Omni-kan: Difference between revisions
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Omni-kan is an international auxiliary language. Its earlier names include Pasetok, Pastok, Omnis-kan and Omenis-kan. Although Omni-kan is an auxlang, there is no serious ambition to make it an actually used international language. It was just created for the fun of the challenge of creating a conlang that could potentially be spoken by as many people as possible on Earth.<br> | Omni-kan is an international auxiliary language. (Its earlier names include ''Pasetok'', ''Pastok'', ''Omnis-kan'' and ''Omenis-kan''.) Although Omni-kan is an auxlang, there is no serious ambition to make it an actually used international language. It was just created for the fun of the challenge of creating a conlang that could potentially be spoken by as many people as possible on Earth.<br> | ||
Since the language is supposed to be international the phonemic inventory is rather small, and several phonological constraints exist for ease of pronunciation. Yet homonyms are avoided. Omni-kan has borrowed all of its words from other languages. There are | Since the language is supposed to be international the phonemic inventory is rather small, and several phonological constraints exist for ease of pronunciation. Yet homonyms are avoided. Omni-kan has borrowed all of its words from other languages. There are 38 languages that have been especially prioritized in word borrowing and phonology. These languages represent the largest language families on Earth. | ||
== Prioritized languages == | |||
Prioritized languages are the languages that are the source of the vast majority of Omni-kan's vocabulary. There were two goals when defining the criteria for which languages should be chosen: 1) There should be as much diversity as possible among the languages, meaning that there should be many unrelated languages and languages spoken in many different parts of the world. 2) The languages should be spoken by a large number of people.<br> | |||
The reason behind the first goal was because Omni-kan is an international language. The reason for the second goal was that the more speakers these languages have combined, the greater likelyhood that a given learner will find words in Omni-kan that they recognize. The two goals are not quite compatible, so the results were that goal 1 was not as succesfully met as goal 2. The prioritized languages have their origins in three continents, Europe, Africa and Asia, and they represent 12-13 different language families. (They uncertainty of the number of language families depends on whether the [[Wikipedia:Mande_languages|Mande languages]] and [[Wikipedia:Atlantic-Congo_languages|Atlantic-Congo languages]] should be classified as two separate families, or as part of the Niger-Congo family.) The prioritized languages together have around 6 billion speakers (including second language speakers).<br> | |||
There are two kinds of prioritized languages in Omni-kan: primary and secondary languages. A primary language's share of Omni-kan's vocabulary is meant to be twice the size of a secondary language's share. If none of the language's had any words in common, this would mean that ca. 3.1% of all the words in Omni-kan should be borrowed from a given primary language, and ca. 1.6% from a given secondary language. However, since many languages have words that are identical, or so similar that they become identical when they are [[#Borrowing_scheme|assimilated]] into Omni-kan, it means that a word can have several donor languages. Currently the sum of the shares of all the languages make up around 217%. So the objective regarding this is to borrow words in such a way that all secondary languages will have a share that is roughly the same size, and all primary languages will have a share that is roughly the same size, and about twice as big as that of the secondary languages. | |||
=== Criteria for becoming a prioritized language === | |||
Omni-kan could not have an enormous number of prioritized languages, because otherwise each language's share of the vocabulary would be miniscule, and therefore no one would be able to find many words that they recognize. So a few criteria was set up for determining which languages should be chosen. Firstly, the language must have at least 10 million speakers (including second language speakers). This goes for both primary and secondary languages. Secondly, for a language to be a primary language, it must be largest language in its family, or a main branch of that family. The very large language families were broken up into their main branches. This resulted in 26 primary languages.<br> | |||
But this did leave out some very large languages. So the concept of secondary languages was introduces. A secondary language is any language that has at least 50 million speakers (including second language speakers), and which is not a primary language. This resulted in nine secondary languages.<br> | |||
It was also decided to that three dead languages, which have had a profound impact on many other languages, should also be added to the secondary languages, bringing that group up to 12 languages. These dead languages were Latin, Ancient Greek and Sanskrit. Latin and Ancient Greek are sources of a large number of words in most European languages, especially in the fields of science and technology. And through European influence they have reached even further out in the world. Sanskrit has had a similar impact on the Indian subcontinent, and on all areas of Asia that have been influenced by Hinduism or Buddhism. | |||
== Phonology == | == Phonology == |
Revision as of 12:05, 6 May 2021
Omni-kan | |
---|---|
Pronounced: | /omnikan/ |
Timeline and Universe: | |
Species: | Human |
Spoken: | |
Total speakers: | |
Writing system: | |
Genealogy: | |
Typology | |
Morphology: | |
Morphosyntax: | |
Word order: | |
Credits | |
Creator: | Qwynegold |
Created: | 2009 |
Omni-kan is an international auxiliary language. (Its earlier names include Pasetok, Pastok, Omnis-kan and Omenis-kan.) Although Omni-kan is an auxlang, there is no serious ambition to make it an actually used international language. It was just created for the fun of the challenge of creating a conlang that could potentially be spoken by as many people as possible on Earth.
