Ckul
Ckul | |
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Ckul | |
Pronunciation | [ʦkʼul] |
Created by | Aquatiki |
Date | 2025 |
Setting | Something distantly related the Avatar movies |
Native to | None |
Indo-European
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Early form | Vulgar Latin
|
Ckul (autoglossonym: ckul; Ckul: [ʦkʼul) is a Italic language, with strong influence of Na'vi. It is the result of a contact among members of the languages.
While its vocabulary derives for the most part from Vulgar Latin, Na'vi influence is most notable in its phonology and its some of its grammar and vocabulary.
History
The language name derives directly from the Latin word for 'exile', suggesting the speakers were somehow transported to and transmuted to be able to live on Earth. After becoming Christianized in the region of North Africa, they were driven to Spane, so they are indeed exiles twice over. Ultimately from Latin exsul (“exile (person)”), it came to refer to "a person in exile on Earth, after having been exiled from Pandora."
This sad tale continues for the Ckul. Their exile in the Atlas mountains was followed by an exile to Muslim Spain. Later, most Ckul migrated to Central America, where their minority status continues to hamper their lives to this day.
Orthography and Phonology
Alphabet
The Tskxul alphabet consists of 26 symbols. There seven vowels are and twenty consonant sounds.
Letters of the Ckul alphabet | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Aa | Ææ | Bb | Cc | Dd | Ee | Ff | Gg | Hh | Ii | Kk | Ll | Mm | Ññ | Nn | Oo | Pp | Rr | Ss | Tt | Uu | Ww | Xx | Yy | Zz |
- The letter æ is used to make the 'ash' sound, but in Na'vi it is written ä.
- The letter h is used to make the glottal stop, but in Na'vi it is written with an apostrophe.
- The letter j is used to make the /j/ sound, as in Spanish.
- The letter ñ is used to make the /ŋ/ sound, but in Na'vi it is written ng.
- The letter x is used to make the /h/ sound, as in Spanish.
- The letter y is used to make the /ɪ/ vowel, but in Na'vi it is written ì.
Phonology
Consonants
Labial | Alveolar | Dorsal | Glottal | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Nasal | /m/ m | /n/ n | /ŋ/ ñ | |
Ejective | /pʼ/ p | /tʼ/ t | /kʼ/ k | |
Stop | /p/ b | /t/ d | /k/ g | /ʔ/ h |
Fricative v- | /f/ f | /s/ s | /h/ x | |
Affricate | /ts/ c | |||
Fricative v+ | /z/ z | |||
Liquid | /ɾ/ r | |||
Lateral | /l/ l | |||
Glide | /w/ w | /j/ j |
When in the coda, the voiceless stops are unreleased. In all positions, the voiceless stops are unaspirated.
Vowels
Front | Back | |
---|---|---|
High | /i/ i | /u/ u |
Near High | /ɪ/ y | |
Middle | /ɛ/ e | /o/ o |
Low | /æ/ æ | /ɑ/ a |
There are also six diphthongs and two syllabic consonants: æw, aj, aw, ej, ew, oj and rr, and ll.
Phonotactics
- Allowed simple onsets: b, d, g, p, t, k, h, m, n, ñ, r, l, w, j, f, s, z, c, x, ø
- Allowed complex onsets: {f, s, c} + {b, d, g, p, t, k, m, n, ñ, r, l, w, j}
- Allowed nucleus: a, æ, e, i, y, o, u, aj, aw, ej, ew, oj, rr, ll
- Allowed coda: b, d, g, p, t, k, h, m, n, l, r, ñ, ø
The only exception to this formatting is that a syllabic consonant nucleus requires an onset consonant (not null), and may not take a coda consonant.
Vowel hiatus is common. VCV is typically syllabified as V.CV.
Morphophonology
Mutation
In certain situations, several consonants undergo mutation (or lenition).
Consonant | p | t | k | b | d | g | c | h |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mutation | b | d | g | f | s | x | s | ø |
Affixes that cause mutation are marked with a + sign, instead of a - sign for merely attaching.
Simplifications
- Because identical vowels cannot occur next to each other, they contract.
- It is possible for the syllabic consonants to occur immediately after their consonant-counterpart. When this happens in an unstressed syllable, the pseudovowel disappears. In a stressed syllable, the infix disappears. Pseudovowels in monosyllables behave as though unaccented.
- In rapid speech final -e is frequently elided when the following word starts with a vowel.
Grammar
Affixes
Ckul has singular, dual, plural. All are formed by prefix:
- The lexical form is the singular, in almost every case.
- du+ (from duo) makes the dual.
- flu+ (from plūrēs) makes the plural.
The case system is highly regular, all suffixing:
- The lexical form is the absolutive. This is the subject of an intransitive verb or the patient of a transitive verb.
- -i for the dative. This is the collapse of the old genitive, dative, and ablative.
- -(u)n for the ergative. This is the actor in a transitive clause.
Apart from these few forms and the prenouns, almost every other affix in the language is able to precede or follow its head. When it is not ambiguous, heads and their modifiers may be some distance apart. This means the language is moderately to heavily non-configurational. When attributive, adjectives agree with their noun-head. When predicative, they use the lexical form. There is no gender.
The vocative is accomplished through intonation or the particle ma.
Nouns
Ckul nouns show three case endings (absolutive, ergative, and dative), and two case-like structures (genitive and topical). There are three numbers: singular, dual, and plural. Note that the forms without the dual or plural are ungrammatical in an utterance (requiring a determiner).
