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'''Koredish''' is the odd child of Korean and Swedish, with some oddities thrown in...
'''Korwedish''' is the odd child of Korean and Swedish, with some oddities thrown in...
 
The language can be written in either latin or hangul alphabets.
 
Author: Rpiereck [[http://www.frathwiki.com/User:Rpiereck]]
 


==Word Order==
==Word Order==
Line 40: Line 45:




[[File:https://lh6.googleusercontent.com/-XTjUwaOhH8E/UsCh67wScuI/AAAAAAAAcck/IVsBBta1pw8/w742-h66-no/Fullscreen+capture+12292013+232713.bmp.jpg]]
hus - - ''house (NOM)''


huswl - 훗을 - ''house (ACC)''


huse - 훗에 - ''house (DAT)''


hus - ''house (NOM)''
husya - 훗야 -  ''house (VOC)''


huswl - ''house (ACC)''
huswi - 훗의 - ''house’s (GEN)''


huse - ''house (DAT)''
huswro - 훗으로 - ''house (INS)''


husya - ''house (VOC)''
huswga - 훗으가 - ''house (TOP)''


huswi - ''house’s (GEN)''
huswa - 훗으아 - ''with house (COM)''


huswro - ''house (INS)''
huswso - 훗으소 - ''at house (LOC)''


huswga - ''house (TOP)''
husege - 훗에게 - ''near house (VIC)''


huswa - ''with house (COM)''
huswge - 훗으게 - ''to house (LAT)''


huswso - ''at house (LOC)''
huseso - 훗에소 - ''from house (ABL)''
 
husege - ''near house (VIC)''
 
huswge - ''to house (LAT)''
 
huseso - ''from house (ABL)''
 
husi - ''house (PST)''


husi - 훗이 - ''house (PST)''


==Verbs==
==Verbs==
Line 80: Line 80:




seda - ''to see''
seda - 세다 - ''to see''


varda - ''to be''
varda - 빨다 - ''to be''


hada - ''to have''
hada - 하다 - ''to have''


gojrda - ''to do''
gojrda - 걜다 - ''to do''


sajda - ''to say''
sajda - 새다 - ''to say''




Line 94: Line 94:




se
se - 세


var
var - 빨


ha
ha - 하


gojr
gojr - 걜


saj
saj - 새




Line 111: Line 111:




Na sejo - ''I see''
Na sejo - 나 새요 - ''I see''


No sejo - ''you see''
No sejo - 노 새요 - ''you see''


Kw sejo - ''he/she sees''
Kw sejo - 크 새요 - ''he/she sees''


Go sejo - ''it sees''
Go sejo - 고 새요 - ''it sees''


Vi sejo - ''we see''
Vi sejo - 삐 새요 - ''we see''


Ni sejo - ''you see''
Ni sejo - 니 새요 - ''you see''


De sejo - ''they see''
De sejo - 데 새요 - ''they see''




Line 129: Line 129:




Na sejka? - ''I see?''
Na sejka? - 나 새이가? - ''(do) I see?''


No sejka? - ''you see?''
No sejka? - 노 새이가 - ''(do) you see?''


etc.
etc.


[[File:https://31.media.tumblr.com/23c41de638084fe28a6a9a9513fc957e/tumblr_inline_mylb28p4H41qbcmmr.jpg]]
 
