Mergian

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Mergian
Margisks razdou
Rommergflag1.png
Flag of Rommerg
Pronunciation[marɡɪsk razdoʊ]
Created byeli
Date2025
SettingEarth
Native toRommerg
EthnicityMergian
Early forms
Official status
Official language in
Rommerg
Regulated byRazdaureits
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.

Introduction

Goals

I wanted to try my hand at a realistic Germanic conlang. I've seen so many typical Germanic conlangs, that I tried to get Mergian nice and unique.

History

In 410, the Gothic king Alaric I sacked Rome. That year was an astonishing victory for all Goths. However, Alaric died that same year due to a hunting accident. The Goths were left without a suitable king, and they began to fracture into petty bickering. Almost none of the tribes wanted to leave the lush Roman Empire, and neither did they want to fight the Emperor. However, the Simmeck tribe, led by their chief Wallia, decided to abandon the Roman Empire. The year that the Simmecks left, the Roman general Constantius III crushed the remaining Goths, and all that were left were the men of Wallia's armies.

Soon after, Constantius became emperor and permitted the Simmecks to live north of Moesia. They acted as the first line of defense against the Huns. They lived in relative peace, and the Romans promised to not bother them. Around 440, the invasion of the Huns forced out the Simmecks all the way to the Rhine. They formed an alliance with the Alemanni and in 451, alongside the Romans, they defeated the Huns at the Battle of the Catalaunian Plains. Wallia died in the battle, and Theodoric rose to power.

After the battle, the Pope Leo I converted Theodoric from Arianism to Nicene Christianity. He appointed Theodoric on a holy mission, citing it to be a revelation given to him by God. The Simmecks were to be the guards of the Christendom. He told them to move north and to establish a church there, to defend Rome and the Christian world.

Theodoric agreed to follow the word of the Pope, and he moved his kingdom east. They settled on the Elbe and Warta. He also adopted the name Fīnēs Rōmae (The borders of Rome). As a thanks, the Romans sent their best architects to design places for the Simmecks to live. Eventually, the Latin name dropped and instead the Old Mergian name Rumi marga stuck. That name evolved to the word Rommerg which is where the word Mergian comes from.

It is important to note that there is no documented "Old Mergian" language. It is simply used as a catch-all term for the language spoken before Modern Mergian.

Sound Changes

Phonology

Phoneme Inventory

Allophony

Stress

Orthography

Morphology

Nouns

Cases

Mergian retained the nominative, vocative, accusative, genitive, dative cases from Gothic. The vocative, as in Gothic, did not have its own independent suffixing. Instead, the accusative singular could also act as the vocative singular, and the nominative plural could act as the vocative plural.

The description of the cases is as follows:

  • The nominative (nom.) case is used to mark the subject of a verb. It is also used in the predicate of the copula and as the dictionary form.
  • The vocative (voc.) case is used when addressing someone.
  • The accusative (acc.) case is used to mark the object of a verb. Some prepositions govern the accusative.
  • The genitive (gen.) case is used to mark possession, measurement, source or other relations between nouns. A small amount of prepositions govern the genitive.
  • The dative case (dat.) is used to mark the indirect object of a verb. The patients of causative actions are also in the dative. This is different to English where we would find a direct object instead(e.g. Ig ima (dat.) þangjen tafde vs. English "I made him (acc.) think"). The majority of prepositions govern the dative.

Gender and Number

Gothic gender was unpredictable. Over time, the Slavic influence on Mergian caused for the genders to regularize. Mergian has three genders: the masculine (m), feminine (f) and neuter (n). The masculine is attributed to biologically masculine nouns (e.g. father, son, boy) or nouns ending in a consonant. The feminine is attributed to biologically female nouns (e.g. mother, daughter, girl) or nouns ending in -a, -i or -ij. The neuter is attributed exclusively to intangible nouns (e.g. sky, name, sun) and to nouns ending in -o or a consonant.

Gothic made a distinction between gendered plurals, but Mergian lost this distinction. The new plural number inherited the masculine plural endings. Gothic's dual number was lost for the most part. However, it replaced the plural series of all pronouns.

