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The language creator is Andrew Smith.
The language creator is Andrew Smith.


Details of the language speakers and culture are speculative as yet.  One name I have for this language is 'the language of the ghost people' or 'ghostian', suggesting that the speakers are perceived as a fair-skinned race by outsiders.
Details of the language speakers and culture are speculative as yet.  My working name for the language is ''Shennian''.  ''Shente'' is the word for 'people, race, gentiles,' and the adjective ''shenni'' is derived from that as an ethnonym.  The native name of the language is ''shennya'' and 'to talk Shennian' is ''bāhant shennyon'', literally talk-language Shennian-thing.'
 
Clues about the Shennian culture emerge from their vocabulary.  Their language has a respect-based hierarchy.  Their religious tradition has a sky-father god, ''Yeuh''.  They are sabbatarians with ascetic religious leaders - monks, hermits and mendicants.  They use words for technology with which we are familiar.  Their history includes a period of expansion.  Currently they are eclipsed by a global super-culture whom they call the ''Yimbiane''.
 
[[Shennian Lexicon]]


= Pronunciation =
= Pronunciation =
Line 35: Line 39:
Vowels:
Vowels:


OT2.0 has the vowels /i ɪ e ɛ a ʉ ʊ ɔ ɑ/.  '''i, e, ʉ''' are always long and are written with a circumflex.  '''a''' can be long or short and is written with an accent.  '''ɔ''' is considered as a long '''ɑ''' and also written with an accent.
OT2.0 has the vowels /i ɛ a ʉ ɔ ɑ/.


Orthography:
Orthography:


In the latin alphabet:
In the latin alphabet:
'''a b ch d e f g h i k l m n ng o p r s sh t u v w y'''
The 'original' conscript for OT2.0 is as yet unknown.


=Dialogue 1: A Friend Arrives=
'''a b ch d e f g h i k l m n ng o p r s sh t u v w y'''
{|
|Host:||''Ei chomú-dâ kú piras''||There is someone at the door
|-
|Servant:||''Chota âyet ta?''||Who is there?
|-
|Friend:||''Ei'm''||It is I
|-
|Visitor:||''Chota tí ta?''||Who is it?
|-
|Host:||''Bodú úwedshim''||I don't know
|-
|Visitor:||''Bodú ve kayir kú siestant''||I will go see
|-
|Host:||''Kain gieruk. Bodú ve kabâm Shinuwin kú yirant''||No need, I shall tell Shinuwin to go
|-
|Host:||''Shinuwin!''||Shinuwin!
|-
|Servant:||''Íe!''||Yes!
|-
|Host:||''Dâo dâ''!||Come here!
|-
|Servant:||''Íe!''||Yes!
|-
|Host:||''Ei chomú-dâ kú piras. Yirú kú siestant chota tí ta.''||There is someone at the door. Go and see who it is.
|-
|Servant:||''Íe!''||Right!
|-
|Servant:||''Korí ya, kakai sinú tí kembí?''||What is your name, sir?
|-
|Friend:||''Moi sinú tí Trushika. A âyet korí Kinig kú soi?''||My name is Trushika. Is Mr Kinig at home?
|-
|Servant:||''Íe, taní âyet kú soi. Kulahú penyirant dâ''||Yes, he is. Please come in
|Friend:||''Âriget''||Thank you
|-
|Servant:||''Korí Trushika tí dâte''||Mr. Trushika has come
|-
|Host:||''Kulahú ten penyirant dâ''||Ask him to come in
|-
|Host:||''Korí Trushika ya, a tí kembí duono ya?''||Hello Mr. Trushika, how are you?
|-
|Friend:||''Duoní. Korí Kinig a koren Shirab ya, a tí ba kembien duono''||Quite well. Are you Mr. Kinig and Mr. Shirab, both well?
|-
|Host and Visitor:||''Duoní, duoní. Kulahú siedant súdakembí''||Quite well. Please take a seat
|-
||Friend:||''Âriget âriget''||Thank you, thank you
|-
|Host:||''Brobú châ!''||Prepare tea!
|-
|Servant:||''Kembí guôt dâ nena dok bodú dâ''||Coming in a moment
|-
||Host:||''Kulahú, korí Trushika, pihant châ''||Take some tea Mr. Trushika
|-
|Friend:||''Âriget''||Thank you
|-
|Host:||''A pohatíshim siedant súdakembí nidolgon bikkon''||Can't you stay a little longer?
|-
|Friend:||''Púch! Ta tí chota-dâ so 'pena bodú kiekt. Bodú múhe tai redyir''||Sorry! There is someone waiting for me. I must return
|-
|Friend:||''Príantantie shim''||Don't get up
|-
|Host and Visitor:||''Ishikude dâno nena talika!''||Where do such words come from!
|-
|All together:||''Dua sieh, dua sieh''||Good-bye, good-bye
|}