Since the language is supposed to be international the phonemic inventory is rather small, and several phonological constraints exist for ease of pronunciation. Yet homonyms are avoided. Omni-kan has borrowed all of its words from other languages. There are 38 languages that have been especially prioritized in word borrowing and phonology. These languages represent the largest language families on Earth.
Prioritized languages
Prioritized languages are the languages that are the source of the vast majority of Omni-kan's vocabulary. There were two goals when defining the criteria for which languages should be chosen: 1) There should be as much diversity as possible among the languages, meaning that there should be many unrelated languages and languages spoken in many different parts of the world. 2) The languages should be spoken by a large number of people.
The reason behind the first goal was because Omni-kan is an international language. The reason for the second goal was that the more speakers these languages have combined, the greater likelyhood that a given learner will find words in Omni-kan that they recognize. The two goals are not quite compatible, so the results were that goal 1 was not as succesfully met as goal 2. The prioritized languages have their origins in three continents, Europe, Africa and Asia, and they represent 12-13 different language families. (They uncertainty of the number of language families depends on whether the Mande languages and Atlantic-Congo languages should be classified as two separate families, or as part of the Niger-Congo family.) The prioritized languages together have around 6 billion speakers (including second language speakers).
There are two kinds of prioritized languages in Omni-kan: primary and secondary languages. A primary language's share of Omni-kan's vocabulary is meant to be twice the size of a secondary language's share. If none of the language's had any words in common, this would mean that ca. 3.1% of all the words in Omni-kan should be borrowed from a given primary language, and ca. 1.6% from a given secondary language. However, since many languages have words that are identical, or so similar that they become identical when they are assimilated into Omni-kan, it means that a word can have several donor languages. Currently the sum of the shares of all the languages make up around 217%. So the objective regarding this is to borrow words in such a way that all secondary languages will have a share that is roughly the same size, and all primary languages will have a share that is roughly the same size, and about twice as big as that of the secondary languages.
Criteria for becoming a prioritized language
Omni-kan could not have an enormous number of prioritized languages, because otherwise each language's share of the vocabulary would be miniscule, and therefore no one would be able to find many words that they recognize. So a few criteria was set up for determining which languages should be chosen. Firstly, the language must have at least 10 million speakers (including second language speakers). This goes for both primary and secondary languages. Secondly, for a language to be a primary language, it must be largest language in its family, or a main branch of that family. The very large language families were broken up into their main branches. This resulted in 26 primary languages.
But this did leave out some very large languages. So the concept of secondary languages was introduces. A secondary language is any language that has at least 50 million speakers (including second language speakers), and which is not a primary language. This resulted in nine secondary languages.
It was also decided to that three dead languages, which have had a profound impact on many other languages, should also be added to the secondary languages, bringing that group up to 12 languages. These dead languages were Latin, Ancient Greek and Sanskrit. Latin and Ancient Greek are sources of a large number of words in most European languages, especially in the fields of science and technology. And through European influence they have reached even further out in the world. Sanskrit has had a similar impact on the Indian subcontinent, and on all areas of Asia that have been influenced by Hinduism or Buddhism.
