Ğimbekan: Difference between revisions

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''Ğymbe Kaan'' (IPA: /ɣi:mbɛ kæ:n/) is a tribal language spoken in the ice wastelands of Ğymbe'a, the larges continent of the Moon of Pyk. The tribe is spread out amongst the frozen wastes, although they do meet up occasianlly for religious festivals and special hunting seasons, so dialects are pretty much the same.  
ú''Ğymbe Kaan'' (IPA: /ɣi:mbɛ kæ:n/) is a tribal language spoken in the ice wastelands of Ğymbe'a, the larges continent of the Moon of Pyk. The tribe is spread out amongst the frozen wastes, although they do meet up occasianlly for religious festivals and special hunting seasons, so dialects are pretty much the same.  


The tribes have lived in the wastes for hundreds of generations, and skills of hunting, cloth-making, butchery and farming the Ekále are handed down from fater to son, mother to daughter, ect.  
The tribes have lived in the wastes for hundreds of generations, and skills of hunting, cloth-making, butchery and farming the Ekále are handed down from fater to son, mother to daughter, ect.  


=Alphabet, Diphthongs, Triphthongs and Consonant Clusters=
The language is highly inflected, however has relatively simple sounds, and a rather short alphabet. Constisting of 5 vowels, and 13 consonants.  
The language is highly inflected, however has relatively simple sounds, and a rather short alphabet. Constisting of 5 vowels, and 13 consonants.  


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Ú - /u:/ and in B'''oo'''m
Ú - /u:/ and in B'''oo'''m


'''''Diphthongs'''
'''''Diphthongs'''''


Ae -
Ae - /æi:/ as in Eye


Au -
Au - /æu:/ as an Pow


Eu -
Eu - /œ/ as in french Neuf


Ue -
Ue - /ʊɛ/ as in '''we'''nt


Áu -
Áu - /æu:ʌ/ as in Power


Úa -
Úa - /u:æ/ as in Sewer (british pron.)


Áe -
Áe - /æu:ɛ/ like saying Ow and Eh in quick succession


Úe -
Úe - /u:ɛ/ Like saing 'Ou Est' in french
 
'''''Triphthongs'''''
 
There are only three possible triphthongs
 
Aua - /æʌæ/ Like a elongated version of hour (british pron.)
 
Eau - /ɛjæɹ/ - another odd triphthong, almost like sayin eyar
 
Ueá - /ʌɛjæu:/ - the most complicated triphthong, sort of like saying away ow!
 
'''''Consonant Clusters'''''
 
Sğ - /ʃ/ as in Short
 
Tğ - /ʧ/ as in Choose
 
Nğ - /nj/ as in Spanish Niño
 
Ng - /ng/ as in Thing
 
Lr - /w/ as in Was
 
=Grammar=
 
Ğymbe Kaan's grammar may seem imposing, and that's because it is. We'll start off with verbs, and who is doing them. Similar to Spanish, verbs in Ğymbe Kaan have three possible endings. The Masculine ending, aune, the femenine ending, unú and the Neutral ending, ida.
 
The idea is you take the final vowel of the ending and you add the inflection.
 
The verb 'to eat' is femenine, Dikitunú. These are it's inflections.
 
'''I eat''' - Dikitunasğ
 
'''You (sing) eat''' - Dikitunama
 
'''You (pl) eat''' - Dikitunamau
 
'''We eat''' - Dikitunibid
 
'''It (that is here) eats''' - Dikitunibo
 
'''It (that is not here) eats''' - Dikitunibú
 
'''He eats''' - Dikitunga
 
'''She eats''' - Dikitungasğ
 
'''They eat''' (that are here) - Dikitunur
 
'''They eat''' (that aren't here) - Dikitunulr.
 
The verb ''To Hunt'' is Masculine, ''Ğunaelranaune'', these are it's inflections:

Revision as of 10:06, 23 October 2012

úĞymbe Kaan (IPA: /ɣi:mbɛ kæ:n/) is a tribal language spoken in the ice wastelands of Ğymbe'a, the larges continent of the Moon of Pyk. The tribe is spread out amongst the frozen wastes, although they do meet up occasianlly for religious festivals and special hunting seasons, so dialects are pretty much the same.

The tribes have lived in the wastes for hundreds of generations, and skills of hunting, cloth-making, butchery and farming the Ekále are handed down from fater to son, mother to daughter, ect.

Alphabet, Diphthongs, Triphthongs and Consonant Clusters

The language is highly inflected, however has relatively simple sounds, and a rather short alphabet. Constisting of 5 vowels, and 13 consonants.

A - /æ/ as in Hat.

Á - /æʊ/ as in Power

B - /b/ as in Boat

D - /d/ as in dog

E - /ɛ/ as in pet

F - /f/ as in foot

Ğ - /ɣ/ Like the greek letter in γερή

G - /g/ as in good

K - /k/ as in Kill

L - /l/ as in long

M - /m/ as in more

N - /n/ as in no

P - /p/ as in person

R - /ɹ/ as in red

S - /s/ as in soon

T - /t/ as in tonne

U - /ʌ/ as in put

Ú - /u:/ and in Boom

Diphthongs

Ae - /æi:/ as in Eye

Au - /æu:/ as an Pow

Eu - /œ/ as in french Neuf

Ue - /ʊɛ/ as in went

Áu - /æu:ʌ/ as in Power

Úa - /u:æ/ as in Sewer (british pron.)

Áe - /æu:ɛ/ like saying Ow and Eh in quick succession

Úe - /u:ɛ/ Like saing 'Ou Est' in french

Triphthongs

There are only three possible triphthongs

Aua - /æʌæ/ Like a elongated version of hour (british pron.)

Eau - /ɛjæɹ/ - another odd triphthong, almost like sayin eyar

Ueá - /ʌɛjæu:/ - the most complicated triphthong, sort of like saying away ow!

Consonant Clusters

Sğ - /ʃ/ as in Short

Tğ - /ʧ/ as in Choose

Nğ - /nj/ as in Spanish Niño

Ng - /ng/ as in Thing

Lr - /w/ as in Was

Grammar

Ğymbe Kaan's grammar may seem imposing, and that's because it is. We'll start off with verbs, and who is doing them. Similar to Spanish, verbs in Ğymbe Kaan have three possible endings. The Masculine ending, aune, the femenine ending, unú and the Neutral ending, ida.

The idea is you take the final vowel of the ending and you add the inflection.

The verb 'to eat' is femenine, Dikitunú. These are it's inflections.

I eat - Dikitunasğ

You (sing) eat - Dikitunama

You (pl) eat - Dikitunamau

We eat - Dikitunibid

It (that is here) eats - Dikitunibo

It (that is not here) eats - Dikitunibú

He eats - Dikitunga

She eats - Dikitungasğ

They eat (that are here) - Dikitunur

They eat (that aren't here) - Dikitunulr.

The verb To Hunt is Masculine, Ğunaelranaune, these are it's inflections: