Seggeynni

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Seggeynni is another conlang spoken in my far-future Antarctican conworld. It developed from language contact, when Kämpya speakers settled in lands where Nwuemer was spoken. Kämpya speakers were more technologically advanced than Nwuemer speakers, and Kämpya was definitely the prestige language, forming the superstrate. Most of Seggeynni's vocabulary and grammar come from Kämpya. On the other hand, Kämpya speakers intermarried extensively with the Nwuemer speaking community, and Nwuemer has exhibited a very heavy substrate effect.

The language documented here is spoken approximately a century after the initial migration. The vast majority of speakers are mixed-race descendents of Kämpya and Nwuemer speakers. In addition to Seggeynni, almost all have a passive command of both Nwuemer (still a common trade language in the region) and Kämpya (a liturgical language).

Like Nwuemer, there are many consonants which contrast secondary articulations, which affect the quality of adjacent vowels. Additionally, Seggeynni is characterised by an underlying simple syllable structure at the phonemic level, however many speakers "drop" vowels, so that consonant clusters are heard in the spoken language. For example, phonemically the name of the language is /ˈséʕkə̀jə̀nə̀jə̀/, but, except when speaking extremely carefully, most speakers pronounce it as [ˈséɠə̀iɲːì].


Phonology

Vowels

The vowel system is quite similar to Nwuemer. In stressed syllables, there are 6 vowel phonemes /iː/, /uː/, /e/, /o/ and /aː/ and /ə/.

As in Nwuemer, the length of the vowel is more important than the quality in contrasting /iː/ and /uː/ vs. /e/ and /o/. Secondary articulation on surrounding consonants "pulls" the vowels around a fair bit.

In unstressed syllables, the language has a Vertical Vowel System, only contrasting /a/ and /ə/ (however other vowels such as [i], [e], [o] and [u] are heard as allophones of /ə/, depending on the surrounding consonants).


Consonants

The consonant inventory is very similar to Nwuemer. Kämpya's aspirated consonants became velarised in Seggeynni.

Labial Pal. Labial Dental / Alveolar Lab. Dental Alveolo-Palatal Retroflex Palatal Velar Uvular Lab. Palatal Lab. Velar Glottal
Nasal m n ɲ ŋ* (ɲʷ) ŋʷ*
Voiced Stop b d ɟ g (ɟʷ) gʷ ~ gb
Voiceless Stop p t c k (cʷ) kʷ ~ kp ʔ
Voiced Sibilant Affricate
Voiceless Sibilant Affricate
Spirant Affricate ʈʂ
Voiced Sibilant Fricative z ʑ
Voiceless Sibilant Fricative s ɕ
Spirant Fricative f ʂ ç ~ ɬ χ ~ x
Flap / Trill ⱱ ~ ʀʷ ⱱʲ ɾʲ ɽ (ʀ)
Lateral ʎ ɫ (ʎʷ) ɫʷ
Semivowel j ɥ w
  • Velar nasals cannot occur word initially.
  • Except for /ɥ/, labialised palatal consonants such as /cʷ/ are rare. They only occur in loanwords. Before front vowels, most speakers merge them with labialised velar consonants, and before back vowels, most speakers merge them with plain palatal consonants.
  • Labialised velar stops /kʷ/ and /gʷ/ are in free variation with their doubly articulated counterparts.
  • For the purposes of phonology, it is useful to draw a distinction between sibilant and spirant (non-sibilant) affricates and fricatives. Sibilants contrast for voicing while spirants do not.
  • Between sonorants, /tθ/ is lenited to [θ].
  • A sound change is currently in progress which is changing the palatal fricative /ç/ to a lateral fricative /ɬ/, especially in clusters.
  • /χ/ has the allophone /x/ between sonorants.
  • /ʀ/ is only found in loanwords. Many speakers merge it into /ɽ/.
  • Labialised labial consonants /mʷ/, /bʷ/, /pʷ/ occur as separate phonemes in a few dialects. But most dialects have merged these with the plain labials.


