb nd ⁿd ng ᵑg
Fricative plain f f s s h h
aspirated fh sh
prenasalized mhf mʱf nhs nʱs
Liquid plain l l r
geminate ll rr r̠ː
breathy voiced lh rh r̠ʱ

Mutations

Lenition: Initials "lenite" as in Irish orthography, but null initials get an h-. All possible initials lenite: i.e. initial n, l, r, sp, st, sc are also "lenited" to nh, lh, rh, sph, sth, sch /nʰ, lʰ, rʰ, spʰ, stʰ, skʰ/.

Eclipsis: Initials "eclipse" as in Irish orthography, but s (if not in one of sp-, st-, sc-) also eclipses to nhs-.

Vowels

Front Central Back
short long short long short long
Close i /i/ ì /iː/ u /u/ ù /uː/
Mid e /e/ è /eː/ o /o/ ò /oː/
Open a /a/ à /aː/

Diphthongs are all read as written.

a in an unstressed syllable becomes e if the previous vowel ends in an /i/.

Prosody

Stress

Intonation

Phonotactics

Morphophonology

Morphology

Nouns

The plural of nouns is always -a if the noun ends in a C, or -n if the noun ends in a V.

Bhadhagha lost grammatical gender.

The definite article is an-L for singular nouns and na-N for plural nouns. Colloquial Bhadhagha may drop the definite article in the singular (leaving behind just the lenition), and also in the plural (leaving behind the eclipsis) if the initial C of the noun is "eclipsable" (i.e. is one of ∅, p, t, c, b, d, g, f, s).

The Thensarian relativizer rin turned into a genitive marker: (an) schain ri h-Aodhàn (Aodhàn's friend). It can be omitted in casual Bhadhagha: schain h-Aodhàn.

Prepositions inflect the same way as in Tíogall; however, 'it' forms tend to use . ri uses the inflected forms of le (to): my = ri lion, your = ri leis, ... Casual Bhadhagha developed a new inflectional paradigm for ri: rìon, rìs, riù, rì, rè, rìom, rìod, rìoc, rìor.

Adjectives

Adjectives inflect similarly to nouns.

Attributive adjectives agree in mutation with the noun if the noun is definite. For example: "a black cat" is eafhad flumh and "the black cat" is (an) h-eafhad fhlumh.

Copula

Bhadhagha has a copula laidh which inflects as follows:

Present tense: lanna, lair, lù, laì, lac, lamh, laid, lar, laobh -- and laidh for nonpronominal subjects

Past tense: g'lanna, g'lair, g'lù, g'laì, g'lac, g'lamh, g'laid, g'lar, g'laobh -- and g'laidh for nonpronominal subjects

Examples: Lanna dùbhòinn (I'm a teacher), Lù ìon (It's blue)

As in Welsh, the copula is also used with progressive verbs: Laidh (an) dhùbhòinn d'èinteach (The teacher is sleeping).

Verbs

The Bhadhagha verbal system is very different from Tíogall, and much closer to Äivö.

For one thing, Bhadhagha analogized the analytic forms of verbs to all persons, and fused the personal pronoun with the verb:

molaigh ná -> molanna "I thank"
molaigh fiar -> molair "thou thankest"
molaigh hú -> molù "he thanks"
molaigh hí -> molaì "she thanks"
molaigh cé -> molac "it thanks"
molaigh -> molaigh or mola "... thanks" (with nonpronominal subjects)
molaigh gámh -> molamh "we thank" (both exc. and inc.!)
molaigh séid -> molaid "ye thank"
molaigh hár -> molar "they thank"
molaigh mé -> molam "... who/that thank(s)"
Impersonal: molaobh "one thanks"

The past tense is marked by a séimhiú on the verb as in Irish, except that the suffixes are the same as in the present tense. This comes from a construction that translates to "it was the case that ...", which also survives in Äivö. Even non-lenitable consonants get aspirated in casual Bhadhagha, though in the written language a particle is used when the first consonant isn't lenitable.

The future tense however has a special set of suffixes, derived from the Old Tíogall future tense:

moltanna, moltair, moltù, moltaì, moltac, moltamh, moltaid, moltar

The verbal noun is extremely irregular in Bhadhagha (more so than in Tíogall). One somewhat common way of deriving verbal nouns is with a prefix (ao+N) but other verbal nouns use the suffixes -ach, -il and -ta/-te. Verbs loaned from Camalic simply use the stem as the verbal noun. Some verbal nouns are suppletive.

Bhadhagha is not split-ergative, unlike Tíogall.

Perfect tenses use the construction tainn ('after', often pronounced tann) followed by the verbal noun.

Verbs are negated with cha or chan which is borrowed from Camalic (whereas Tíogall uses -L). In the past tense, cha do-L is used.

Syntax

Bhadhagha is a head-initial, topic-comment language with V2 order.

The man thanks the teacher = Shos molù dhùbhòinn (lit. the man, he thanks the teacher), or Dhùbhòinn mola shos hù (lit. the teacher, the man thanks him)

The teacher thanks the man = Dhùbhòinn molù shos (lit. the teacher, he thanks the man), or Shos mola dhùbhòinn hù (lit. the man, the teacher thanks him)

Relative clauses

Relative clauses work similarly. The resumptive pronoun 'mè' is used to refer back to the head of the relative clause.

Dhùbhòinn ri mhola shos (mè) - The teacher who the man thanked (lit: the teacher REL the man thanked RES)

Dhùbhòinn ri mholam shos - The teacher who thanked the man (lit: the teacher REL RES thanked the man)

Shois ri h-aoncam hàr - The men who fed them (lit: the men REL RES fed them)

Shois ri h-aoncar mè - The men who they fed (lit: the men REL they fed RES)


Constituent order

Noun phrase

Verb phrase

Sentence phrase

Dependent clauses

Vocabulary

Bhadhagha uses native or Camalic words where Tíogall uses Netagin words; for example the word for school is suar-dùbhach 'house of learning' in Bhadhagha and tarsúdh in Tíogall. An example of a Camalic word in Bhadhagha is eafhad (cat), where Tíogall has zár from Netagin.

Future Bhadhagha

The dominant Talmic language in postmodern Clotricin, known as an Bhadhagha shearn, is derived from the Uithfeasaimh dialect of Bhadhagha. It has a simplified vowel system (fewer diphthongs) and a palatalization distinction in some consonants. (But it shouldn't be Irish gibby!) It also has a lot of loanwords from [Future Xaetjeon].

Example texts

The North Wind and the Sun

[to be edited]

Bhòlcoll ag h-Ud

Other resources