Singular | Dual | Plural | |
---|---|---|---|
Absolutive | pædrr - *father | dubædrr - two fathers | flubædrr - fathers |
Ergative | pædrun - *father | dubædrun - two fathers | flubædrun - fathers |
Dative | pædri - *to father | dubædrri - to two fathers | flubædri - to fathers |
de | de pædrr / pædrrde - *of father | de dubædrr / dubædrrde - of two fathers | de flubædrr / flubædrrde - of fathers |
fbi+ | fbibædrr - *as for father | fbidubædrr - as for two fathers | fbiflubædrr - as for fathers |
The noun-phrase in Ckul is both slotted and non-configurational. See the table below for the full schema. Basically, the main determiners affix to the noun, either to the left or the right, in a certain order.
Specifier +FOCUS |
Quantifier + FOCUS |
Number | Genus + FOCUS |
NOUN + CASE | Genus -focus |
Quantifier -focus |
Specifier -focus | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1. the/this | hyl- | 1. all/every | tod- | 1. dual | du+ | 1. kind | gen- | 1' kind | -ner | 1' all/every | -dal | 1' the/this | -ll | |
2. this/that | sde- | 2. each/per | kæd- | 2. plural | flu+ | 2' each/per | -dæ | 2' this/that | -ce | |||||
3. what/which | cwi+ | 3' what/which | -cwi | |||||||||||
4. an/some | hal- | 4' an/some | -lyg |
For a given morpheme pair, to occur on the left brings it into focus. Compare this to putting its partner on the right, which does not attract focus. For example, cwisuk is WHICH captain?, whereas dukcwi is Which CAPTAIN?.
Certain English words require two of these bound morphemes to translate. For example 'all' + 'dual' = 'both'.
Pronoun
Pronouns inflect as noun do, but also have a dedicated genitive adjective. ≪he≫ is the infix of honor/humility for pronouns, and always appear just before the case ending (or at the end for the absolutive).
Singular | Dual | Plural | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
A | E | D | A | E | D | A | E | D | |
1st excl | jo | jon | joj | duno | dunon | dunoj | no | non | noj |
1st incl | hæmfno | hæmfnon | hæmfnoj | ño | ñon | ñoj | |||
Second | tu | tun | ti | hæmftu | hæmftun | hæmfti | wo | won | woj |
3rd ani | ja | jan | jaj | dua | duan | duaj | ear | ean | eaj |
3rd inanim | jy | jyn | jyi | duy | duyn | dui | eor | eon | eoj |
Possessive Adjectives
Singular | Dual | Plural | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
A | E | D | A | E | D | A | E | D | |
1st excl | mea | mean | meaj | dul | dulun | duli | nojcrr | nojcrun | nojcri |
1st in | hæmbor | hæmbon | hæmbori | ñojcrr | ñojcrun | ñojcri | |||
2nd | weh | wehan | wehi | hæmñe | hæmñen | hæmñi | wejcrr | wejcrun | wejcri |
3rd ani | sa | san | saj | dup | dupan | dupaj | lor | lon | loj |
3rd inan | sy | syn | syi | duk | dukan | dukaj | lu | lun | lui |
Adjectives
Verbs
Lexical entries for verbs look different from other words because the contain middle dots where the second and third infix locations are. TAM particles are typically infixes in the verb, though some are exclusively suffixes and other exclusively prefixing. There is a slight tendency to put the verb last, but it is not a majority of utterances. Verbs are strictly transitive or intransitive, and may not delete an argument unless it is very clear from context (e.g. imperatives, or after a topic has been set).
Slot 1
In almost all verbs, the position for the valency-altering affixes is before the beginning, i.e. prefixing. It is still marked with a middle dot in the lexicon, making verbs easy to spot.
Only one or one of the following may occur:
In the same slot, the subjunctive affixes may co-occur with the previous (or not):
Subjunctives are considered the polite imperative. True imperatives take no such infix.
Deverbals
Unlike all the other verbal infixes, these occur after a consonant, not after a vowel. The cannot co-occur with any others and turn a verb into an adjective or noun. They all lack aspect, and the first two lack tense.
- ≪ar≫ - active infinitive (no tense or aspect, verbal noun)
- ≪ad≫ - anti-passive infinitive (no tense or aspect, verbal noun)
- ≪añ≫ - non-past participle (no aspect, verbal adjective)
- ≪am≫ - past participle (no aspect, verbal adjective)
After becoming an adjective or noun, these may take normal morphology (e.g. plural, definiteness, etc.).
Slot 2
Typically coming after the first vowel of the verb, most of slot 2 infixes conveys tense and aspect. ≪null≫ is present imperfective.
- ≪wy≫ - simple past (preterite)
- ≪wa≫ - imperfective past (imperfect)
- ≪re≫ - perfective past (pluperfect)
- ≪sdi≫ - present perfect (perfect)
- ≪wi≫ - future imperfective (future)
- ≪weri≫ - future perfective (future perfect)
Slot 3
Almost always simply suffixing, slot 3 conveys mirativity, honor, and/or evidentiality.
- ≪an≫ - positive mirativity
- ≪im≫ - positive mirativity and indirect evidentiality
- ≪i≫ - formal register
- ≪id≫ - formal register and indirect evidentiality
- ≪ur≫ - negative mirativity
- ≪uñ≫ - negative mirativity and indirect evidentiality
Notice that this means ≪null≫ here is neutral mirativity, informal register, and direct evidentiality.
Sample Texts
Our Father
Ma sembu-ñojcrr cwo sdar skæl-l-yn, |
Our Father, who art in heaven, |
Ma sempu ngoytsrr tswo star skxäl-lìn, |