Alpic: Difference between revisions

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===Nouns and Adjectives===
===Nouns and Adjectives===
Nouns inflect for Possession, Case, and Number. Adjectives and the Definite and Indefinite Articles agree with their host nouns in Case and Number. The order of suffixes are:
Nouns inflect for Possession, Case, and Number. Adjectives and the Definite and Indefinite Articles agree with their host nouns in Case and Number. The order of suffixes are:<br>


1. Nominal Stem<br>
1. Nominal Stem<br>
2. Possessive Suffix<br>
2. Possessive Suffix<br>
3. Case-Number Suffix<br>
3. Case-Number Suffix<br>
Nouns fall into 3 classes, Animate, Inanimate, and Collective.
'''Collective Class:''' ethic and political units, organizations, settlements, sports teams, etc
'''Animate Class:''' people, animals, deities, natural forces
'''Inanimate Class:''' everything else


====Possessive suffixes====
====Possessive suffixes====
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The relative pronoun precedes all relative clauses, it cannot be dropped as it can in English. The impersonal pronoun is similar to English "one", German "Man", and French "on".
The relative pronoun precedes all relative clauses, it cannot be dropped as it can in English. The impersonal pronoun is similar to English "one", German "Man", and French "on".
===Verbs===


[[Category:LLL]]
[[Category:LLL]]

Revision as of 12:55, 9 July 2010

Alpic
Elbettusa
Spoken in: Switzerland (Swestazjoka)
Conworld: League of Lost Languages
Total speakers: ~300,000
Genealogical classification: Danubian
SW Danubian
Alpine
Alpic
Basic word order: SVO
Morphological type: Synthetic/Fusional
Morphosyntactic alignment: Fluid-S Active-Stative
Writing system:
Created by:
Taylor Selseth 2010 C.E.

Alpic /ˈælpik/, natively Elbettusa /ˈɛlbɛˌtːusa/, spoken in southeastern Switzerland, with most speakers living along the Inn River and near Davos. It is the sole surviving language of the Danubian language family which was once spoken throughout the Danube River basin. The Danubian languages are part of the of the Europic Macrofamily, which consists of Indo-European, Hesperic, and Rhaeto-Etruscan. Europic itself maybe a part of an even larger language phylum called Mitian, Eurasiatic, or Core Nostratic, which also includes Uralic, Chukchi-Kamchatkan, Eskimo-Aleut, Altaic, and Kartvelian.

Phonology

The syllable structure of Alpic is (C)(F|l|m|r|w|j)V(C), where F is any fricative. CF, Cl, Cm, and Cr can only occur at the beginning of a word. Stress is moderately light and is always on the initial syllable of a word. Prosody is syllable-timed and Trochaic in rhythm. Intonation patterns are typical for a Western European language, with a rising intonation in questions.

Consonants

IPA

Labial Alveolar Postalveolar Palatal Velar
Stops, fortis ʧʰ
Stops, lenis p t ʧ k
Fricatives, unvoiced f s ʃ x
Fricatives, voiced v z ʒ
Nasals m n ɲ
Laterals l ʎ
Trills r
Semivowels w j

Orthographical

Labial Alveolar Postalveolar Palatal Velar
Plosives, fortis p t tj k
Plosives, Lenis b d dj g
Fricatives, unvoiced f s sj h/ch
Fricatives, voiced v z zj
Nasals m n nj
Laterals l lj
Trills r
Semivowels w j

/r/ is realized as the flap /ɾ/ in between vowels. /n/ assimilates to the point of articulation of the following consonant. /x/ is realized as /h/ in the syllable onset and [ɣ] between vowels, it is represented as H in the orthography in the onset and as CH in the coda. /s/ and /z/ are [ʃ] and [ʒ] when before a plosive. /kʰ/ and /k/ are [cʰ] and [c] when followed by /j/ or /i/. Fortis plosives de-voice adjacent fricatives. Lenis plosives assimilate in voicing with adjacent phonemes. final lenis plosives and voiced fricatives become their fortis and unvoiced counterparts at the end of a word, much like Final Fortition in High German.

Vowels

Alpic has a simple Spanish-style /a e i o u/ vowel system, with the vowels realized as [ɐ ɜ ɪ ɔ ʊ] in closed syllables and are pronounced shorter than in open syllables to maintain syllable-timed prosody.