Pronouns

The personal pronouns were inherited almost exactly from Gothic. The 3p pronoun come from two different sources. The accusative, genitive and dative declensions all come from eis, the nominative is an innovation so that it would fit the -ð paradigm of við and juð. The 3sn pronoun ta was influenced by Slavic *to

Personal pronouns
1s 2s 3sm 3sn 3sf 1p 2p 3p refl.
Nominative ig þo e ta si við juð
Accusative mig þog ina ja unge ing ins sig
Genitive mijne hijne e izou ungra ingra izei sijne
Dative me þu ima izai unge ing im se


The demonstrative pronouns changed a slight bit. These pronouns used to also be used to mark definiteness, but Mergian lost that feature. Most namely did the pronouns in the nominative change. sa replaced Old Mergian sou (which had come from ) to prevent merging with the relative particle sou (which had come from swē). sen replaced Old Mergian sa, to fit the -a paradigm of feminine nouns. The accusatives were innovated to fit their nominative counterparts, except for the neuter and the plural. Lasty, final vowels got dropped off as a result of fast speech eliding them.

Demonstrative pronouns
Masculine Neuter Feminine Plural
Nominative sen þed sa þai
Accusative þen þa þans
Genitive þe þis þizei
Dative þem þizai þaim

The interrogative pronouns experienced the most alteration from Gothic. In Old Mergian, two sets of pronouns existed for the interrogative: the simple and the intensive. The simple was derived from the words ƕas (who) and ƕa (what). The intensive was derived from the word ƕaþar (which of them, originally "which of the two" but duals replaced plurals in pronouns). The difference in the simple and the intensive was the emphasis placed on the object of interrogation. With time, the simple came to only be used with inanimate objects and the intensive came to only be used with animate objects. Since Old Mergian was out of a pronoun meaning "which of the two" and "which of them", the words *ƕa-baddjē and *ƕa-ize ("what of the two" and "what of them" respectively) began to be used to refer to inanimate nouns and *mannē-ƕas ("who of the men/people") began to be used to refer to animate nouns. These words evolved and lexicalized into the modern Mergian pronouns used today.

Interrogative pronouns
What? Who? Which (of the two)? Which (of them)? Who (of them)?
Nominative ha haðar haaðei haazei maniua
Accusative haðna maneuna
Genitive he haðre hispaðei hisizei maniue
Dative hama haðma hamfae hamizei maneuma

The indefinite pronouns are formed by suffixing -ug after consonants. After a vowel, -zug is instead used. These suffixes come from the -uh conjunction in Gothic. Originally, they were used for universal pronouns but the meaning shifted.

Indefinite pronouns
Something Someone
Nominative hazug haðarug
Accusative haðnazug
Genitive hezug haðrezug
Dative hamazug haðmazug

The universal pronouns were replaced by the word alls in the masculine plural for the animate and in the neuter singular for the inanimate.

Universal pronouns
Everything Everyone
Nominative aal ale
Accusative aal alens
Genitive ale alsei
Dative alma alem

Negative pronouns are formed by prefixing ni- before the indefinite pronouns. It should be written with a hypen between the ni- and the pronoun.

Negative pronouns
Something Someone
Nominative ni-hazug ni-haðarug
Accusative ni-haðnazug
Genitive ni-hezug ni-haðrezug
Dative ni-hamazug ni-haðmazug

Declension

Derivation

Adjectives

Possessives

Comparatives

Adverbs

Declension

Verbs

Verbal prefixes

Mergian has a rich system of verbal prefixes which was inherited from Gothic and reinforced by Slavic influence. They can indicate directionality, manner or perfectivity. Most the prefixes are prepositions but some of them are uniquely verbal prefixes. While verbs with prefixes might resemble the separable verbs of other Germanic languages, Mergian verbs are always inseparable.

List of prefixes
Directional prefixes
Prefix Meaning Example with ... Example meaning
an- on lazen "lay" anlazen "lay onto"
at- towards, proximity voubjen "call" atvoubjen "summon"
af- away, indicates reversal nimen "take" afnimen "remove"
dis- apart deljen "share" disdeljen "divide"
du- towards (slight positive connotation) gien "give" dugien "donate"
in- into, patient of a causative verb ludzjen "shine" inludzjen "illuminate"
miþ- with, co- veirjen "please" miþveirjen "agree with"
us-,
ur- (before an r)
out-, up- gien "give" usgien "give up; surrender [something]"
uf- under meiljen "write" ufmeiljen "sign, subscribe"
uvar- over fulnen "be full" uvarfulnen "overflow"
for- before, forth lazen "lay" forlazen "present"
fra- separation buzjen "buy (archaic)" frauzjen "sell"
Aspectual prefixes
Prefix Meaning Example with ... Example meaning
id- indicates repetition munen "be aware of" idmunen "remember"
mis-
mir- (before an r)
indicates a mistake teien "do" misteien "make a mistake"
for- indicates lack visen "be" forvisen "be absent"
fra- negative implication kuðen "say" frakuðen "curse"