Phonotactics

Underylingly, the only syllables permitted are CV and CCV. The latter is rare, and only a few consonant clusters are permitted, namely /pf/, /tf/, /sf/, /kf/, /pχ/, /sχ/, /kχ/, /pç/ and /kç/.

  • Speakers who are shifting /ç/ to /ɬ/ are especially prone to do so in clusters. In this case, they shift /kç/ to a lateral affricate /tɬ/.
  • /kχ/ is much more commonly heard as [q].
  • /kf/ is sometimes heard as [qʷ].
  • There used to be a cluster */tχ/, but it has now shifted to /tθ/.


Spirant Mutation

Seggeynni has a rule that only one "spirant" consonant can occur in a phonological word. If a process such as cliticisation would cause a violation of this rule, then every spirant consonant except the last undergoes mutation, via the following patterns:

  • /f/ -> /w/
  • /fʲ/ -> /ɥ/
  • /pf/ -> /p/
  • Other clusters of Consonant + /f/ -> Labialised versions of the initial consonant, with the /f/ deleted e.g. /sf/ -> /sʷ/, /kf/ -> /kʷ/ etc.
  • /tθ/ -> /t/
  • /ʈʂ/ -> /tɕ/
  • /ʂ/ -> /ɕ/
  • /ç/ -> /j/
  • /pç/ -> /pʲ/
  • /kç/ -> /c/
  • /χ/ -> /ʔ/
  • Clusters of consonant + /χ/ -> Simple deletion of the /χ/ e.g. /pχ/ -> /p/, /sχ/ -> /s/

e.g. when the word /ˈkχòʔɲátə́/ - "Hkonat" (the name of a city) takes the postposition /fámə́/ - "from", the result is /ˈkòʔɲátə́=fámə́/ - "from Hkonat". Similarly when the verb /ˈʔà̤ːχə̀/ - "to ask a question" takes the reportative mood prefix /sfájə́/, the result is /sʷájə́=ˈʔà̤ːχə̀/ - "apparently he asked".

Stress

The situation here is identical to Kämpya. One syllable in each word bears stress, the location of which is unpredictable. Vowel phonation is phonemic on stressed syllables but not elsewhere. The phonations are tense /a̰/, breathy /a̤/ or /ä/, and glottalised /aʔ/. Glottalised vowels are pronounced with gemination (and glottalisation where possible) of the following consonant (or with a glottal stop [ʔ] in the case of word final syllables). For example, the first syllable of "Seggeynni" has stress with glottalised phonation, meaning that the subsequent /k/ is pronounced as an implosive /ɠː/.


Long vowels with glottalised phonation diphthongise into centering diphthongs. For example, /ˈdʑíːʔpə̀/ - "deep" (descriptive) is pronounced [ˈdʑíəɓə̀].


Short vowels with tense phonation are pronounced with an epiglottal approximant [ʢ] after them e.g. /ɲḛ̂/ - "snare" is pronounced [ɲḭ̂ʢ].


The pronunciation of short vowels with breathy phonation varies depending on a variety of factors. At the end of words, they are normally pronounced with a final /ɦ/, or occasionally [z] or [ɹ]. If the vowel precedes an obstruent (stop, affricate or fricative), then a voiceless fricative is inserted, that is homorganic with the obstruent e.g. /sə́ˈçə̤̀tà/ - "sister" is most often pronounced [síˈçì̤stà]. However this is in free variation with preaspiration, so the word for sister can also be pronounced as [síˈçì̤ʰtà]. If the vowel precedes a sonorant, then it is pronounced geminated and with breathy voice e.g. /dè̤nə̀/ - "to dance" is usually pronounced [dè̤n̤ːə̀].


Tone Patterns

These are also identical to Kämpya. A description of the tone patterns can be found here.


Assimilations / Epenthesis

There are many phonetic processes that result in the deletion of schwa, often leading to consonant clusters. They apply to unstressed syllables, with two major exceptions. The first of these is word-initial syllables. The second of these is the syllable immediately after a stressed syllable.