=Grammar=
In the ''Kiriva'', the Shennian alphabet:


== Infinitive/Verbal Noun ==
'''a b g d e dy ā ty y k l m n s o p ch r sh t y'''


The infinitive generally ends with ''-ant''.  It is alternative uses to being the infinitive form of the verbThe language also uses it as a verbal noun: a word ending in '-ing' or in '-ation'; and as an adjective derived from verbs.
The ''Kiria'', the writing, is a Semitic-based script, not yet adapted into an available fontSome letters are written with pointing to mark a sound change.   


A number of verbs derived from nouns exist only as verbal nouns; as do causative verbs derived from other verbs.  In such cases tense and person are described peripherally from the verb.  More information will be released as a better understanding on how they work emerges.
The long vowels U, Ō and I are written as abjads either written with pointing over a previous consonant or over a short-A.


==''Wohant'', to be, being ==
The short-A is called ''Aliv''
 
The present tense of 'to be' is as follows:
 
{|
|''me mi''||I am||''meme en''||we are
|-
|''te si''||you (sg) are||''tete ti''||you (pl) are
|-
|''ta ti''||he is||''ga en (ti)''||they are
|}


The pronouns for 'she' and 'it' are ''da'' and ''ten'' respectivelyIf the subject is a plural noun, the verb form is ''ti'' rather than ''en''.
NG is written as ''Gim'' marked with a nasal.   


In old high literature the forms of the verb for 'we are' and 'they are' are ''emo'' and ''eno''.  These forms are not used in the spoken language.
H is written as a superscript letter called half-''Āta''.  It is inserted between ''Āta'' and ''Tyeta'' in dictionary practice but not listed in the sequence of the alphabet.


The past tense of 'to be' is
The ''Kiria'' has two writing styles. Cursive script is the default script. Square script is used for names and proper nouns.  Shennian writing style alternates between both forms.  Not knowing where to change into square script appears clumsy and uneducated, over-using square script feels like reading official, formal language.


{|
=There Is=
|''me wora''||I was||''meme woren''||we were
|-
|''te woret''||you (sg) were||''tete woret''||you (pl) were
|-
|''ta woret''||he was||''ga woren (woret)''||they were
|}


The past tense of 'to be' translates both 'I have been' and 'I was'  It can also acts as an auxiliary.
''Ten āyet'', it is, there is a..., there are, that is, which takes a direct object.  This may be singular or plural, so ''ten āyet'' means 'there is' or 'there are'. It is a common and useful expression, used in making statements, not when an object is pointed out.  It is also used in interrogative sentences when it translates 'is there', 'are there'.


The negative verb marker is a clitic.  After a consonant it is ''shim'', after a vowel ''him''.  In a subordinate clause it becomes an independent adverb and moves to in front of the verb.
The third person ending ''-(e)t'' is silent in spoken Shennian.


{|
It is used in the sense, to be present or to be absent (in a place).  It is used with a non-living subject, always in the third person: it is (somewhere), they are (somewhere).  It forms sentences if where the thing is, is known: ''A konisa belye' pena trepeye? Āyet'' Is the book on the table? Yes, it is.
|''me ve tehim''||I was not||''meme ve enshim''||we were not
|}


As an independent word ''shim, shidim'' means 'nothing'.
'There was, there were' is normally ''Ten we dunide'', literally 'there happened'.  In 'there will be', ''ten āyet'' becomes ''ten we dunyet'', literally 'there will happen'.


The future tense of 'to be' is  
The third person moves to the head of the sentence and has existential force to mean ‘there is, there are’.
{|
|''me ve bude''||I will be||''meme ve budun''||we will be
|-
|''te ve bud''||you (sg) will be||''tete ve bud''||you (pl) will be
|-
|''ta ve bud''||he will be||''ga ve budun (bud)''||they will be
|}


''Ve'' is described as a non-present participle that is placed between the subject and a past or future verb.  It is not used with ''wora'', but it is used with ''bud''
''Ten'' in ''ten āyet'' is considered the secondary subject and the real subject is the noun or pronoun that comes after the verb.  The verb does not change for gender, it changes for number, ''Tye āyen''.


