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[[ | [[Tserovesh/Lexicon]] | ||
[[ | [[Tserovesh/Swadesh list]] | ||
{{Infobox language | {{Infobox language | ||
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|creator = [[User:IlL|IlL]], [[User:Praimhín|Praimhín]] | |creator = [[User:IlL|IlL]], [[User:Praimhín|Praimhín]] | ||
|name = {{PAGENAME}} | |name = {{PAGENAME}} | ||
|nativename = | |nativename = ceroveš | ||
|pronunciation= / | |pronunciation= /tseʁoˈveʃ/ | ||
|setting = [[Verse:Tricin]] | |setting = [[Verse:Tricin]] | ||
|region = Talma | |region = Talma | ||
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}} | }} | ||
''' | '''Tserovesh''' (''ceroveš'' /tseʁoˈveʃ/) is a [[Lakovic]] language spoken in [[Verse:Tricin/Zagvneti|Zagvneti]] in Talma, inspired by Modern Hebrew, Georgian, and Armenian. | ||
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==Introduction== | ==Introduction== | ||
Unlike Classical Windermere or Tergetian, | Unlike Classical Windermere or Tergetian, Tserovesh has many loans from an ancient (unnamed) pre-Lakovic substrate, often called the ''[[KTAC|Kodṛcha-Tzameshut Archeological Complex]]'' (KTAC). | ||
It went through some of the strangest sound changes in Lakovic. | It went through some of the strangest sound changes in Lakovic. | ||
Old | Old Tserovesh grammar is much closer to Windermere or Häskä than to Modern Tserovesh. | ||
==Todo== | ==Todo== | ||
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PLak with a Philly Cockney accent? | PLak with a Philly Cockney accent? | ||
initial t could be added randomly to vowel-initial words in | initial t could be added randomly to vowel-initial words in Tserovesh (from an earlier sandhi/liaison-like phenomenon) | ||
==Dialects== | ==Dialects== | ||
Tserovesh is fairly dialectally uniform. The dialect spoken in the eastern region of Kadzovetia aspirates voiceless stops. | |||
==Phonology== | ==Phonology== | ||
===Orthography=== | ===Orthography=== | ||
Tserovesh is most commonly written with the Windermere alphabet. | |||
===Consonants=== | ===Consonants=== | ||
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===Phonotactics=== | ===Phonotactics=== | ||
Tserovesh phonology only allows open syllables (syllabic resonants count as vowels), except final consonants are allowed.<!-- | |||
Tserovesh phonology is slightly less restrictive than Israeli Hebrew but much more so than Georgian. As in both languages, initial consonant clusters appear frequently in Tserovesh. Initial clusters of the form ''l/r'' + consonant are allowed (Are those really syllabic resonants?). For example: | |||
* ''croveš'' (the name of the language) | * ''croveš'' (the name of the language) | ||
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===Noun phrase=== | ===Noun phrase=== | ||
The adjective comes before the noun in | The adjective comes before the noun in Tserovesh: | ||
''udvanit ertmati'' = the happy spider | ''udvanit ertmati'' = the happy spider |
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