Tũka: Difference between revisions

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When a voiced alveolar nasal consonant(/n/) is followed by a ⟨ĩ⟩, the diphthong(triphthong?) is written ⟨nhi⟩.
When a voiced alveolar nasal consonant(/n/) is followed by a ⟨ĩ⟩, the diphthong(triphthong?) is written ⟨nhi⟩.
===Consonants===
===Consonants===
{| class=wikitable style="text-align: center;"
{| class=wikitable style="text-align: center;"
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| || l || || j ||
| || l || || j ||
|}
|}
===Vowels===
===Vowels===
{| class=wikitable style="text-align: center;"
{| class=wikitable style="text-align: center;"
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| a || || aː ||
| a || || aː ||
|}
|}
===Prosody===
===Prosody===
====Stress====
====Stress====
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| ''-iln'' || ''-ũan'' || ''-pã''
| ''-iln'' || ''-ũan'' || ''-pã''
|}
|}
===Gender===
Tũka has five grammatical genders: '''masculine'''-'''feminine'''-'''neuter''' for people, and '''animate'''-'''inanimate''' for non-human things, though animate-inanimate is usually used to denote if something is alive or dead respectively. If a noun has a masculine, feminine or neuter gender, then it is assumed to be a live human. If the human is dead, in an attempt to not dehumanise the dead person, the word ''tlapi''(basically meaning "unfortunately dead") is used. The word ''tlapi'' is ungendered, so its inflection does not change regardless of who is being talked about.


Inflection-wise, grammatical gender only affects adjectives. Particles, nouns or agglutinative case suffixes do not change form based on grammatical gender.
====Animacy====
For non-human things with no clear gender(yes, including animals, grammatical gender in Tũka does not necessarily correspond with sex), the genders '''inanimate''' or '''animate''' are used. Although inanimate and animate technically only mean things that do or do not move naturally, animacy in Tũka is mostly used to refer to alive or dead things, with the animacy of the adjective sometimes semantically affecting the word, e.g. ''lumũ tāt''(lit. ''inanimate leaf'') means "autumn leaf", as autumn leaves are usually categorised by their yellow-orange colour that signifies death.
===Number===
===Number===
Unlike in English, where only sgular and plural declensions exist, Tũka uses three declensions: '''singular''', '''dual''' and '''plural''', in this case "plural" meaning three or more of an item, and all words have to be distinguished by a number particle, such as ''i tũka''("Tũka language"), lit. {{sc|sg}}.{{sc|nom}}, though ''i'' is only in nominative. In accusative, ''u'' is used and in absolutive ''ī'' is used.
Unlike in English, where only sgular and plural declensions exist, Tũka uses three declensions: '''singular''', '''dual''' and '''plural''', in this case "plural" meaning three or more of an item, and all words have to be distinguished by a number particle, such as ''i tũka''("Tũka language"), lit. {{sc|sg}}.{{sc|nom}}, though ''i'' is only in nominative. In accusative, ''u'' is used and in absolutive ''ī'' is used.
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: ''I kão ũ ikli ta panaũi.''
: ''I kão ũ ikli ta panaũi.''
: {{sc|sg}}.{{sc|nom}} {{sc|dl}}.{{sc|acc}}
: {{sc|sg}}.{{sc|nom}} {{sc|dl}}.{{sc|acc}}
===Constituent order===
===Constituent order===
Tũka uses an SOV constituent order in most sentences, though the verb comes first(VSO) in imperative sentences, as well as the imperative particle, ''im'', which goes after the verb.
Tũka uses an SOV constituent order in most sentences, though the verb comes first(VSO) in imperative sentences, as well as the imperative particle, ''im'', which goes after the verb.
====Noun-adjective order====
Tũka puts the adjective after the noun, an aspect of the language borrowed from [[Toki Pona]].
===Noun phrase===
===Noun phrase===
===Verb phrase===
===Verb phrase===
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