The pronoun ''ten'' means 'it, there.'  It is used in impersonal expressions like ''ten wuet'' it rains and ''ten snyeget'' it snows.


The imperative is ''wohú''. This is considered abrupt and only used as a command.
In deferential language ''gohaut'' is substituted for ''āyet'' and ''ō'' for ''iet'', ''ten gohaut lut'' Good morning, lit. it is early.


With adjectives <i>mi</i> and <i>wora</i> describes a temporary or accidental situation, and <i>deide mi</i> and <i>deide wora</i> describes a more permanent or general situation.
= Shim =
The negative is ''shim'' nothing, followed by a genitive noun or noun phrase.  ''Shim'' is the word used in conversation and written word.  In careful speech it becomes the longer word ''shidim''.  It is placed directly after a verb it negates.  An infinitive verb or a participle will follow after it.  It occurs independently at the end of sentences as 'or not'.


==''A'nt'', to have, auxiliary verb==
''Bod bovol'' I speak; ''bod bovol shim'' I do not speak.  ''Ta lichet'' He reads; ''Kudin lichet'' he does not read.  Shennian speakers think of the subject pronouns he, she and it, ''ta'', ''da'' and ''ten'', as wrong in negative sentencesThe negative pronouns ''kudin'', ''kudna'' and ''kudnon'', not one, are substituted in their place.   
''A'nt'' is used to mean 'to have (done something)'.  It is not used to mean 'to have, possess or hold'.  In this sense the language prefers to use a prepositional phrase.


Present tense:
If noun or pronoun is contradicted, a form of ''kudin'' is used.


{|
''Kudnon'' can be used to contradict statements: ''Ta dāt ishi Sobye. Kudnon, kudin dāt ishi Sobye'' He comes from Sobye. No, he doesn't come from Sobye.
|''me a'''||I have||''meme a'n''||we have
|-
|''te aft''||you (sg.) have||''tete aft''||you (pl.) have
|-
|''ta aft''||he has||''ga a'n (aft)''||they have
|}


In the old high language the contracted forms insert a ''-b-'': ''me ab'', ''meme/ga aben'', ''abant''.  This has dropped out of the modern language.
''Kudnon'' is used as negative question tag: ''Ai-ta morigo kerane, kudnon?'' He is the chief clerk, is he not?


Past tense:
With a name or pronoun with ''so'' it means 'not the one who', ''kudin bod so det ten'' it wasn't me who told him.


{|
Occasionally it can mean 'non-': ''kudni shenni'' non-Shennian
|''me ve yed''||I had||''meme ve yeden''||we have
|-
|''te ve yed''||you (sg.) had||''tete ve yed''||you (pl.) had
|-
|''ta ve yede''||he had||''ga ve yeden (ve yed)''||they had
|}


''A'nt'' is not used with reflexive verbs or verbs of motion.  Instead these verbs use the verbal noun, combined with the forms of ''wohant'' to indicate the number and the tense.
''Kudnon shim'', not un-: ''kudin kōt shim'' he is not unwilling.


==Future Auxiliary==
When a future of a negated verb is fronted before the pronoun it means 'it is unlikely': ''kudin we dāyet'' He won't come; ''dāye'lā kudin'' It is unlikely that he will come; he is unlikely to come.


The modal auxiliaries ''kal'' and ''wol'' are used with the verbal noun.  ''Kal'', shall, be going to, is ...ing, is used with the first person, and ''wol'', will, be willing, want, like, wish, with the second, although this is not rigid.
Other negatives that can be used as adverbs after a verb: ''shame'' never, ''shidim'' nothing, ''pahon'' nobody.  These words can be moved to the start of the sentence and the order of the sentence remains unchanged for the rest of the sentence: ''chota āye'ten?  Ei pahon'' Who is there? Nobody.


{|
''Kem'' is used as a negative adverb, 'only'.
|''me ve kal''||I shall||''meme ve kalen''||we shall
|-
|''te ve wolt''||you (sg.) will||''tete ve wolt''||you (pl.) will
|-
|''ta ve wolt''||he will||''ga ve wolen||they will
|}


If the verbal noun is a verb of motion it can be dropped if the direction is indicated by an adverb or a preposition.  The present tense can be used for future action, especially if it is marked by an adverb of time.  ''Dyant'' or ''kal/wol dyant'', will become, can also replace ''bud'' in which case it portends an unchanging state (will always be...).  ''Dyant'' cannot replace ''kal/wol aryant'', to be (in a place).
''Okom, okong, okon'' is used as a stronger negative than ''shim'', not at all.


