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Ilya: Difference between revisions

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*''doma > doma'''m''''' — house > houses
*''doma > doma'''m''''' — house > houses
*''ajen > ajen'''im''''' — woman > women
*''ajen > ajen'''im''''' — woman > women
Adjectives modifying a noun do not change when the noun is plural. But when an adjective is used as a noun, it can be pluralized:
*''dobrá > dobrá'''m''''' — the good > the goods
*''guzá > cok guzá'''m''''' — a beauty > many beauties


Mass nouns include liquids, powders, and substances, such as ''usu'' (water), ''-'' (sand), and ''heta'' (wood). They do not normally require determiners or the plural. However, one may add these to indicate specific examples or different types:
Mass nouns include liquids, powders, and substances, such as ''usu'' (water), ''-'' (sand), and ''heta'' (wood). They do not normally require determiners or the plural. However, one may add these to indicate specific examples or different types:
Line 119: Line 123:
*''hetam'' — woods (e.g. various kinds)
*''hetam'' — woods (e.g. various kinds)


Gender is typically not indicated. If necessary, nouns may be followed by ...:
Gender is typically not indicated. If necessary, nouns may be modified by '''-uj-''' for masculine, and '''-en-''' for feminine:
*
* '''kavla''' - horse
 
: '''kavluja''' - stallion
*A few terms for family members and traditional roles do show distinctions of gender. For example:
: '''kavlena''' - mare
*...
 
Apposition — the use of one noun to modify another — is mostly limited to names and titles:
*
*


== Case ==
== Case ==

Revision as of 07:43, 28 September 2015

Introduction and Morphology

  • Ilya is an agglutinative language.
  • Suffixes predominate Ilya morphology, though there is a small number of prefixes. Verbs can express tense and aspect, and they agree with the subject in person and number. There is no grammatical gender in Ilya, nor are pronouns marked for natural gender.

Phonology

consonants

Ilya consonants
Labial Alveolar Post-
alveolar
Palatal Velar Glottal
Nasal m n
Stop p b t d k ɡ
Affricate t͡s t͡ʃ
Fricative f v s z ʃ ʒ h
Approximant l j w
Flap ɾ

vowels

Front Central Back
Close i~ɪ u~ʊ
Mid e~ɛ o~ɔ
Open a~ə
  • ai - /aɪ/

Orthography & Allophony

Ilya uses 23 of the 26 letters in the English alphabet; q, w, and x are unused.

  • c - /ʃ/; /t͡ʃ/ when followed by a front vowel; /t͡s/ when word final
  • g - always /g/
  • h - can be /ɦ/ when followed by a front vowel
  • j - /ʒ/ in all cases; can be /dʒ/ in proper names
  • u - /u/ but /w/ when followed by another vowel
  • y - always /j/

Accents

The acute accent ◌́ is used to mark stressed syllables in words that deviate from the standardized stress patterns. It is also used to distinguish minimal pairs.

  • á é í ó ú

Syntax

Nouns

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
  • ajen > ajenim — woman > women

Adjectives modifying a noun do not change when the noun is plural. But when an adjective is used as a noun, it can be pluralized:

  • dobrá > dobrám — the good > the goods
  • guzá > cok guzám — a beauty > many beauties

Mass nouns include liquids, powders, and substances, such as usu (water), - (sand), and heta (wood). They do not normally require determiners or the plural. However, one may add these to indicate specific examples or different types:

  • usu — the water (e.g. in the cup)
  • hetam — woods (e.g. various kinds)

Gender is typically not indicated. If necessary, nouns may be modified by -uj- for masculine, and -en- for feminine:

  • kavla - horse
kavluja - stallion
kavlena - mare

Case

Case Ending Examples Meaning
karya "village" saca "tree"
Nominative Ø (none) zz zz (the) village/tree
Genitive -ín karyín sacín the village's/tree's
of the village/tree
Dative karyé sacé to the village/tree
Accusative -í/-yí zz zz the village/tree
Ablative -(e)cí zz zz from the village/tree
Locative -(e)dá karyadá sacadá in the village/on the tree

Determiners

Pronouns

  • Ilya is a null-subject, or pro-drop, language, so personal pronouns (e.g. I, he, she) are optional. Pronouns generally are the same for all cases.
Pronouns
Person Singular Plural
1st na nuk
2nd te tum
3rd il hum

Verbs

Tense

Aspect

Mood

Adjectives

Adverbs

Adpositions

Conunctions

Questions

Clauses

Numbers