User:Sectori/Compositions: Difference between revisions
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Phonology:<br> | Phonology:<br> | ||
/p t k b d g/ < p t k b d g><br> | /p t k b d g/ < p t k b d g><br> | ||
/l r\ | /l r\ j/ <l r j><br> | ||
/f s T D h/ <f s þ ð h><br> | /f v s T D h/ <f v s þ ð h><br> | ||
/m n/ <m n><br> | /m n/ <m n><br> | ||
/tS dZ C j\ S/ <tj dj hj gj sj><br> | /tS dZ C j\ S/ <tj dj hj gj sj><br> | ||
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gjøltt/gjoltta<br> | gjøltt/gjoltta<br> | ||
gjøltt/gjoltta | gjøltt/gjoltta | ||
Pronouns: | |||
First person:<br> | |||
Nominative singular: eg<br> | |||
Nominative plural: ver<br> | |||
Oblique singular: meg<br> | |||
Oblique plural: uns | |||
Second person:<br> | |||
Nominative singular: ðu<br> | |||
Nominative plural: jer<br> | |||
Oblique singular: ðeg<br> | |||
Oblique plural: jeg | |||
Third person masculine:<br> | |||
Nominative singular: henn<br> | |||
Nominative plural: honn<br> | |||
Oblique singular: hinn<br> | |||
Oblique plural: honn | |||
Third person feminine:<br> | |||
Nominative singular: hann<br> | |||
Nominative plural: honn<br> | |||
Oblique singular: hunn<br> | |||
Oblique plural: honn | |||
Third person neuter:<br> | |||
Nominative singular: hinn<br> | |||
Nominative plural: honn<br> | |||
Oblique singular: hinn<br> | |||
Oblique plural: honn | |||
Some random vocab:<br> | |||
ur: out of<br> | |||
fónn: m., room<br> | |||
vorá: a-ablaut, go<br> | |||
urvorá: a-ablaut, exit | |||
'''Eg urvar fǿnn.'''<br> | |||
1P-nom-s go.out.of-1Ps-pret-ind room-obl-s<br> | |||
''I went out of the room.'' |
Latest revision as of 20:08, 3 February 2007
Scandinavian-seeming conlang with IE-esque ablaut.
Phonology:
/p t k b d g/ < p t k b d g>
/l r\ j/ <l r j>
/f v s T D h/ <f v s þ ð h>
/m n/ <m n>
/tS dZ C j\ S/ <tj dj hj gj sj>
/a E i O u/ <a e i o u>
/a: E: i: O: u:/ <á é í ó ú>
/e e: o o: y y:/ <æ ǽ ø ǿ y ý>
Allophones:
n/N/_C[+velar]
Cj/C_j
g/G/_#
Syllable structure undefined, but I can tell you that traditional grammar creates syllable breaks before vowels.
There's a series of umlaut rules, just for fun:
i-umlaut
a > e
á > é
e > æ
é > ǽ
æ > i
ǽ > í
o > a
ó > á
ø > æ
ǿ > ǽ
u > y
ú > ý
y > i
ý > í
u-umlaut
a > o
á > ó
e > ø
é > ǿ
æ > ø
ǽ > ǿ
i > y
í > ý
o > ø
ó > ǿ
ø > u
ǿ > ú
y > u
ý > ú
Nouns have three genders: masculine, feminine, and neuter; and two numbers, singular and plural. Nouns are divided into several declension patterns. Nouns decline for two cases, nominative and oblique.
Masculine:
Nominative singular: -(-)
Nominative plural: -ar
Oblique singular: *-(-)
Oblique plural: -ann
yl/ylar (silver)
il/ylann
Feminine:
Nominative singular: -a
Nominative plural: -or
Oblique singular: ^-(-)
Oblique plural: ^-um
ðura/ðuror (gold)
ður/ðurum
Neuter:
Nominative singular: -(-)
Nominative plural: -a
Oblique singular: -(-)
Oblique plural: -a
ylður/ylðura (electrum)
ylður/ylðura
- i-umlaut the final vowel of the stem
^u-umlaut the final vowel of the stem
Verbs inflect for the following: mood (indicative, subjunctive, imperative) and tense (present, preterite), participle (present, past), and infinitive.
There are two loose classes of verbs, ablaut and non-ablaut. The infinitive of all non-ablaut verbs ends in -á. Ablaut verbs have infinitives ending variously in -á, *-í, or ^-ú.
a-ablaut verbs follow the following pattern of stem vowel alternations.
Present indicative: -o-
Preterite indicative: -a-
Past participle: -ø-
e-ablaut verbs follow the following pattern of stem vowel alternations:
Present indicative: -a-
Preterite indicative: -e-
Past participle: -ø-
i-ablaut verbs follow the following pattern of stem vowel alternations:
Present indicative: -e-
Preterite indicative: -i-
Past participle: -ø-
o-ablaut verbs follow the following pattern of stem vowel alternations:
Present indicative: -a-
Preterite indicative: -o-
Past participle: -o-
u-ablaut verbs follow the following pattern of stem vowel alternations:
Present indicative: -y-
Preterite indicative: -i-
Past participle: -u-
The inflectional endings for ablaut verbs are:
Present indicative: (gjoltá, cut)
^-u (gjøltu)
-Vr (gjoltar)
-Vð (gjoltað)
-Vm (gjoltam)
-Vþ (gjoltaþ)
-Vn (gjoltan)
Where -V- is the ablaut stem vowel.
Preterite indicative:
-(-) (gjalt)
-t (gjaltt)
-(-) (gjalt)
^-um (gjoltum)
^-uþ (gjoltuþ)
^-un (gjoltun)
Present subjunctive:
- -V (gjalta)
- -Vr (gjaltar)
- -Vð (gjaltað)
- -Vm (gjaltam)
- -Vþ (gjaltaþ)
- -Vn (gjaltan)
Preterite subjunctive:
^-(-) (gjolt)
^-t (gjoltt)
^-(-) (gjolt)
^-um (gjoltum)
^-uð (gjoltuþ)
^-un (gjoltun)
Imperative (second person only)
-(-) (gjolt!)
-Vþ (gjoltaþ!)
Present participle: -Vnd (gjoltand)
Past participle: -t- (gjoltt-)
The past participle inflects as an adjective.
Adjectives inflect as nouns, with the added bonus that they must agree in gender and number with the noun they modify. So, gjoltt- (cut), declines as follows:
gjoltt/gjolttar
gjøltt/gjolttann
gjoltta/gjolttor
gjøltt/gjølttum
gjøltt/gjoltta
gjøltt/gjoltta
Pronouns:
First person:
Nominative singular: eg
Nominative plural: ver
Oblique singular: meg
Oblique plural: uns
Second person:
Nominative singular: ðu
Nominative plural: jer
Oblique singular: ðeg
Oblique plural: jeg
Third person masculine:
Nominative singular: henn
Nominative plural: honn
Oblique singular: hinn
Oblique plural: honn
Third person feminine:
Nominative singular: hann
Nominative plural: honn
Oblique singular: hunn
Oblique plural: honn
Third person neuter:
Nominative singular: hinn
Nominative plural: honn
Oblique singular: hinn
Oblique plural: honn
Some random vocab:
ur: out of
fónn: m., room
vorá: a-ablaut, go
urvorá: a-ablaut, exit
Eg urvar fǿnn.
1P-nom-s go.out.of-1Ps-pret-ind room-obl-s
I went out of the room.