Miyu

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Lexicon
Writing

Introduction

Miyu is an attempt to have a minimalist artlang in the spirit of Toki Pona that affords speakers more nuance, even with a reduced number of morphemes. Strict word order and and word compounding allow Miyu to be expansive and specific when necessary. Strict use of syntactic and lexical particles help to reduce sematic ambiguities.

Some key features:

Phonology

Miyu has nine consonants (/p, t, k, s, m, n, l, j, w/) and five vowels (/a, e, i, o, u/). Stress is word final.

consonants

Labial Coronal Dorsal
Nasal m n
Plosive p t k
Fricative s
Approximant w l j (y)
  • The plosives /p t k/ are pronounced [b d ɡ] when in an unstressed syllable.
  • [s] is in free variation with [z] and [ʃ].
  • [l] and [ɾ] are in free variation.

vowels

Vowels in stressed syllables tend to be tense, and likewise unstressed ones tend to be more lax. Thus, for example, /i/ is realized as [i] or [ɪ] in stressed and unstressed syllables, respectively. Likewise, /e/ is realized as [e] or [ɛ], and so on.

Vowels Front Back
Close i~ɪ u~ʊ
Mid e~ɛ o~ɔ
Open a~ə

diphthongs

There are two diphthongs [ai̯] ai, and [au̯] au. These typically occur word-finally.

syllable structure

All syllables are of the form (C)V(N), that is, optional consonant + vowel + optional final nasal, or V, CV, VN, CVN.

syllables

Valid syllables
-a -ai -au -an -e -en -i -in -o -on -u -un
∅- a ai au an e en i in o on u un
p- pa pai pau pan pe pen pi pin po pon pu pun
t- ta tai tau tan te ten ti tin to ton tu tun
k- ka kai kau kan ke ken ki kin ko kon ku kun
m- ma mai mau man me men mi min mo mon mu mun
n- na nai nau nan ne nen ni nin no non nu nun
s- sa sai sau san se sen si sin so son su sun
l- la lai lau lan le len li lin lo lon lu lun
w- wa wai wan we wen wi win
y- ya yau yan ye yen yo yon yu yun

phonotactics

A few syllables sequences are disallowed; /ji, wu, wo/. Also, a syllable-final nasal may not occur before /m/ or /n/ in the same root.

Lexical Categories

Syntax

Classical Arabic is primarily VSO, but MSA (Modern Standard Arabic) tends to be SVO, favoring full agreement over partial. Chinese is classified as an SVO language. Transitive verbs precede their objects in typical simple clauses, while the subject precedes the verb. Spanish unmarked word order for affirmative declarative sentences is SVO; however, as in other Romance languages, in practice, word order is mostly variable. English word order is almost exclusively SVO. Hindi is primarily an SOV language.

Based on the above information about the main source languages for Miyu, it is primarily an SVO (subject-verb-object) language. Modifiers generally follow what they modify, as do prepositional phrases and subordinate clauses.

Appendices