(work in progress)
(work in progress)
==Numbers==
'''Cardinal Numbers'''
han - ''one''
du - ''two''
se - ''three''
ne - ''four''
tas - ''five''
yos - ''six''
gop - ''seven''
dol - ''eight''
hop - ''nine''
jol - ''ten''
jorihan - ''eleven''
joridu - ''twelve''
jorise - ''thirteen''
… …
duhwn  - ''twenty''
duhwnihan - ''twenty-one''
… …
sehwn - ''thirty''
nehwn - ''forty''
… …
hunder - ''hundred''
hunder joriyos - ''one hundred sixteen''
… …
duhunder - ''two hundred''
duhunder hophwnigop - ''two hundred sixteen''
… …
tusen - ''thousand''
joltusen - ''ten thousand''
hunder tusen - ''one hundred thousand''
… …
miljon - ''million''
biljon - ''billion''
'''Ordinal numbers'''
Add -et to the cardinal number:
hanet - ''first''
sehwnet - ''thirtieth''
tusenet - ''thousandth''
For compound numbers it is customary to hyphenate the whole number when used as an ordinal:
duhunder-hophwnigopet - ''two hundred sixteenth''
==Personal Pronouns==
There are two grammatical numbers, singular and plural; and two grammatical genders: human and neuter (which covers everything else other than humans). The third person singular has different forms for both human and neuter, but the third person plural does not. None of the other persons shows a distinction between grammatical genders.
Each person has different forms for each of the thirteen cases.
'''Nominative - NOM'''
1SG - na
2SG - no
3SG.HUM - kw
3SG.NEU - go
1PL - vi
2PL - ni
3PL - de
'''Accusative - ACC'''
1SG - nal
2SG - nol
3SG.HUM - kwl
3SG.NEU - gol
1PL - vil
2PL - nil
3PL - del
'''Dative - DAT'''
1SG - nae
2SG - noe
3SG.HUM - ke
3SG.NEU - goe
1PL - vie
2PL - ni
3PL - de
'''Vocative - VOC'''
1SG - naya
2SG - noya
3SG.HUM - kwya
3SG.NEU - goya
1PL - viya
2PL - niya
3PL - deya
'''Genitive - GEN'''
1SG - nawi
2SG - nowi
3SG.HUM - kwi
3SG.NEU - gowi
1PL - viwi
2PL - niwi
3PL - dewi
'''Instrumentative - INS'''
1SG - naro
2SG - noro
3SG.HUM - kwro
3SG.NEU - goro
1PL - viro
2PL - niro
3PL - dero
'''Topical - TOP'''
1SG - naga
2SG - noga
3SG.HUM - kwga
3SG.NEU - goga
1PL - viga
2PL - niga
3PL - dega
'''Comitative - COM'''
1SG - nawa
2SG - nowa
3SG.HUM - kwa
3SG.NEU - gowa
1PL - viwa
2PL - niwa
3PL - dewa
'''Locative - LOC'''
1SG - naso
2SG - noso
3SG.HUM - kwso
3SG.NEU - goso
1PL - viso
2PL - niso
3PL - deso
'''Vicinitive - VIC'''
1SG - naege
2SG - noege
3SG.HUM - kwege
3SG.NEU - goege
1PL - viege
2PL - niege
3PL - dege
'''Lative - LAT'''
1SG - nage
2SG - noge
3SG.HUM - kwge
3SG.NEU - goge
1PL - vige
2PL - nige
3PL - dege
'''Ablative - ABL'''
1SG - naeso
2SG - noeso
3SG.HUM - kweso
3SG.NEU - goeso
1PL - vieso
2PL - nieso
3PL - deso
'''Postpositional - PST'''
1SG - nai
2SG - noi
3SG.HUM - kwi
3SG.NEU - goi
1PL - vii
2PL - nii
3PL - dei
==Interrogative Pronouns==
Omo? - 오모? - ''What?''
Ogu? - 오구? - ''Who?''
Onje? - 온제? - ''When?''
Odi? - 오디? - ''Where?''
Oe? - 왜? - ''Why?''
Otke? - 옫게? - ''How?''
Osun? - 오순? - ''Which?''
Sample Phrases
Noga otke heterhajka? - 노가 옫게 헤델해카? - ''What is your name?''
Kw flikkaga ogu ajrjka? - 그 플리까가 오구 애리카? - ''Who is that girl?''
Nil hemwge onje komska? - 닐 헴엑 온제 곰스카? - ''When did you come home?''
Nowi hemwga odi ajrjka? - 노의 헴가 오디 애리카? - ''Where is your home?''
Nol goga oe gojhaska? - 놀 고가 왜 거핫까? - ''Why did you do that?''
I tid vil skolage oke gaajka? - 이 틷 빌 스코라게 오게 가애카? - ''How do we go to school now?''
Nowi morwga osun kvinal arjka? - 노의 모르가 오순 크삐날 아리까? - ''Which woman is your mother?''
==Telling Time==
'''Hours and minutes'''
Use the suffix -sci for hours, and -bun for minutes.
hansci - ''one o’clock''
dusci - ''two o’clock''
nehwnitasbun - ''45 minutes''
hansci nehwnitasbun eftermiddage - ''1:45 in the afternoon''
'''Days of the week'''
maansdag - ''Monday''
brandsdag - ''Tuesday''
vattensdag - ''Wednesday''
trejsdag - ''Thursday''
guldsdag - ''Friday''
stjejrnasdag - ''Saturday''
solsdag - ''Sunday''
'''Months of the year'''
hanmaanad - ''January''
dumaanad - ''February''
semaanad - ''March''
nemaanad - ''April''
tasmaanad - ''May''
yosmaanad - ''June''
gopmaanad - ''July''
dolmaanad - ''August''
hopmaanad - ''September''
jolmaanad - ''October''
jorihanmaanad - ''November''
joridumaanad - ''December''
'''Use of dative case as temporal'''
Use the dative case (DAT) for telling time, by adding the suffix -e to temporal words:
hanscie - ''at one o’clock''
gulsdage - ''on Friday''
semaanade - ''in March''
noga solsdage hemwge ska gaajo - ''you should go home on sunday''
== Quick Phrases==
Ja - ''yes''
Nej - ''no''
Vajnlik - ''please''
Vajlkomhajo - ''you’re welcome''
Nae ursajkthajo - ''excuse me''
Na ledsenhajo - ''I am sorry''
Snajl slutahajo - ''please stop''
Okej - ''OK''
Helo. Nol ajterska? - ''Hello. How are you? (literally, “did you eat?”)''
Nawi namwga _____ ajrjo. - ''My name is _______.''
Na nage ______ heterhajo. - ''I call myself _______. (“my name is _______”)''
Noga omo heterhajka? - ''What is your name?''
Noga Engelsksprajk talahajka? - ''Do you speak English?''
Naga Korensksprajk inte talahajo. - ''I do not speak Korwedish.''
Na inte fojrstarhajo. -  ''I don’t understand.''
No goga igen sajger kanhajka? - ''Can you say that again? (Can you repeat that?)''

