User:Aquatiki/Sandbox: Difference between revisions
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== Intro to Verb Conjugation == | == Intro to Verb Conjugation == | ||
The part of Syreni most like English (in | The part of Syreni most like English (if it is like it in any way) is the "verb conjugation". English is called an SVO language, which means it usually lists the parts of a sentence in the order '''subject-verb-object'''. It is thought that perhaps Syreni began this same way assuming that they ''ever'' had nouns. Syreni, however, glues all those English words together into one, big, monster word! It is easiest to picture a collection of eleven "slots" into which one may inject part, with only the root absolutely being obligatory and able to appear on its own. | ||
{| class="wikitable" | {| class="wikitable" | ||
| '''#''' | | '''#''' | ||
! 1 || 2 || 3 || 4 || 5 || 6 | ! 1 || 2 || 3 || 4 || 5 || 6 | ||
! rowspan="3" | Root || 7 || 8 || 9 || 10 || 11 | |||
|- | |- | ||
| '''Function:''' | | '''Function:''' | ||
| | | Case | ||
| Deixis | | Deixis | ||
| Class | | Class. | ||
| Person | | Person | ||
| Prep. | | Prep. | ||
| | | State | ||
| | | Mode | ||
| | | Case | ||
| Deixis | | Deixis | ||
| Class | | Class. | ||
| Person | | Person | ||
|- | |- | ||
Line 22: | Line 23: | ||
| colspan="4" | "On Side" | | colspan="4" | "On Side" | ||
| | | | ||
| | | ??? | ||
| | | | ||
| colspan="4" | "Off Side" | | colspan="4" | "Off Side" | ||
|} | |} | ||
Let's look at the | Let's look at the four items that group together. These are the Case, Deixis, Class and Person which all can occur on the "on" or the "off" side. "On" and "Off" are used instead of "subject" and "object" because sometimes they behave in ways quite unlike subjects and objects! For now - even though this is generally wrong - let's equate "on" with subject and "off" with object. '''Case''' lets you know the intentionality or passivity of the subject/object. '''Deixis''' is a fancy word for 'this' vs. 'that', but in Syreni it's a lot more complicated! '''Class''' is short for "classifier" which lets you know what kind of thing you're dealing with: person, animal, thing, etc. (Technically, you could have as many as four sets of voice-deixis-class-person on each side, but we won't talk about that!) | ||
The '''Person''' marking is generally required. In English, we talked about first (I or We), second (You or Y'all), and third (He, She, It, They) person. Of course, Syreni has more! We kind of have the Zeroth Person in English. Consider the sentence "It is raining." Who or what is raining? The sentence doesn't mean anything more than "There is rain" but again, what is 'there' doing there? These are actions without actors. Syreni can do this with almost any verb. It is usually best to translate the Zeroth Person as "There is/was/will be ...". Third person means neither of us talking right now, and the fourth person is usually handled by "the other one" in English. Here are the personal affixes: | |||
The '''Person''' marking is generally required. In English, we talked about | |||
{| class="wikitable" style="float:left;" | {| class="wikitable" style="float:left;" | ||
Line 80: | Line 77: | ||
| colspan="2" style="text-align:center;" | ''mn̄ǹ-'' | | colspan="2" style="text-align:center;" | ''mn̄ǹ-'' | ||
|} | |} | ||
definite unknown = someone | |||
indefinite unknown = anyone | |||
indefinite = whoever | |||
Real conditional = If I .... | |||
Unreal conditional = Were I to ... | |||
<br clear="both" /> | <br clear="both" /> | ||
Lastly, we look at the root itself. Just as you have to learn in English that "sink, sank, sunk" are all forms of the same verb, you'll have to learn | Next, '''Preposition''' is a kind of clarifier for the verbal-root. Why aren't they part of the verb? Consider the English verb "to turn into". It's quite different from "to turn" and yet all manner of things might come in between "turn" and "into" in any given sentence (e.g. "Frankie turned very slowly but nevertheless deliberately into pickled cod.") "Into" is crucial to distinguish a very different meaning for "turn", but it is separated from it. That's how the '''prep.''' spot functions in Syreni. There are a great deal many "prepositions" in Syreni. Many of them refer to what in human language are nouns.So many, in fact, that some linguists think that they were originally noun that got incorporated into the endless verbal stew! This happens a little in English. (e.g. "I was picking berries" can turn into "I was berry-picking.") | ||