Nasal Consonants

If a schwa occurs word finally and is preceded by a nasal, then the whole syllable is often deleted, with nasalisation of the preceding vowel e.g. /ˈjḛ̂ɲə̀mə̀/ - "enemy" is pronounced [ˈjḛ̂ʢɲì] (here and below, the parts of the word that undergo assimilation have been marked in bold).

A schwa has a strong tendency to be lost if it occurs immediately after a nasal consonant, and immediately before an obstruent. In this case, the nasal changes it's place or articulation to be homorganic with the obstruent e.g. /ˈjḛ̀ɲə́mə́/ - "enemy" (postpositional form) combines with the locative enclitic /ka/ to become /ˈjḛ̀ɲə́mə́=ká/, which is pronounced [ˈjḛ̀ʢɲíŋká].


If a schwa occurs between two nasal consonants, it is elided, along with the preceding consonant. In its place, the following nasal is geminated e.g. /ˈjḛ̀ɲə́mə́/ - "enemy" (postpositional form) combines with the enclitic /nəja/ to become /jḛ̀ɲə́mə́=nə́já/ - "near the enemy", which is pronounced [jḛ̀ʢɲínːéjǽ].


The sequence /məjə/ is usually pronounced [mːʲi]. Unlike most other assimilation processes, this can occur in the syllable immediately following the stressed one e.g. /ʔáˈɫʷṳ̀ːmə̀=jə̀/ - "everyone's" (alienable) is usually pronounced [ʔɒ́ɫʷṳ̀ːmːʲì].


A similar process transforms the sequence /nəjə/ to [ɲːi], as in the name of the language, Seggeynni [ˈséɠːə̀iɲːì], underlyingly /ˈséʕkə̀jə̀nə̀jə̀/.


Debuccalisation of Stops

If a word final schwa is preceded by a stop, then it is very common to delete the schwa and debuccalise the stop to a glottal stop e.g. /ˈkχóʔɲàtə̀/ - "Hkonat" (the name of a city), is usually pronounced as [ˈkχɔ́ɲ̰ːɛ̀ʔ].


If schwa occurs after a stop, and before an obstruent of identical voicing, then both schwa and the preceding stop are deleted, and the following consonant becomes geminated e.g. /ˈkχòʔɲátə́=ká/ - "from Hkonat" is normally pronounced [ˈkχɔ̀ɲ̰ːɛ́á].


If a schwa is preceded by a stop, and followed by a sonorant, then both the schwa and the preceding stop are deleted, and the sonorant is glottalised and geminated e.g. /ˈkχóʔɲàtə̀/ - "Hkonat" combines with the alienable genitive enclitic /jə̀/ to become /ˈkχóʔɲàtə̀=jə̀/ - "of Hkonat" (alienable), which is pronounced [ˈkχɔ́ɲ̰ːæ̀j̰ːè].


Semivowels

An extremely common phonetic process involves /j/, /w/ or /ɥ/ flanked on both sides by /a/ or /ə/. The second vowel is deleted, and the semivowel assimilates with the preceding vowel to form a diphthong. /ajə/ and /aja/ become [ai], /awə/ and /awa/ become [au], /aɥə/ and /aɥa/ become [aʉ]. Likewise /əjə/ and /əja/ become [əi], /əwə/ and /əwa/ become [əu], /əɥə/ and /əɥa/ become [əʉ]. An example of this is in the name of the language, /ˈséʕkə̀jə̀nə̀jə̀/, which is pronounced as [ˈséɠːə̀iɲːì].

This differs from the previous processes in two ways. Firstly because it can delete not only schwa, but also /a/. Secondly because it can delete vowels in any syllable, even if it bears stress or comes after the stressed syllable. For example /ʔáɫáːˈwə̰̀nə̀/ [ʔɑ́ˈɫɑ̀ːṵnə̀] - "alone" (restrictive). If a stressed vowel is deleted in this way, the resulting diphthong bears stress (as in the previous example).

