Ilya: Difference between revisions

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Revision as of 11:05, 1 March 2017

Phonology

consonants
Bilabial Alveolar Palatal Velar Labiovelar Glottal
Plosives p   b t   d k   g ʔ (q)
Nasals m n
Fricatives s ʃ (sh)
Approximants l j (y) w h
Trill r

Note: The glottal stop /ʔ/ q, is used as a "buffer" to keep vowels apart when adding suffixes.

vowels
Front Central Back
Close i~ɪ u~ʊ
Mid e~ɛ o
Open a~ə

Vowel length is productive and is marked by an acute accent. á é í ú

Nouns

Number

Ilya nouns can be singular, dual, or plural.

  • kop-á - dog
    • kop-ik - (two) dogs
      • kop-im - dogs

Gender

Ilya does not have grammatical gender. However, where desired, masculine individuals may be distinguished by the suffix XXX, and feminine ones by XXX :

  • kop-á - dog

Some

Case

Vocative

Affect (diminutive and augmentative)

Pronouns

singular plural
1 -an -uk
2 -ti / -e -ut
3 -u / -a / il -um

Demonstrative pronouns

Case

nominative accusative genitive dative
1s -an eyan nai iban
2s -ti / -e eti / eye tai ibti
3s -u / -a eya ai ibu
1p -uk eyuk kai ibuk
2p -ut / eyut wai ibut
3p -um eyum mai imbu

direct object incorporation

Direct object pronouns are incorporated to the verb inflection. So, instead of eya rayeshan (I saw her), rayeshana is grammatical. The DO pronouns are not used when the object is specified. So, instead of kawal rayeshanu (I saw (it) the horse), kawal rayeshan is grammatical.

verb tense / aspect / mood subject object
ray -esh -an -a
see simple past 1sg 3sg.FEM
I saw her.

Prepositions

Attributives

Numbers

Cardinal

Ordinal

Questions

Affirmation & Negation

Content Questions

Answering

Verbs

Tense

Aspect

Mood

Other modifiers

Syntax

Negation

Conjunction

Reported Speech

Subordinate clauses

Relative clauses