Parthavan language: Difference between revisions

From FrathWiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
Line 72: Line 72:




'''The Plural''' <br>
====The Plural====
Plural suffixes go directly after the noun. They cannot be added to indefinite nouns, only definite ones. They can change depending on the noun itself:
Plural suffixes go directly after the noun. They cannot be added to indefinite nouns, only definite ones. They can change depending on the noun itself:
: '''berc / barc''' in most cases
: '''berc / barc''' in most cases
Line 79: Line 79:




'''The absolutive''' <br>
====The absolutive====
The absolutive case carries no suffix - it is the plain noun as found in the lexicon.
The absolutive case carries no suffix - it is the plain noun as found in the lexicon.


Line 89: Line 89:




'''Definite accusative''' <br>
====Definite accusative====
This is used for definite direct objects. The suffix is '''i''' or '''yi''' after vowels.
This is used for definite direct objects. The suffix is '''i''' or '''yi''' after vowels.


Line 95: Line 95:
: Bi adağbarci xevera ui
: Bi adağbarci xevera ui
: ''I like the horses''
: ''I like the horses''
====Genetive====
This is used to indicate the possessor

Revision as of 12:26, 22 November 2006


Parthavun erciğ
Pronounced: /parθaβ ɛrtʃɪɣ
Timeline and Universe: Alamanti
Species: Human
Spoken: Parthava, Parizhia, Seleyizhe, Dorcindi
Total speakers: 40 million
Writing system: Parthavan script
Genealogy: Ayartaic
Central Aghantian
 Parthavan
Parthavan
Typology
Morphological type: Agglutinative
Morphosyntactic alignment: Nominative-Accusative
Basic word order: SOV
Credits
Creator: Nadeem Ahmad
Created: September 2006

Parthavan is a language that is spoken throughout much of central Aghantia. It is very closely related to Armavi

Distribution

Parthavan is spoken mainly in the central Aghantian countries. There is also an area in Parizhia where it is spoken.

Its largest concentration of speakers is in Parthava.

Phonology

Vowels

Parthavan has 7 vowels, which are arranged into three classes for vowel harmony:


Front e (IPA: ɛ) ö (IPA: œ) ü (IPA: ʏ)
Back a (IPA: a) o (IPA: o) u (IPA: u)
Neutral i (IPA: ɪ)

A word can only contain either front vowels or back vowels (and the neutral vowel i). For words with only i, the word is regarded as front.

If a word contains both back and front vowels (in some foreign words), vowel harmony acts on with the last vowel, that is to say that when adding suffixes, if the word is mixed, look at the last vowel as an indicator.

Consonants

Parthavan also has the following consonants:


Consonants
Bilabial Labiod. Dental Alveolar Post-alv. Palatal Velar Glottal
Nasal m (m) n (n) ŋ (n)
Plosive p (p) b (b) t (t) d (d) k (k) g (g) q (q)
Fricative θ (ť) s (s) z (z) ʃ (ş) ʒ (ž) x (x) ɣ (ğ)
Affricate ts (ts)
Approximants β̞ (v) j (y)
Trill r (r)
Lateral Fricative ɬ (l)


As well as this, most consonants have labialised and palatised forms. These are shown, where appropriate, by y and w following the consonant.

Counting

Parthavan has a base-10 number system. Each number from 0 to 9 has initial, medial, final, isolated, and multiplier forms, which are used to make bigger numbers.

Morphology

Noun suffixes

Case in Parthavan is marked by attaching suffixes to the end of words. These suffixes must harmonise in accordance with the vowel harmony rules stated above.


The Plural

Plural suffixes go directly after the noun. They cannot be added to indefinite nouns, only definite ones. They can change depending on the noun itself:

berc / barc in most cases
bey / bay for nouns ending in c, r, t, s, z, ş, l, i or any front vowel
ibiğ for nouns ending in t, d, k, g, q


The absolutive

The absolutive case carries no suffix - it is the plain noun as found in the lexicon.

The absolutive is most commonly used as a nominative. However, it also serves as an indefinite accusative (of any type):

Examples:

Bi adağ xevera ui
I like horses


Definite accusative

This is used for definite direct objects. The suffix is i or yi after vowels.

Examples:

Bi adağbarci xevera ui
I like the horses


Genetive

This is used to indicate the possessor