The '''State''' slot can be ambiguous as to whether it is marking the on-side or the off-side. The most common infix here marks something as a distributive plural. It may only be applied to very animate subjects and is usually quite clear from context. There are two other infixes that can go here. The "energetic/inert" markers also go here and they are also ambiguous as to whether they refer to the "subject" or "object". (In other languages, these would be part of deixis. This is also the slot for negation of the verbal idea. | |||
'''Mode''' has a variety of functions which are hard to classify as a group. In one sense, this changes the "part of speech" of the phrase-word. They are: | |||
{| class="wikitable" | |||
! Title || Word || IPA || Function | |||
|- | |||
| ADVERB || || || Like English -ly | |||
|- | |||
| SUBJUNCTIVE || || || Used to make a verb dependent upon the preceding one, much like English "to" or "that". | |||
|- | |||
| PARTICIPLE || || || Like Engligh -ing | |||
|- | |||
| TOPICAL || || || Sets the topic. "In regards to ...". It is also a participlizer. | |||
|- | |||
| CONSTRUCT || || || Participlizer. Add the word "of" after. | |||
|} | |||
Lastly, we look at the root itself. Just as you have to learn in English that "sink, sank, sunk" are all forms of the same verb, you'll have to learn three forms of each verb in Syreni. The names of the principle parts of the verb roots are: | |||
* Imperfective, | * Imperfective, | ||
* Perfective, | * Perfective, and | ||
* Future | * Future. | ||
The imperfective is used for incomplete or ongoing actions. The perfective implies a finality or unity to the action. The future is used to refer to times after today. The dictionary form of the word is the imperfective, but the other forms are typically listed after it. | |||
The imperfective is used for incomplete or ongoing actions. The perfective implies a finality or unity to the action. The future | |||
It's not very nice to talk about, but the simplest verb we can test-drive is '''-ko''', which means 'to slap' or 'to strike with the open hand', 'to body glove'. It's pronounced just like the English verb "go", but be careful not to make a diphthong out of it (normally English speakers say /gou/). It has no accent marker written, so it is middle tone. (That means, if you think of tone as a song in C Major, this one ends on C!) You should be able to put together six almost-right sentences about slapping now. | It's not very nice to talk about, but the simplest verb we can test-drive is '''-ko''', which means 'to slap' or 'to strike with the open hand', 'to body glove'. It's pronounced just like the English verb "go", but be careful not to make a diphthong out of it (normally English speakers say /gou/). It has no accent marker written, so it is middle tone. (That means, if you think of tone as a song in C Major, this one ends on C!) You should be able to put together six almost-right sentences about slapping now. |
Revision as of 18:34, 29 June 2013
Intro to Verb Conjugation
The part of Syreni most like English (if it is like it in any way) is the "verb conjugation". English is called an SVO language, which means it usually lists the parts of a sentence in the order subject-verb-object. It is thought that perhaps Syreni began this same way assuming that they ever had nouns. Syreni, however, glues all those English words together into one, big, monster word! It is easiest to picture a collection of eleven "slots" into which one may inject part, with only the root absolutely being obligatory and able to appear on its own.
# | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | Root | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Function: | Case | Deixis | Class. | Person | Prep. | State | Mode | Case | Deixis | Class. | Person | |
For: | "On Side" | ??? | "Off Side" |
Let's look at the four items that group together. These are the Case, Deixis, Class and Person which all can occur on the "on" or the "off" side. "On" and "Off" are used instead of "subject" and "object" because sometimes they behave in ways quite unlike subjects and objects! For now - even though this is generally wrong - let's equate "on" with subject and "off" with object. Case lets you know the intentionality or passivity of the subject/object. Deixis is a fancy word for 'this' vs. 'that', but in Syreni it's a lot more complicated! Class is short for "classifier" which lets you know what kind of thing you're dealing with: person, animal, thing, etc. (Technically, you could have as many as four sets of voice-deixis-class-person on each side, but we won't talk about that!)
