User:Masako/naho/tatse: Difference between revisions

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<small>Note: The glottal stop /ʔ/ '''q''', is used as a "buffer" to keep vowels apart when adding suffixes. /x/ and /h/ are actually allophonic.</small>  
<small>Note: The glottal stop /ʔ/ '''q''', is used as a "buffer" to keep vowels apart when adding suffixes. /x/ and /h/ are actually allophones.</small>  


=== Spelling ===
=== Spelling ===
* /ʔ/ is written as '''q'''
* /ʃ/ always as '''sh'''
* /h~ɦ/ as '''h'''
* /j/ as '''y'''
Latin letters that only appear in loan words include '''c, f, j, v, z'''.


=== Allophony ===
=== Allophony ===

Latest revision as of 11:51, 8 February 2022

Introduction

Amal is meant to be a personal (or artistic) conlang and despite appearances and structure is not intended as an IAL. Amal is phonologically inspired by Semitic languages but incorporates aspects and lemma of numerous natural languages, in an effort to be euphonious and easy to use/learn.

Amal is an agglutinative language. Its vocabulary consists of basic roots which can be extended into different parts of speech, their meaning changed or modified, with various suffixes. Most of the suffixes are optional, so that there is a choice of what sort of information to convey with a given word.

Phonology

Consonants

consonants
Bilabial Alveolar Palatal Velar Labiovelar Glottal
Plosives p   b t   d k   g ʔ
Nasals m n
Fricatives s ʃ x
Approximants l j w h~ɦ
Trill r~ɹ

Note: The glottal stop /ʔ/ q, is used as a "buffer" to keep vowels apart when adding suffixes. /x/ and /h~ɦ/ are actually allophones.

Spelling

  • /ʔ/ is written as q
  • /ʃ/ always as sh
  • /h~ɦ/ as h
  • /j/ as y

Latin letters that only appear in loan words include c, f, j, v, z.

Allophony

Vowels

vowels
Front Central Back
Close i~ɪ u~ʊ
Mid e~ɛ o
Open a~ə

The vowels can be marked with an acute accent — á, é, í, ú — for two purposes: to mark stress if it does not follow the most common pattern, or to differentiate words that are otherwise spelled identically.

Diphthongs

Phonotactics

Syllable Structure

Roots and Word Formation

Vowel Concordance

Word Order

Nouns

Case

Gender

Plurality

Pronouns

Case

Direct Object Incorporation

Pronominal Suffixes

Numbers

Verbs

Tense

Aspect

Mood

Derivation

Lexicon

Roots