Nother/Trentish: Difference between revisions

From FrathWiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
(=Voice=)
(formatizing; +pronoun table)
 
(28 intermediate revisions by 8 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
==Description==
{{infobox|name=Trentish (Nyalohn-sha)|pronounce=[ɲɑlonʃɑ]|tu=[[Nother]]|species=[[../Trents/]]|in=Pacific Northwest<br>[[../Timeline|19th century—]]|no=[No data]|script=[[Trentish Phonology#Orthography|Latin alphabet]]|tree=''[[../Coalescence languages/]]''<br>&nbsp;'''Trentish'''|morph=Polysynthetic|ms=Accusative|wo=OV|creator=[[User:Muke|Muke Tever]] &#x7c; [[User Talk:Muke|✎]]|date=2001}}
''A priori'' conlang for a race of [[ent]]like creatures in [[Nother]].  Polysynthetic.


*Author: [[User:Muke|Muke Tever]] | [[User Talk:Muke|✎]]
''A priori'' conlang for a race of [[ent]]like creatures (''trents'', Trentish: ''qlumeu'') in [[Nother]]


==History==
Not recorded before 1800s. 


==[[Phonology]] and [[Orthography]]==
===Geographic distribution===
===Phonemic Inventory===
North America; largest populations in Pacific Northwest.
====Consonants====
 
{| cellpadding=5
==Sounds==
! !! labial !! alveolar !! palatal !! velar !! glottal
''Main article: [[Trentish Phonology]]''
|-
 
! plosive
==Writing system==
| p pʼ pʰ || tʼ tʰ tʷ || c cʰ cʷ || k kʼ kʰ kʷ || ʔ
Trentish is written in a variant of the [[Latin alphabet]].
|-
! nasal
| m || n || ɲ || ŋ
|-
! lateral
| || l tɬ
|-
! fricative
| || s ʃ || || x
|}


====Vowels====
{|
{| cellpadding=5
| A || B || D || Dʼ || E || G || I || K || L || Λ̅ || M || N || NG || NY || O || Ö || P || Q || R || S || T || Tʼ || U || Ü || W || X || Y
| i y || ʊ u
|-
| e ø || o
|-
|   || ʌ ɔ 
|-
|-
| || ɑ
| a || b || d || dʼ || e || g || i || k || l || ƛ || m || n || ng || ny || o || ö || p || q || r || s || t || tʼ || u || ü || w || x || y
|}
|}


===Internal [[Sandhi]]===
The digraphs ''ng'' and ''ny'' are sometimes written with single characters, and are considered individual "letters" for the purposes of sortingOther digraphs such as ''tʼh'' and ''sh'' are not counted as letters.
====Word-level====
* Trentish words can only end in a vowel or a nasal. Stops and /l/ occurring at the end of a word are nasalized, thus /thɑk/ "wear" becomes [thɑŋ]/ʔ/ and the other consonants are dropped.


====Syllable-level====
The capital of letter ''ƛ'' is supposed to be <small>CAPITAL LETTER LAMBDA WITH OVERLINE</small>.
=====Syllable-final=====
* Plain voiceless consonants disappear, lengthening the previous vowel:
*:/xlɔʔ/ "washed, clean" &rarr; [xlɔɔkʷʌ] "be washed".
* Ejectives and /l/ turn to nasals as at the word level:
*:/tʰɔl/ "upon" &rarr; [tʰɔŋkʷʌ] "be on top of".
* Labialized consonants reduce to [w]:
*:/kitʷ/ <small>COLL</small> &rarr; [kiwcʷecʷe] "set of journeys".
* Aspirated consonants fricativize:
*:/pʼɑlɑkʰ/ "hate" &rarr; [pʼɑlɑxpʼɑlɑŋ] "grudge".


=====Syllable-initial after a nasal=====
==Grammar==
* Aspirated stops are ejectivized by a preceding original nasal:
''Main article: [[Trentish Morphology]]''
*:/tʰɑŋ/ "wear" &rarr; [xɑntʼɑŋ] "wear that"
* Labialized stops inherit preceding nasality:
*:/cʷe/ "go" &rarr; [xɑnɲʷe] "go up yonder".
* Plain stops are aspirated by a preceding nasal:
*:/pɑ/ <small>TOP</small> &rarr; [xɑnpʰɑ] "yonder"
* Ejective stops geminate a preceding nasal:
*:/pʼɑlɑŋ/ "hate" &rarr; [xɑmmɑlɑŋ] "hate that"


==Morphology==
===Pronouns===
===Reduplication===
Trentish third-person pronouns inflect for spatial relationships.  Not only is nearness to the speaker or hearer marked, but also the referent's height or elevation relative to the speaker.  A higher or lower elevation is also used metaphorically to represent degrees of respect; one speaks to an elder or superior as one would to one "above", or to a child or inferior as one would to one "below".
Reduplication produces resultative nouns from verbal roots.