Latest revision as of 13:53, 1 July 2014

Korwedish is the odd child of Korean and Swedish, with some oddities thrown in...

The language can be written in either latin or hangul alphabets.

Author: Rpiereck [[1]]


Word Order

Subject, Object, Verb

Postpositional

Nouns before adjectives


Grammatical Cases

Nominative (NOM) - subject

Accusative (ACC) – direct object

Dative (DAT) – indirect object, telling time (temporal)

Vocative (VOC) – addressing, calling

Genitive (GEN) - possession

Instrumental (INS) – by, means, tool

Topical (TOP) – topic, emphasis

Comitative (COM) – with

Locative (LOC) – location of

Vicinitive (VIC) – nearby

Lative (LAT) – movement to

Ablative (ABL) – movement from

Postpositional (PST) – used with postpositions


hus - 훗 - house (NOM)

huswl - 훗을 - house (ACC)

huse - 훗에 - house (DAT)

husya - 훗야 - house (VOC)

huswi - 훗의 - house’s (GEN)

huswro - 훗으로 - house (INS)

huswga - 훗으가 - house (TOP)

huswa - 훗으아 - with house (COM)

huswso - 훗으소 - at house (LOC)

husege - 훗에게 - near house (VIC)

huswge - 훗으게 - to house (LAT)

huseso - 훗에소 - from house (ABL)

husi - 훗이 - house (PST)

Verbs

Infinitive


The infinitive ends in -da:


seda - 세다 - to see

varda - 빨다 - to be

hada - 하다 - to have

gojrda - 걜다 - to do

sajda - 새다 - to say


The root of the verb is the verb minus the -da suffix:


se - 세

var - 빨

ha - 하

gojr - 걜

saj - 새


Conjugation


Verbs are not conjugated for person, hence the verb ending is the same regardless of person:


Na sejo - 나 새요 - I see

No sejo - 노 새요 - you see

Kw sejo - 크 새요 - he/she sees

Go sejo - 고 새요 - it sees

Vi sejo - 삐 새요 - we see

Ni sejo - 니 새요 - you see

De sejo - 데 새요 - they see


Interrogative mood


Na sejka? - 나 새이가? - (do) I see?

No sejka? - 노 새이가 - (do) you see?

etc.


(work in progress)

Numbers

Cardinal Numbers

han - one

du - two

se - three

ne - four

tas - five

yos - six

gop - seven

dol - eight

hop - nine

jol - ten

jorihan - eleven

joridu - twelve

jorise - thirteen

… …

duhwn - twenty

duhwnihan - twenty-one

… …

sehwn - thirty

nehwn - forty

… …

hunder - hundred

hunder joriyos - one hundred sixteen

… …

duhunder - two hundred

duhunder hophwnigop - two hundred sixteen

… …

tusen - thousand

joltusen - ten thousand

hunder tusen - one hundred thousand

… …

miljon - million

biljon - billion


Ordinal numbers


Add -et to the cardinal number:


hanet - first

sehwnet - thirtieth

tusenet - thousandth


For compound numbers it is customary to hyphenate the whole number when used as an ordinal:


duhunder-hophwnigopet - two hundred sixteenth

Personal Pronouns

There are two grammatical numbers, singular and plural; and two grammatical genders: human and neuter (which covers everything else other than humans). The third person singular has different forms for both human and neuter, but the third person plural does not. None of the other persons shows a distinction between grammatical genders.

Each person has different forms for each of the thirteen cases.