The Person marking is generally required. In English, we talked about first (I or We), second (You or Y'all), and third (He, She, It, They) person. Of course, Syreni has more! We kind of have the Zeroth Person in English. Consider the sentence "It is raining." Who or what is raining? The sentence doesn't mean anything more than "There is rain" but again, what is 'there' doing there? These are actions without actors. Syreni can do this with almost any verb. It is usually best to translate the Zeroth Person as "There is/was/will be ...". Third person means neither of us talking right now, and the fourth person is usually handled by "the other one" in English. Here are the personal affixes:
General | Dual | |
---|---|---|
0 | bə̣- | No |
1 | di- | r̀- |
2 | tzí- | ŋòj- |
3/4 | ı̣n- |
General | Dual | |
---|---|---|
0 | bb̀ | No |
1 | dụì- | ẹʊ̪- |
2 | tzí- | ǝ̪ò- |
3/4 | mn̄ǹ- |
definite unknown = someone
indefinite unknown = anyone
indefinite = whoever
Real conditional = If I ....
Unreal conditional = Were I to ...
Next, Preposition is a kind of clarifier for the verbal-root. Why aren't they part of the verb? Consider the English verb "to turn into". It's quite different from "to turn" and yet all manner of things might come in between "turn" and "into" in any given sentence (e.g. "Frankie turned very slowly but nevertheless deliberately into pickled cod.") "Into" is crucial to distinguish a very different meaning for "turn", but it is separated from it. That's how the prep. spot functions in Syreni. There are a great deal many "prepositions" in Syreni. Many of them refer to what in human language are nouns.So many, in fact, that some linguists think that they were originally noun that got incorporated into the endless verbal stew! This happens a little in English. (e.g. "I was picking berries" can turn into "I was berry-picking.")
The State slot can be ambiguous as to whether it is marking the on-side or the off-side. The most common infix here marks something as a distributive plural. It may only be applied to very animate subjects and is usually quite clear from context. There are two other infixes that can go here. The "energetic/inert" markers also go here and they are also ambiguous as to whether they refer to the "subject" or "object". (In other languages, these would be part of deixis. This is also the slot for negation of the verbal idea.
Mode has a variety of functions which are hard to classify as a group. In one sense, this changes the "part of speech" of the phrase-word. They are:
Title | Word | IPA | Function |
---|---|---|---|
ADVERB | Like English -ly | ||
SUBJUNCTIVE | Used to make a verb dependent upon the preceding one, much like English "to" or "that". | ||
PARTICIPLE | Like Engligh -ing | ||
TOPICAL | Sets the topic. "In regards to ...". It is also a participlizer. | ||
CONSTRUCT | Participlizer. Add the word "of" after. |
Lastly, we look at the root itself. Just as you have to learn in English that "sink, sank, sunk" are all forms of the same verb, you'll have to learn three forms of each verb in Syreni. The names of the principle parts of the verb roots are:
- Imperfective,
- Perfective, and
- Future.
The imperfective is used for incomplete or ongoing actions. The perfective implies a finality or unity to the action. The future is used to refer to times after today. The dictionary form of the word is the imperfective, but the other forms are typically listed after it.
It's not very nice to talk about, but the simplest verb we can test-drive is -ko, which means 'to slap' or 'to strike with the open hand', 'to body glove'. It's pronounced just like the English verb "go", but be careful not to make a diphthong out of it (normally English speakers say /gou/). It has no accent marker written, so it is middle tone. (That means, if you think of tone as a song in C Major, this one ends on C!) You should be able to put together six almost-right sentences about slapping now.
General | Dual | |
---|---|---|
0 | bə̣ko /ˈvɵ˧.go˧/ - "There is slapping" | No |
1 | diko /ˈzi˧.go˧/ - "I slap" | r̀go /ˈr̩˦.go˧/ - "We slap" |
2 | tzígo - /ˈdr̝͆i˦.go˧/ - "You slap" | ŋòjgo -/ˈŋoʒ˩.go˧/ - "You'all slap" |
3/4 | ı̣ŋ.go /ˈɪŋ˧.go˧/ - "He/She/It/They/The other(s) slap" |
Notice how almost nothing has changed as we mashed up these two sets. That is because the indicative affixes are strong, as are the principle parts of the root.
Also notice, in the IPA transcription, we put the stress on the first syllable. This is indicated by length of the vowel/tone (as in English), not by pitch (unlike English). In my classroom, we practice with xylophones, hitting a low 'G' for low accent, 'C' for middle accent, and a higher 'E' for high accent. If you have access to a musical instrument and the ability to play while speaking, it really helps.