Uaru: Difference between revisions

From FrathWiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 64: Line 64:
'''Gara ko nea i tala time.''' The cat is bigger than the fish.
'''Gara ko nea i tala time.''' The cat is bigger than the fish.


The most common prepositions are: '''i''' in, at, on '''o''' to, into, onto, '''a''' from, out of, '''li''' through, along, across '''me''' with.
The most common prepositions are:  
'''i''' – in, at, on  
'''o''' to, into, onto,  
'''a''' from, out of,  
'''li''' through, along, across  
'''me''' with
 
The prepisition '''i''' is used to form the passive participle:
 
'''Time i mate.''' – The eaten fish, the fish that has been eaten
 
The prepisition '''me''' is used to form the active participle:
 
'''Time me mate – The cat that eats, the cat that has eaten.

Revision as of 12:23, 29 January 2019





Leopardcivilflag.png
Uaru, Uaa
Pronounced: waru, waː
Typology
Morphological type: analytic
Basic word order: SVO
Credits
Creator: Xing at the CBB

Uaru or Uaa is a constructed language. It's a mixture between an artlang and an auxlang.


Phonology

Common consonants: p t k b d g m n ŋ <ng> l r

Marginal consonants: f s t͡ʃ (ch) ʃ (sh) v z

Vowels: i e a o u

The syllable structures is (C)V.

/u/ can be rather lax. It may be de-rounded, centralised, devoiced, or even dropped completely. It may be inserted to break up consonant clusters in loan-words.


Grammar

The basic word order is SVO. There is generally no inflection, but grammatical relations are expressed through separate words.

Gara mate time. – The cat eats the fish.

Gara mota. – The cat is sleeping.

Gara mota i langetu – The cat is sleeping on the blanket.


There is an optional past tense marker ko

Gara ko mota i langetu. – The cat was sleeping on the blanket.

Gara ko mate time. – The cat ate the fish.


Adjectives follow nouns:


Gara maka – a big cat, the big cat

Time miti – a small fish, the small fish

(Note that there is no distinction between definite and indefinite forms.)

Together with the copula nea (to be), adjectives can serve as predicates:

Gara nea maka. – The cat is big.

Gara ko nea maka. – The cat was big.

Comparative constructions is formed with the construction i talo.

Gara ko nea i tala time. The cat is bigger than the fish.

The most common prepositions are: i – in, at, on o – to, into, onto, a – from, out of, li – through, along, across me – with

The prepisition i is used to form the passive participle:

Time i mate. – The eaten fish, the fish that has been eaten

The prepisition me is used to form the active participle:

Time me mate – The cat that eats, the cat that has eaten.