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= Determiners = | = Determiners = | ||
Determiners in Amal precede the noun they modify. There is one article: | Determiners in Amal precede the noun they modify. There is one article: '''al''' (the), used similar to English: | ||
* '''al muj, cuma, u ayelim''' — the man, a woman, and children | * '''al muj, cuma, u ayelim''' — the man, a woman, and children |
Revision as of 08:21, 22 September 2014
- See also:
Introduction
Amal is meant to be a personal conlang and despite appearances and structure is not intended as an IAL.
Vocabulary and grammatical features are inspired by or taken directly from:
- Arabic (ara)
- Basque (bas)
- Japanese (jap)
- Quechua (que)
- South Slavic (sla)
- Spanish (spa)
- Turkish (tur)
Phonology
23 of the 26 Latin letters are used, leaving q, w and x unused. All letters are pronounced like their IPA equivalents with a few exceptions.
- c - /ʃ/, /t͡ʃ/ or /t͡s/ without confusion
- e - /e/ or /ɛ/ without confusion
- j - /ʒ/
- ny - /ɲ/ (rare)
- u - /w/ when followed by another vowel
- y - /j/
- ' - /ʔ/ the glottal stop separates non-diphthonged vowels.
Word Order
Amal has a mostly regular word order. The general word order is SVO:
- Ivan haca
- Ivan run-3SG
- Ivan runs.
- Marya duya Ivan
- Maria hear-3SG Ivan
- Maria hears John.
A noun phrase has this order:
- (determiners —) noun (—quantifiers) (— stative verb)
- Al muj uc buyum
- DEF.ART man three be.large-3PL
- The three large men...
A verb phrase has this order:
- (leading verb —) verb(tense/mood) (— adverb)
- ..necra yemek sarelya..
- need-PST eat.INF be.quick-ADV
- ..needed to eat quickly..
- A prepositional phrase generally follows what it modifies, and has this order:
- preposition — noun phrase
- See also: case
- ..bada cinya
- after midnight
- ...after midnight
Nouns
The roles of nouns in a sentence are indicated through prepositions (or case) and word order. Amal has seven cases.
cases
Genrally speaking, these case endings are invariable, with a few eceptions. If a noun ends in a vowel, that vowel is replaced by the case ending, unless the case ending begins with a consonant, then all remain. See examples below.
- muj - man; husband
- Nominative – muj man > mujim men
- Accusative – muji (the) man > mujim (the) men
- Genitive – mujin of the man; the man's > mujimin of the men; the men's
- Dative / Locative – mujda to the man; at the man > mujimda to the men; at the men
- Ablative / Comparative – mujac from the man; than the man > mujimac from the men; than the men
- Comitative – mujle with/accompanying the man > mujimle with/accompanying the men
- Instrumenal – mujun by; using; through the man > mujimun by; using; through the men
- doma - house; home
- Nominative – doma house > domam houses
- Accusative – domi (the) house > domim (the) houses
- Genitive – domin of the house; the house's > domamin of the houses; the houses’
- Dative / Locative – domada to the house; at the house > domamda to the houses; at the houses
- Ablative / Comparative – domac from the house; than the house > domamac from the houses; than the houses
- Comitative – domale with/accompanying the house > domamle with/accompanying the houses
- Instrumental – domun by; using; through the house > domamun by; using; through the houses
plurals
Nouns are commonly preceded by determiners. Plural nouns are formed by appending -m to nouns ending in vowels or -im to nouns ending in consonants. This does not alter the stress:
- doma > domam — house > houses
- muj > mujim — man > men
Mass nouns include liquids, powders, and substances, such as usu (water), ukum (sand), and uzra (wood). They do not normally require determiners or the plural. However, one may add these to indicate specific examples or different types:
- al usu — the water (e.g. in the cup)
- uzram — woods (e.g. various kinds)
gender
Gender is typically not indicated. If necessary, nouns may be modified by -(e)ka (male) or -(e)va (female):
- konyaka / konyava — a stallion / a mare
A few terms for family members and traditional roles do show distinctions of gender. For example:
- am / ab — mother / father
- ban / neska — son / daughter
apposition
Apposition — the use of one noun to modify another — is mostly limited to names and titles:
- kada Yusuf — Prof. Joseph
- ane nai Marya — my sister Mary
Determiners
Determiners in Amal precede the noun they modify. There is one article: al (the), used similar to English:
- al muj, cuma, u ayelim — the man, a woman, and children
Other words function similarly:
- an - that [over there]
- anta - such
- anyi - same
- ayam - whatever, whichever; any
- aza - few, little
- cok - many; much
- hacok - more
- haza - less; fewer
- kon - this [by me]
- kul - all; every; each
- ne - no; zero
- nek - some; several; a few
- son - that [by you]
- ukra - other
Verbs
tense
The future tense is marked with -as-/-s(a)-. Past tenses, including perfect and pluperfect, are marked with -ar-/-r(a)-. The present tense is unmarked:
- Ganan. – I sing / I am singing.
- Gansat. – You will sing / You are about to sing.
- Ganara. – He sang / She was singing / It has sung.
Stories often describe events that take place in the past (or an imagined past), or whose location in time is of no concern to the reader. In such cases, the -ar-/-r(a)- may be omitted.