*/mɑli/ "speak" &rarr; /mɑli-mɑli/ "speech, message"
{|
*/pʼɑlɑŋ/ "hate" &rarr; /pʼɑlɑŋ-pʼɑlɑŋ/ "hatred, grudge" (i.e., [pʼɑlɑxpʼɑlɑŋ])
!bgcolor=lightgrey| First person
 
|colspan=6 align="center"| ''nyü'' /ɲy/
In reduplication, no more than the first two syllables are reduplicated:
|-
 
!bgcolor=lightgrey| Second person
*/ikʼɑtɬi/ "barter" &rarr; /ikʼɑ-ikʼɑtɬi/ "transaction"
|colspan=6 align="center"| ''lusyi'' /lusji/
 
|- bgcolor=lightgrey
===Voice===
! Third person 
Trentish verbs are marked for [[voice]]. 
!colspan=2| Above 
 
!colspan=2| Equal
There are five voices, '''active''', '''unergative''', '''unaccusative''', '''passive''', and '''middle'''.  Their use depends on the presence of and importance given to the agent and patient.
!colspan=2| Below
 
{| cellpadding=5
! agent !! patient !! voice !! marker
|-
|-
| high || low || ''active'' / ''middle'' ||
!bgcolor=lightgrey| Near speaker
| ''qohnohgoh'' || /ʔonoko/ || ''öt'' || /øtʼ/ || ''gr'' || /kʌ/
|-
|-
| high || none || ''unergative'' || /tɬi-/
!bgcolor=lightgrey| Near hearer
| ''kohtwülr'' || /kʼotʷylʌ/ || ''pnyr'' || /pʼɲʌ/ || ''lr'' || //
|-
|-
| low || high || ''passive'' / ''middle'' ||
!bgcolor=lightgrey| Distant
| ''xan'' || /xɑn/    || ''xini'' || /xini/ || ''xr'' || /xʌ/
|-
|-
| none || high || ''unaccusative'' || /ʔuu-/
!bgcolor=lightgrey| Reflexive
|colspan=6 align="center"| ''xa'' //
|}
|}


The middle voice is used if the agent and patient refer to the same entity (''me'' and ''myself'') or an entity and a part of itself (''me'' and ''my nose'').
'''Problems'''
* ''Where does the ''/pʼɲ/'' in ''pnyr'' come from?  Is that a normal Trentish initial consonant cluster?  Does it get pronounced that way?  (I think it would turn to ''nnyr [ɲɲʌ]'' in a connected word.)''
 
==Vocabulary==
''Main article: [[Trentish Lexicon]]''


The ''high'' agent or patient is marked with the topic marker /-pɑ/.
===Sample texts===
The ''low'' agent or patient is marked with /-(ɔ)m/.
*[http://frath.net/pdf/trent-relay7.pdf Trentish leg of the 7th CONLANG Translation Relay] (PDF, 49K)
*:The text is that which is was in the official relay, but the interlinear and the English translation are new, the originals being lost (at least until the full 7th Relay gets put online).  The Trentish text has been respelled to match current orthography, but not otherwise corrected.


===Aspect===
==External links==
There are at least six [[aspect]]s, which are focuses on the status of the event.
* [http://frath.net/language/trentish.shtml Old website]


{| cellpadding=5
[[Category:A priori conlangs]]
! aspect !! description !! marker
[[Category:Conlangs]]
|-
| imperfective ||  seen as in progress || ∅
|-
| perfective ||  seen as completed || /po-/
|-
| iterative || seen as happening many times together || /tʰø-/
|-
| cumulative || iterative with cumulative effect  || /mel-/
|-
| reluctative || seen as happening with reluctance || /ɑk-/
|-
| effrenative<sup>?</sup> || seen as happening without reluctance <br> (either in a good or bad way) || /pʰli-/
|}

Latest revision as of 14:48, 10 January 2010


Trentish (Nyalohn-sha)
Pronounced: [ɲɑlonʃɑ]
Timeline and Universe: Nother
Species: Trents
Spoken: Pacific Northwest
19th century—
Total speakers: [No data]
Writing system: Latin alphabet
Genealogy: Coalescence languages
 Trentish
Typology
Morphological type: Polysynthetic
Morphosyntactic alignment: Accusative
Basic word order: OV
Credits
Creator: Muke Tever |
Created: 2001

A priori conlang for a race of entlike creatures (trents, Trentish: qlumeu) in Nother.

History

Not recorded before 1800s.

Geographic distribution

North America; largest populations in Pacific Northwest.

Sounds

Main article: Trentish Phonology

Writing system

Trentish is written in a variant of the Latin alphabet.

A B D E G I K L Λ̅ M N NG NY O Ö P Q R S T U Ü W X Y
a b d e g i k l ƛ m n ng ny o ö p q r s t u ü w x y

The digraphs ng and ny are sometimes written with single characters, and are considered individual "letters" for the purposes of sorting. Other digraphs such as tʼh and sh are not counted as letters.

The capital of letter ƛ is supposed to be CAPITAL LETTER LAMBDA WITH OVERLINE.

Grammar

Main article: Trentish Morphology

Pronouns

Trentish third-person pronouns inflect for spatial relationships. Not only is nearness to the speaker or hearer marked, but also the referent's height or elevation relative to the speaker. A higher or lower elevation is also used metaphorically to represent degrees of respect; one speaks to an elder or superior as one would to one "above", or to a child or inferior as one would to one "below".

First person nyü /ɲy/
Second person lusyi /lusji/
Third person Above Equal Below
Near speaker qohnohgoh /ʔonoko/ öt /øtʼ/ gr /kʌ/
Near hearer kohtwülr /kʼotʷylʌ/ pnyr /pʼɲʌ/ lr /lʌ/
Distant xan /xɑn/ xini /xini/ xr /xʌ/
Reflexive xa /xɑ/

Problems

  • Where does the /pʼɲ/ in pnyr come from? Is that a normal Trentish initial consonant cluster? Does it get pronounced that way? (I think it would turn to nnyr [ɲɲʌ] in a connected word.)

Vocabulary

Main article: Trentish Lexicon

Sample texts

  • Trentish leg of the 7th CONLANG Translation Relay (PDF, 49K)
    The text is that which is was in the official relay, but the interlinear and the English translation are new, the originals being lost (at least until the full 7th Relay gets put online). The Trentish text has been respelled to match current orthography, but not otherwise corrected.

External links