Conflicting Processes

If a word could be transformed in more than one way, then the assimilation rules work from left to right across the word. So /ˈséʕkə̀jə̀nə̀jə̀/ is pronounced as [ˈséɠːə̀iɲːì] and not *[ˈséɠːə̀inə̀i].


Comparison with Kämpya

At the phonological level, the two languages are completely different, however at the phonetic level, many words are similar. Below is a table comparing words in the two languages, as well as words in the older version of Kämpya that the two languages diverged from.

Gloss Seggeynni Phonemic Seggeynni Phonetic Kämpya Old Kämpya
Seggeynni /ˈséʕkə̀jə̀nə̀jə̀/ [ˈséɠːə̀iɲːì] [ˈséʔkìnì] */ˈsɛ́ʔkìnì/
forest /ˈfò̤ɥə̀/ [ˈfòy̤ː]] [ˈpʰò̤wè] */ˈfɔ̤̀wè/
sister /sə́ˈçə̤̀tà/ [síˈçì̤stà] /ˈsʰì̤tà/ */ˈsʰì̤tà/
snare /ɲḛ̂/ [ɲḭ̂ʢ] [n̥ḛ̂ː] */n̥ḛ̂/
forgetful /jámə́ˈɲì̤ː/ [jɛ́ˈɲːì̤ː] [ámˈnèi̤] */ɛ́mˈnèi̤/
rotten (restrictive) /zə́ˈwòʔ/ [zóˈwòʔ] [ˈzwóʔ] */ˈzwɔ́ʔ/
everyone /ʔáˈɫʷṳ̀ːmə̀/ [ʔɒ́ɫʷṳ̀ːm] [áˈlòṳⁿ] */áˈlòṳm/
Hkonat (the name of a city) /ˈkχóʔɲàtə̀/ [ˈqɔ́ɲ̰ːɛ̀ʔ] [ˈkʰóʔnàt] */ˈkʰɔ́ʔnɛ̀t/
at Hkonat /ˈkχòʔɲátə́=ká/ [ˈqɔ̀ɲ̰ːɛ́kːá] [ˈkʰòʔnátká] /ˈkʰɔ̀ʔnɛ́t=ká/
cave /kʷə́ˈçḛ̂pà/ [kʷʉ́ˈçḭ̂ʢpà] [ˈkʰwḛ̂ːpà] */ˈkʰwḛ̂pà/


Telicity

Due to contact with Nwuemer, Seggeynni has developed a grammatical telicity contrast. Atelic verbs are unmarked, and in Tone Class 1. Telic verbs are in Tone Class 2, are usually take the suffix /ɕə́ŋə́/ (usually pronounced [ɕíⁿ]). This is a grammaticalised form of the verb /ˈɕéʔŋə̀/ - "to become".

For example:

/ˈjḛ̂ɲə̀mə̀ ˈkχòʔɲátə́=fámə́ dʑə́ˈpˤâ̰ːɽə̀ tə́ˈjə̀ʔ mǎ̤ːnə̀/

[ˈjîʢɲìⁿ ˈqɔ̀ɲ̰ːɛ́fːámə́ ˈdʑɘ́ˈpˤɑ̰̂ːɽʌ̀ tə̀iʔ mǎ̤ːnə̀]

enemy Hkónat=from depart.ATEL one month.ADV

The enemy departed from Hkonat for a month (and then they came back)

vs.

/ˈjḛ̂ɲə̀mə̀ ˈkχòʔɲátə́=fámə́ dʑə́ˈpˤâ̰ːɽə̀-ɕə́ŋə́ tə́ˈjə̀ʔ mǎ̤ːnə̀/

[ˈjîʢɲìⁿ ˈqɔ̀ɲ̰ːɛ́fːámə́ ˈdʑɘ́ˈpˤɑ̰̀ːɽɘ́ɕíⁿ tə̀iʔ mǎ̤ːnə̀]

enemy Hkónat=from depart.TEL one month.ADV

The enemy departed from Hkónat in a month (as in it took them that long to get ready).