Nominative - NOM

1SG - na

2SG - no

3SG.HUM - kw

3SG.NEU - go

1PL - vi

2PL - ni

3PL - de


Accusative - ACC

1SG - nal

2SG - nol

3SG.HUM - kwl

3SG.NEU - gol

1PL - vil

2PL - nil

3PL - del


Dative - DAT

1SG - nae

2SG - noe

3SG.HUM - ke

3SG.NEU - goe

1PL - vie

2PL - ni

3PL - de


Vocative - VOC

1SG - naya

2SG - noya

3SG.HUM - kwya

3SG.NEU - goya

1PL - viya

2PL - niya

3PL - deya


Genitive - GEN

1SG - nawi

2SG - nowi

3SG.HUM - kwi

3SG.NEU - gowi

1PL - viwi

2PL - niwi

3PL - dewi


Instrumentative - INS

1SG - naro

2SG - noro

3SG.HUM - kwro

3SG.NEU - goro

1PL - viro

2PL - niro

3PL - dero


Topical - TOP

1SG - naga

2SG - noga

3SG.HUM - kwga

3SG.NEU - goga

1PL - viga

2PL - niga

3PL - dega


Comitative - COM

1SG - nawa

2SG - nowa

3SG.HUM - kwa

3SG.NEU - gowa

1PL - viwa

2PL - niwa

3PL - dewa


Locative - LOC

1SG - naso

2SG - noso

3SG.HUM - kwso

3SG.NEU - goso

1PL - viso

2PL - niso

3PL - deso


Vicinitive - VIC

1SG - naege

2SG - noege

3SG.HUM - kwege

3SG.NEU - goege

1PL - viege

2PL - niege

3PL - dege


Lative - LAT

1SG - nage

2SG - noge

3SG.HUM - kwge

3SG.NEU - goge

1PL - vige

2PL - nige

3PL - dege


Ablative - ABL

1SG - naeso

2SG - noeso

3SG.HUM - kweso

3SG.NEU - goeso

1PL - vieso

2PL - nieso

3PL - deso


Postpositional - PST

1SG - nai

2SG - noi

3SG.HUM - kwi

3SG.NEU - goi

1PL - vii

2PL - nii

3PL - dei

Interrogative Pronouns

Omo? - 오모? - What?

Ogu? - 오구? - Who?

Onje? - 온제? - When?

Odi? - 오디? - Where?

Oe? - 왜? - Why?

Otke? - 옫게? - How?

Osun? - 오순? - Which?


Sample Phrases


Noga otke heterhajka? - 노가 옫게 헤델해카? - What is your name?

Kw flikkaga ogu ajrjka? - 그 플리까가 오구 애리카? - Who is that girl?

Nil hemwge onje komska? - 닐 헴엑 온제 곰스카? - When did you come home?

Nowi hemwga odi ajrjka? - 노의 헴가 오디 애리카? - Where is your home?

Nol goga oe gojhaska? - 놀 고가 왜 거핫까? - Why did you do that?

I tid vil skolage oke gaajka? - 이 틷 빌 스코라게 오게 가애카? - How do we go to school now?

Nowi morwga osun kvinal arjka? - 노의 모르가 오순 크삐날 아리까? - Which woman is your mother?

Telling Time

Hours and minutes

Use the suffix -sci for hours, and -bun for minutes.


hansci - one o’clock

dusci - two o’clock

nehwnitasbun - 45 minutes

hansci nehwnitasbun eftermiddage - 1:45 in the afternoon


Days of the week

maansdag - Monday

brandsdag - Tuesday

vattensdag - Wednesday

trejsdag - Thursday

guldsdag - Friday

stjejrnasdag - Saturday

solsdag - Sunday


Months of the year


hanmaanad - January

dumaanad - February

semaanad - March

nemaanad - April

tasmaanad - May

yosmaanad - June

gopmaanad - July

dolmaanad - August

hopmaanad - September

jolmaanad - October

jorihanmaanad - November

joridumaanad - December


Use of dative case as temporal

Use the dative case (DAT) for telling time, by adding the suffix -e to temporal words:


hanscie - at one o’clock

gulsdage - on Friday

semaanade - in March

noga solsdage hemwge ska gaajo - you should go home on sunday


Quick Phrases

Ja - yes

Nej - no

Vajnlik - please

Vajlkomhajo - you’re welcome

Nae ursajkthajo - excuse me

Na ledsenhajo - I am sorry

Snajl slutahajo - please stop

Okej - OK

Helo. Nol ajterska? - Hello. How are you? (literally, “did you eat?”)

Nawi namwga _____ ajrjo. - My name is _______.

Na nage ______ heterhajo. - I call myself _______. (“my name is _______”)

Noga omo heterhajka? - What is your name?

Noga Engelsksprajk talahajka? - Do you speak English?

Naga Korensksprajk inte talahajo. - I do not speak Korwedish.

Na inte fojrstarhajo. - I don’t understand.

No goga igen sajger kanhajka? - Can you say that again? (Can you repeat that?)