==''Yirant'', to go (by foot)==
=Hisal=


Present tense:
''Hisal'' means ‘to arise, to come into existence:


{|
''Ya hisen-lā pena keten payade tolke'', and on this point there are stanzas
|'' me yire''||I go||''meme yirun''||we go
|-
|''te yir''||you (sg.) go||''tete yir''||you (pl.) go
|-
|''ta yir''||he goes||''ga yirun''
|}


The past tense is irregular (there must be a story behind that):
''Ishipena ōga hist samōn'', from anger arises delusion


{|
An alternative to 'to be' in nominal sentences: ''binon-lā tena ramayon hist pena tache'', the sight of it is delightful to the exhausted.
|''me ve sefa''||I went||''meme ve seften''||we went
|-
|''te ve seft''||you (sg.) went||''tete ve seft''||you (pl.) went
|-
|''ta ve sefte''||he goes||''ga ve seften''||they went
|}


Similar to ''Yirant'' is the verb ''yerant'', to go (by vehicle), present tense:
= Lā =


{|
The two particles ''ai'' and '''' are used to emphasize words.  ''Ai'' being used in questions, and '''' in statements. A word may be emphasized by moving it forward in a sentence and tagging it with ''ai'' or ''''.
|''me yere''||I go||''meme yerun''||we go
|-
|''te yer''||you (sg.) go||''tete yer''||you (pl.) go
|-
|''ta yer''||he goes||''ga yerun''||they go
|}


''Yerant'' uses the same ending in the past tense as in the present:
At the beginning of a sentence or clause, ''lā'' can replace an impersonal ''ten'': ''dakilbesh-lā ya sodyant keresh suyan'' it is difficult to go across the river.  At other times ''kam'' if, at the beginning of a sentence is balanced by ''lā'' on the first word of the main clause: ''kam na' dā tenyen ast a āgorion simodi, na' dā pochen-lā nawesam ten'' if we have enough money, we can buy it.


{|
'''' softens a command, and makes it less abrupt.
|''me ve yerte''||I went||''meme ve yerten''||we went
|-
|''te ve yerte''||you (sg.) went||''tete ve yerte''||you (pl.) went
|-
|''ta ve yerte''||he went||''ga ve yerten''||they went
|}


Completed action with these verbs are made by combining the verbal noun with ''wohant'', to be: ''me mi yirant'', I have gone (on foot); ''ga worun yerant'', they had gone (by vehicle).


==''Kulahant''==


Literally this is a polite word meaning 'to beg'.  The phrase ''me kulas'' is used widely to mean 'I beg (you)', 'please' and 'please don't mention it, you are welcome'.  With the imperative ending it becomes a polite way of phrasing a command: ''kulahú yirant'', (please) go.
[[Category: Conlangs]]

Latest revision as of 14:04, 18 April 2022

An eclectic language created from texts from the Teach Yourself language books, originally produced by the English Universities Press, latterly by Hodder and Stoughton.

The guiding principle was to take foreign language words from the contents pages of each grammar and use them as the basis of an imaginary language. Also used were irregularities affecting verbs and nouns, etc., and descriptions of courtesy language (notably, Japanese, Samoan and Modern Persian).

The language creator is Andrew Smith.

Details of the language speakers and culture are speculative as yet. My working name for the language is Shennian. Shente is the word for 'people, race, gentiles,' and the adjective shenni is derived from that as an ethnonym. The native name of the language is shennya and 'to talk Shennian' is bāhant shennyon, literally talk-language Shennian-thing.'

Clues about the Shennian culture emerge from their vocabulary. Their language has a respect-based hierarchy. Their religious tradition has a sky-father god, Yeuh. They are sabbatarians with ascetic religious leaders - monks, hermits and mendicants. They use words for technology with which we are familiar. Their history includes a period of expansion. Currently they are eclipsed by a global super-culture whom they call the Yimbiane.

Shennian Lexicon

Pronunciation

Consonants:

labial dental alveolar postalveolar palatal velar glottal
unvoicedstops p t k
voiced stops b d g
affricates
unvoiced fricatives f s ʃ
voiced fricatives v h
nasals m n ŋ
lateral l
approximant ɹ
semivowels w j

Vowels:

OT2.0 has the vowels /i ɛ a ʉ ɔ ɑ/.

Orthography:

In the latin alphabet:

a b ch d e f g h i k l m n ng o p r s sh t u v w y

In the Kiriva, the Shennian alphabet:

a b g d e dy ā ty y k l m n s o p ch r sh t y

The Kiria, the writing, is a Semitic-based script, not yet adapted into an available font. Some letters are written with pointing to mark a sound change.