Semantic Shifts

Many verbs have completely different meanings when their aspect changes from atelic to telic. For example:

/ˈjḛ̂ɲə̀mə̀ xə́ˈʎíːʔpə̀/

[ˈjîʢɲìⁿ χɘ́ˈʎíəɓə̀]

enemy sleep.ATEL

The enemy is asleep.

vs.

/ˈjḛ̂ɲə̀mə̀ xə́ˈʎìːʔpə́-ɕə́ŋə́/

[ˈjêʢɲìⁿ χɘ́ˈʎìəɓíɕíⁿ]

enemy sleep-TEL

The enemy is dead.


This (and many other similar semantic shifts) are clearly attributable to influence from Nwuemer, which inflects the verb root /səʔˈʎiːpə/ into atelic /səʔˈʎiːpə/ to mean "sleep", and telic /mʲaɲəʔ-səʔˈʎiːpə/ to mean "die". In Kämpya (which does not mark telicity), the verb /hléiʔp/ (cognate with /xə́ˈʎíːʔpə̀/) is only used to mean "sleep". There is a separate verb root /dôṵ/ to mean "die". However in Seggeynni, the cognate to this word /dʷḭ̂ː/ means to die insane.


Pronouns

Like Kämpya, Seggeynni has tripartite alignment in pronouns. The emphatic pronouns and the ergative pronouns (also used for alienable possession) are independent words, but the others are proclitics. There is also a distinction between emphatic and non-emphatic forms of pronouns. Unlike Kämpya, there is no proximate / obviate distinction in 3rd person pronouns (null pronouns are used when Kämpya would use a proximate pronoun).

1PS Exclusive 1PS Inclusive 2PS 3PS Interrogative
Intransitive /ʔájə́/ /wájə́/ /jə́wə́/ Null /bá/
Intransitive Emphatic /wḭ̀ː/ /ɥḭ̀ː/ /jṵ̀ː/* Null /bà̰ː/
Accusative /mə́jə́/ /ʎə́/ /tɕə́/ /sə́́wə́jə́/ /cə́/
Accusative Emphatic /mə́ˈjà̰/ /ˈʎè̤sə́/ /tɕḛ̀/ /sə́́wə́ˈjà̰/ /cḛ̀/
Genitive Inalienable /májə́/ /jáfə́/ /ɥə́/ /ⱱə́jə́/ /jə́fə́/
Genitive Alienable / Ergative /mḭ̂ː/ /jṵ̂ː/* /ɥô̰/ /ⱱə́ˈjáʔ/ /çṳ̀ː/
Genitive / Ergative Emphatic /mḭ̀ː/ /jṵ̀ː/ /ɥò̰/ /ⱱə́ˈjàʔ/ /çṳ̀ː/

Due to a sound change, the emphatic forms of the 2nd person intransitive pronoun and the 1st person inclusive genitive alienable / ergative pronoun have become homophones. However, due to social norms, the 2nd person emphatic pronouns are very rarely used at all. So whenever /jṵ̀ː/ is heard, it can be assumed to be the emphatic form of the 1st person genitive alienable / ergative pronoun.


Alternate Second Person Pronouns

In certain situations, alternate forms of the second person pronoun are used. There are a variety of these, depending on the situation:

  • /ˈɥô̰mə̀/ - used by a cleric to a layperson
  • /ˈmʲṵ̂ːŋə̀/ - used by a senior cleric to refer to a junior cleric
  • /tɕə́ˈjṵ̂ːdʑə̀n/ - literally "student", used by a teacher to a student
  • /kə́ˈçə̰̂də̀/ - literally "child", used by an adult to a child
  • /wṳ̀ː/ - literally "wife", used by a husband to a wife
  • /ˈtfóʔɽə̀/ - used by men to slightly younger men (within a generation) that they know well
  • /ˈmóʔɽə̀/ - used by women to slightly younger women (within a generation) that they know well
  • /sˤâ̰ːnə̀/ - literally "son", used by an older person to much younger men
  • /ˈdóʔɽà/ - literally "daughter", used to much younger women
  • /wóˈmḛ̂/ - literally "slave", used when talking to slaves.

