User:Bukkia/sandboxIII: Difference between revisions

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==Syntax==
==Syntax==
SOV - GN - AN - NP - RN
SOV - GN - AN - NP - RN
Subject - Indirect Object - Direct Object - Place - Manner - Temporal adverbs or construction - Negation - Time particle - Verb system
Subject - Indirect Object - Direct Object - Place - Manner - Temporal adverbs or construction - Negation - Time particle - Verb system

Revision as of 03:19, 27 April 2020

Qihep (in Qihep: Qixēp [ˌkʷiˈxeːp]) is a constructed fantasy language

Phonology

Consonants

Consonants
Bilabial Labio-
dental
Dental Alveolar Post-
alveolar
Palatal Velar Labialized
velar
Labialized
velar
Plosive p b t d k g (ʔ)1
Nasal m (ɱ)2 n ɲ (ŋ)3
Vibrant r
Fricative f v s ʃ x h
Affricate ʦ ʧ ʤ
Approximants j w
Lateral
approximants
l

Note:

  • [ʔ]1is not recognised as an independent phoneme but it is inserted between two vowels, or between two identical consonants.
  • [ɱ]2 and [ŋ]3 are considered allophones of the normal nasal phonemes in front of [f]/[v] and [k]/[g]/[kʷ] respectively.

Vowels

Vowels
Front Near-
front
Central Near-
back
Back
Close i(ː) u(ː)
Close mid e(ː) o(ː)
Mid ə(ː)
Open a(ː)

Every vowel can be distinctively short and long.

No dipthongs are allowed. If two vowels are adiacent in a compound word, a glottal stop ([ʔ]) emerges to keep them separated.

Transcription

Qihep uses a logographic script, but it can be transcribed in Latin form:

Letter a ā b c d e ē f g ǵ h i ī j k l m n ń o ō p q r s ś t ts u ū v w x y ȳ
IPA [a] [aː] [b] [ʧ] [d] [e] [eː] [f] [g] [ʤ] [h] [i] [iː] [j] [k] [l] [m] [n] [ɲ] [o] [oː] [p] [kʷ] [r] [s] [ʃ] [t] [ʦ] [u] [uː] [v] [w] [x] [ə] [əː]

Morphology

Tipologically speaking, Qihep is an isolating language, that means its words never change nor add any additional ending to show number, gender, tense, aspect, etc.

We followed those men: Ul la nār vran ta śak fa

Analysing the sentence:

  • Ul: means I
  • la: it's a grammatical particle which shows the idea of plural
  • nār: means that
  • vran: means man
  • ta: it's a grammatical particle, conveying the idea of past
  • śak: means follow
  • fa: it's a grammatical particle, conveying the idea of action complete

Grammar roles and complements are conveyed by the position in the sentence, by grammatical particles and by postpositions. Grammatical particles are not strictly needed and can be left out of the sentence if the meaning is clear from the context. For example, in the previous sentence, the particle ta can be easily omitted if it's clear that we are talking about the past.

Even if there is no strict morphology, Qihep words can be compounded to form new words and a complex derivational morphology does exist. For example:

  • xep, mouth + svūk, soundxepsvūk, voice
  • troj, to build + -kȳt, noun for the result of the action → trojkȳt, building

Nouns

Nouns do not change for number or for gender.

Nouns denoting humans or animals can be linked to a definite gender by prefixing the terms tan, male or res, female:

  • vran, human, persontanvran, man, resvran, woman.

By reduplicating the nouns we can express the meaning of a collective noun:

  • vran, human, personvranvran, people, population

The particle la can be postponed after the nouns to express plurality, but it conveys also the idea of "many".

  • vran(vran) la, many people

Pronouns

Personal pronouns

Pronouns show a limited gender distinction and mandatorily use the grammar particle la for plural if they refer to plural forms.

Person English Form Explanation
1st I ul
2nd you ma
3rd he tȳn for humans or animals, male or without defining gender
3rd she rȳs for humans or animals, strictly for female
3rd it qem for objects or small animals
3rd it do indicates something undefined, object or idea, which it has already been talked about, aforementioned

When referring to more people or objects, particle la is mandatorily postponed after the pronouns:

  • ul, Iul la, we

Pronouns do not change for case, as they do in English, but they express their role by using the position in the sentence:

  • ul tȳn nat piǵ kra, I can't see him
  • tȳn ul nat piǵ kra, He can't see me

Interrogative pronouns

There are two basic interrogative adjectives and pronouns

Form English Explanation
who, which for humans and animals
what, which, where for objects and small animals, it can also express location with locative verbs
  • Ma wē ta piǵ fa lo, Who did you see?
  • Tȳn la wū skyt sty lo, What are they doing?
  • Rȳs wū stā sty lo, Where is she?

Other interrogative pronouns are formed by adding specific nouns:

+ meś, place = wūmeś where, in which place
+ tsēd, time = wūtsēd when, in which period
+ dān, moment = wūdān when, in which moment
+ cin, way = wūcin how, in which way
+ prīc, reason = wūprīc why, for which reason
+ tsel, purpose = wūtsel why, for which purpose

Demonstrative pronouns

There are three demonstrative adjectives and pronouns

Form English Explanation
tyk this for something or somebody near both the listener and the speaker
that for something or somebody near the listener but far from the speaker
nār that for something or somebody far from both the listener and the speaker

Numbers

Number Form
1 xxx
2 xxx
3 xxx
4 xxx
5 xxx
6 xxx
7 xxx
8 xxx
9 xxx
10 xxx
100 xxx
1000 xxx
1000000 xxx
1000000000 xxx

Verbs

Negation - Time particle - Verb - Aspect particle - Modal particle

Syntax

SOV - GN - AN - NP - RN

Subject - Indirect Object - Direct Object - Place - Manner - Temporal adverbs or construction - Negation - Time particle - Verb system