Morphology and Morphosyntax

Alpic is a synthetic and fusional language with rich morphology in nouns, adjectives and verbs.

Nouns and Adjectives

Nouns inflect for Possession, Case, and Number. Adjectives and the Definite and Indefinite Articles agree with their host nouns in Case and Number. The order of suffixes are:

1. Nominal Stem
2. Possessive Suffix
3. Case-Number Suffix

Nouns fall into 3 classes, Animate, Inanimate, and Collective.

Collective Class: ethic and political units, organizations, settlements, sports teams, etc Animate Class: people, animals, deities, natural forces Inanimate Class: everything else

Possessive suffixes

Possessive Suffixes function like the Possessive Adjectives in other European languages, marking who possesses the marked noun

1st Person 2nd Person 3rd Animate 3rd Inanimate Impersonal
Singular -mi- -di- -ye- -si- -pa-
Plural -vi- -wa- -tje- -sja-

Attami
atta-mi
"My father"

Case and Number

Case and Number marking is fusional. There are two numbers: singular and plural. There are 4 cases: Direct, Genitive, Dative, and Instrumental. The Direct Case is the unmarked case for the Agent or Patient of the sentence. The Genitive marks that the noun possesses or has a relation of some kind to another noun. The Dative marks the Direct Object of the sentence. The Instrumental marks by which means a verb is done as well as the demoted agent of a passive voice sentence.

Direct Genitive Dative Instrumental
Singular -s -n -t
Plural -t -sja -r -tta

Articles

Alpic has 3 articles, the Definite Article, the Indefinite Article, and the Partitive Article. All agree with their nouns in, case and number. The Definite Article also agrees with it's noun in Noun Class. All are regularly declined, though the Partitive has no plural form. The article precedes the noun.

Definite

The Definite Article indicates that its noun is a particular thing identifiable to the listener. It may be the same thing that the speaker has already mentioned, or it may be something uniquely specified. A noun marked with a possessive suffix always has the Definite Article.

Direct Genitive Dative Instrumental
Singular Animate da das dan dat
Plural Animate dat dasja dar datta
Singular Inanimate do dos don dot
Plural Inanimate dot dosja dor dotta
Collective dje djes djin djet

Indefinite

The Indefinite Article indicates that its noun is not yet a particular thing identifiable to the listener. It may be something that the speaker is mentioning for the first time, or its precise identity may be irrelevant or hypothetical, or the speaker may be making a general statement about a particular thing.

Direct Genitive Dative Instrumental
Singular zo zos zon zot
Plural zot zosja zor zotta

Partitive

The Partitive article indicates a non-specific quantity of a mass noun. It is not unlike the English determiner "some", but acts grammatically like an article since it agrees with it's noun in case.

Direct Genitive Dative Instrumental
Singular ni nis nin nit

Demonstratives

Alpic has a 2-way Proximal-Distal demonstrative system, like English's "This-These" and "That-Those. It also has locative demonstratives like English's "Here-There"

Proximal

Direct Genitive Dative Instrumental
Singular Animate sa sas san sat
Plural Animate sat sasja sar satta
Singular Inanimate so sos son sot
Plural Inanimate sot sosja sor sotta

Distal

Direct Genitive Dative Instrumental
Singular Animate dwe dwes dwen dwet
Plural Animate dwet dwesja dwer dwetta
Singular Inanimate dwa dwas dwan dwat
Plural Inanimate dwat dwasja dwar dwatta

Locative

Direct Genitive Dative Instrumental
Proximal swa swas swan swat
Distal ga gas gar gat

Adjectives

Adjectives have comparative and superlative inflections that precede the case-number inflection.

Comparative: -ra-
Superlative: -dja-

Pronouns

Alpic pronouns are thus:

Agent Patient Genitive Dative Instrumental
1SG mu mi mwe mim mit
2SG du di dwe dim dit
3SG Animate e em es im et
3SG Inanimate sa sa sis sim sit
1PL vu vi ve vir vit
2PL dju dje wa wor wat
3PL ge gem ges ger get
Relative zje zjem zjis zjin zjit
Interrogative ko kom kis kin kit
Impersonal pa pam pas pan pat

The relative pronoun precedes all relative clauses, it cannot be dropped as it can in English. The impersonal pronoun is similar to English "one", German "Man", and French "on".

Verbs