Most of these are derived from nouns, and indeed they pattern like nouns, not prononus. Notably, they take ergative-absolutive marking (with the enclitic /-zə̀wə̀/ or /-ɽə̀wə̀/ used to mark ergative case) rather than tripartite marking.

Noun Phrases

Most of the noun phrase grammar is very similar to Kämpya. This section will only discuss the differences.

Articles and Demonstratives

Unlike Kämpya, Seggeynni has no articles.

The demonstrative system is also somewhat simplified. The specialised demonstratives for something uphill or downhill from the speaker have been lost (perhaps because Seggeynni is spoken in an area that is much less hilly than Kämpya. There are now only three degrees of distance, like Japanese, or English when it still used "yonder".

This That That over there
Pronominal dâ̰ː fṵ̂ː xə́ˈɫà̤ːnə̀
Adnominal (Places) *xáwə́ *xə́ˈɫánə́
Adnominal (Other cases) dà̰ː fṵ̀ː xə́ˈɫà̤ːnə̀
  • When demonstratives beginning with /x/ are used adnominally to describe places, the /x/ changes to /ʔ/ if there is another spirant phoneme in the word e.g. ˈmʲúːʔnànə̀/ [ˈmʲʉ́ən̰àⁿ] - "mountain" -> /xáwə́=ˈmʲúːʔnànə̀/ [χɑ́uˈmʲʉ́ən̰àⁿ] - "that mountain", but /ˈfò̤ɥə̀/ [ˈfòy̤ː] - "forest" -> /ʔáwə́=ˈfò̤ɥə̀/ [ʔáuˈfòy̤ː] - "that forest", not */xáwə́=ˈfò̤ɥə̀/.


Possession

Possession is marked by the enclitic /jə/, which undergoes tonal change to indicate alienable and inalienable possession just like Kämpya /ja/ e.g.


/ˈdò̰gə́=jə́ báˈwə̂nə̀/

[dò̰ʢgə́i ˈbâṵnə̀]

dog=GEN.INALIENABLE bone

"The dog's bone" (in it's body)

vs.

/ˈdô̰gə̀=jə̀ báˈwə̂nə̀/

[dô̰ʢgə̀i ˈbâṵnə̀]

dog=GEN.ALIENABLE bone

"The dog's bone" (e.g. that it's chewing on, burying etc.)


Mood/Evidentiality

This also works in the exact same way as Kämpya, with particles that are mostly cognate. These have reduced forms which are used as clitics to mark a sentence for mood/evidentiality, and also full forms which are responses to polar questions.

Mood / Evidential Clitic Form Full Form Etymology
Negative ɲawə náˈwə̰̂ English "no"
Necessitative gʷa góʔ English "gotta"
Optative wana ˈwóʔnà English "wanna"
Conditional wədə ˈwə̰̂də̀ English "would"
Hypothetical fəjə fə́ˈjə̰̂ English "if"
Direct Unmarked Repeat Verb N/A
Reportative sfajə sˤáˈjə̰̂ English "say"
Inferential ɟə ɟè̤ English "guess"
Assumptive matə mà̤tə̀ English "must"
Interrogative dəwə də́ˈwə̰̂ English "do"
Challenging a presupposition N/A páˈwə̤̀ Thai /plàu/


Verb Subordination

This is done in the same way as Kämpya. The particles used are:

Particle Normal Emphatic
Intransitive səjə jə̤̀tə̀
Accusative nô̰
Ergative nəja ɲâ̰ː


Comparative Constructions

This is done exactly the same as Kämpya, using the postpositional clitic /tfapə/ (often shortened to [tfaʔ]), meaning "above".