The long vowels U, Ō and I are written as abjads either written with pointing over a previous consonant or over a short-A.

The short-A is called Aliv.

NG is written as Gim marked with a nasal.

H is written as a superscript letter called half-Āta. It is inserted between Āta and Tyeta in dictionary practice but not listed in the sequence of the alphabet.

The Kiria has two writing styles. Cursive script is the default script. Square script is used for names and proper nouns. Shennian writing style alternates between both forms. Not knowing where to change into square script appears clumsy and uneducated, over-using square script feels like reading official, formal language.

There Is

Ten āyet, it is, there is a..., there are, that is, which takes a direct object. This may be singular or plural, so ten āyet means 'there is' or 'there are'. It is a common and useful expression, used in making statements, not when an object is pointed out. It is also used in interrogative sentences when it translates 'is there', 'are there'.

The third person ending -(e)t is silent in spoken Shennian.

It is used in the sense, to be present or to be absent (in a place). It is used with a non-living subject, always in the third person: it is (somewhere), they are (somewhere). It forms sentences if where the thing is, is known: A konisa belye' pena trepeye? Āyet Is the book on the table? Yes, it is.

'There was, there were' is normally Ten we dunide, literally 'there happened'. In 'there will be', ten āyet becomes ten we dunyet, literally 'there will happen'.

The third person moves to the head of the sentence and has existential force to mean ‘there is, there are’.

Ten in ten āyet is considered the secondary subject and the real subject is the noun or pronoun that comes after the verb. The verb does not change for gender, it changes for number, Tye āyen.

The pronoun ten means 'it, there.' It is used in impersonal expressions like ten wuet it rains and ten snyeget it snows.

In deferential language gohaut is substituted for āyet and ō for iet, ten gohaut lut Good morning, lit. it is early.

Shim

The negative is shim nothing, followed by a genitive noun or noun phrase. Shim is the word used in conversation and written word. In careful speech it becomes the longer word shidim. It is placed directly after a verb it negates. An infinitive verb or a participle will follow after it. It occurs independently at the end of sentences as 'or not'.

Bod bovol I speak; bod bovol shim I do not speak. Ta lichet He reads; Kudin lichet he does not read. Shennian speakers think of the subject pronouns he, she and it, ta, da and ten, as wrong in negative sentences. The negative pronouns kudin, kudna and kudnon, not one, are substituted in their place.

If noun or pronoun is contradicted, a form of kudin is used.

Kudnon can be used to contradict statements: Ta dāt ishi Sobye. Kudnon, kudin dāt ishi Sobye He comes from Sobye. No, he doesn't come from Sobye.

Kudnon is used as negative question tag: Ai-ta morigo kerane, kudnon? He is the chief clerk, is he not?

With a name or pronoun with so it means 'not the one who', kudin bod so det ten it wasn't me who told him.

Occasionally it can mean 'non-': kudni shenni non-Shennian

Kudnon shim, not un-: kudin kōt shim he is not unwilling.

When a future of a negated verb is fronted before the pronoun it means 'it is unlikely': kudin we dāyet He won't come; dāye'lā kudin It is unlikely that he will come; he is unlikely to come.

Other negatives that can be used as adverbs after a verb: shame never, shidim nothing, pahon nobody. These words can be moved to the start of the sentence and the order of the sentence remains unchanged for the rest of the sentence: chota āye'ten? Ei pahon Who is there? Nobody.

Kem is used as a negative adverb, 'only'.

Okom, okong, okon is used as a stronger negative than shim, not at all.

Hisal

Hisal means ‘to arise, to come into existence:

Ya hisen-lā pena keten payade tolke, and on this point there are stanzas

Ishipena ōga hist samōn, from anger arises delusion

An alternative to 'to be' in nominal sentences: binon-lā tena ramayon hist pena tache, the sight of it is delightful to the exhausted.

The two particles ai and are used to emphasize words. Ai being used in questions, and in statements. A word may be emphasized by moving it forward in a sentence and tagging it with ai or .

At the beginning of a sentence or clause, can replace an impersonal ten: dakilbesh-lā ya sodyant keresh suyan it is difficult to go across the river. At other times kam if, at the beginning of a sentence is balanced by on the first word of the main clause: kam na' dā tenyen ast a āgorion simodi, na' dā pochen-lā nawesam ten if we have enough money, we can buy it.

softens a command, and makes it less abrupt.