Alongside the directional and aspectual prefix, there are a number of perfective prefixes. They are not interchangeable, despite all meaning the same thing. The most common and productive one is ga-. A number of the directional suffixes are also used:

  • an
  • at
  • us
  • uf

Although rare, there also exist imperfective prefixes. Similar to perfective prefixes, they are not interchangeable. There is no one most common imperfective prefix, since they are already rare. The two most common imperfective prefixes are at- and for-

If a geminate consonant cluster forms due to a prefix, then it should be turned degeminated. Prefixes are able to stack, and this is most common seen in perfective verbs which already have a directional or aspectual prefix. If two vowels meet between prefixes, then the second one should be deleted. An example is atzjigen ("to contact") becoming its perfective form, gatzjigen.

Tense, aspect and mood

Mergian inherited their tense, aspect and mood from Gothic and innovated an additional tense due to Slavic influence. The two base tenses are the past (pst.) and the present (prs.) The past is used to talk about verbs which have happened and the present is used to talk about verbs which have not yet happened or verbs which are happening. The two aspects are the perfective (pfv.) and imperfective (npfv.) The perfective is used to talk about verbs which are done to completion and the imperfective is used to talk about verbs are not done to completion. The three moods are the indicative (ind.), subjunctive (sjv.) and the imperative (imp.) The indicative is used to talk about factual statements. The subjunctive came from the Gothic optative. It is used in subclauses to talk about imaginaries or hypotheticals. While the present subjunctive cannot exist in an independent clause, the past subjunctive is used as a conditional mood. The imperative is used to give commands. It is not found in any tenses but the non-past.

The Slavic influence caused for aspect and tense to combine and give new tenses. Essentially, the contrast created allowed for a clear future tense for perfective verbs. To mirror perfectives, imperfective verbs also gained a compound future tense.

Effective tenses of verbs
Past Present
Perfective Perfect past Perfect future
Imperfective Imperfect past Present
Example with brigen "break"
Past Present
Perfective frebrag
"I have broken"
frabriga
"I will break"
Imperfective brag
"I was breaking"
briga
"I am breaking"

The default for most verbs is that the unmodified form is the imperfective and that a verb requires some prefix to become perfective, however this is not always true. Verbs that describe "instant" actions (e.g. die, finish, strike) are perfective by default and instead require a prefix to become imperfective.

Example with diven "die"
Past Present
Perfective dav
"I have died"
diva
"I will die"
Imperfective fordav
"I was dying"
fordiva
"I am dying"

Passive

Mergian has two passive voices, both inherited from Gothic. They are the mediopassive (mpass.) and the passive (pass.) The mediopassive is used only in the third person. It is used to talk about a common action associated with a noun, unaccusative verbs or impersonal actions. Mediopassive verbs also lack an explicit agent. The passive is used for all persons. It is used to describe the action a noun is undergoing, most often by a different agent. Compare the following examples:

  • Sa lampa kobde favme - 'This lamp is cheap' (lit. 'This lamp buys/is bought cheap')
There is no explicit agent, and kobde ('is bought') acts like an unaccusative verb, therefore this verb should be in the mediopassive.
  • Sen books ist anmeelts þerg Frankiskne bougrja - 'This book is written by a French author'
There is an explicit agent, so this verb should be in the passive.
  • In biðjen brinde hjimja - 'Incense is burnt during prayer' (lit. 'In prayer burns prayer')
There is no explicit agent, and this is a common action, therefore this verb should be in the mediopassive.
  • Smirn ist gabrannens þerg Paben Asto - 'Myrrh is burnt by Father Augustus'
There is an explicit agent, and this action is not common/a general statement.

Verb classes

Conjugation

Particles

Prepositions

Discourse particles

Conjunctions

Syntax

Negation

Interrogatives

Word Order

Subordinate Clauses

Content Clauses

Relative Clauses

Adverbial Clauses

Vocabulary

Numerals