Phonology
Phoneme inventory
Bilabial | Labiodental | Dental | Alveolar | Postalveolar | Retroflex | Palatal | Velar | Uvular | Pharyngeal | Epiglottal | Glottal | ||||||||||||||
Nasal | /m/ <m> | /n/ <n> | /ŋ/[1] <g> | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Plosive | /p/ <p> | /t/ <t> | /k/ <k> | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Affricate | /tʃ/ <c> | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Fricative | /f/[2] <f> | /s/ <s> | /h/ <h> | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Approximant | /ʋ/ <w> | /j/ <j> | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Trill | /r/[3] <r> | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Tap or flap | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Lat. fricative | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Lat. approximant | /l/ <l> | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Lateral flap |
Labial-palatal | Labial-velar | Alveolo-palatal | Palatal-velar | |||||
Fricative | ||||||||
Approximant |
Front | Near-front | Central | Near-back | Back | |||||||
Close | /i/ <i> | /u/ <u> | |||||||||
Close | |||||||||||
Close-mid | |||||||||||
Mid | /e/ <e> | /o/ <o> | |||||||||
Open-mid | |||||||||||
Near-open | |||||||||||
Open | /a/ <a> |
- ^ ^ ^ These are marginal phonemes. There are no minimal pairs involving these phonemes, except for possibly in proper nouns and interjections. [ŋ] is in complementary distribution with /n/, [f] with /p/, and [r] with /l/. The former ones can be replaced by the latter ones if the speaker cannot pronunce any of the alternatives marked with the same color in the above phoneme charts.
The sounds of Omni-kan can be pronunced in several ways depending on what the speaker is capable of, but the most desirable pronunciations have been marked in the above tables. The desirable realization may be substituted for any phoneme marked with the same color. For example /s/ should preferrably be an alveoral fricative, as "/s/ <s>" has been marked in column alveolar, row fricative, but postalveolar, retroflex and alveolo-palatal realizations are also acceptable.
There are also six diphthongs: /ui, oi, ei, ai, ou, au/. The final /i/ could optionally be [j], and final /u/ could be [w]. The diphthongs can also be split up into two syllables, with an optional [ʔ] between. /ei/, /au/ and /ou/ are marginal phonemes as mentioned above, and in complementary distribution with other phonemes.
Phonological constrains
The syllable structure of Omni-kan is (C)V(C). The onset can be any consonant except g, while the coda can be any of m, n, g, p, t, k, c, f, s, l. The allowed medial clusters are:
- mp mf
- nt nc ns ny nw nr nl
- gk
- pt ps pr pl
- ft fr fl
- tn tw tr tl
- kn kp kt kc ks kw kr kl
- sn sy sw sr sl
- lm lp lf lt lk lc ls ly lw
The sequences yi and wu are disallowed.
Complimentary distribution
In the following list $ stand for either syllable break or word boundary.
- V1n - V1
- au - o
- ei - e
- f - p
- g - n
- ou - o, u
- r - l
- s$ - t$
- ti - ci
Borrowing scheme
When borrowing words, the word might need to be changed to fit Omni-kan's phonological constrains. Generally, e is used to split up non-word final consonant clusters, while o is used at the end of words. If possible, the vowel is placed so that the consonants are still adjacent. Here some other rules, which take precedence over the above:
- #CiV > CijV
- #CuV > CuwV (but see wo and wu below)
- Cː > C
- CCiV > CCijV
- CCuV > CCuwV (but see wo and wu below)
- Vː > V
- Vst > Vt
- eu > e
- iV > jV
- ji > i
- m# > mo
- r· > l·
- wo > o
- wu > u
Morphology
Nominal morphology
Nouns are pluralized with the suffix -kal, e.g. palke (stick) → palkekal (sticks), mau (cat) → maukal (cats). Nouns can also be reduplicated to form collective nouns, e.g. manusiya (human) → manusiya manusiya (humanity).
There is no definiteness marking and no case in Omni-kan.
Pronouns
Personal pronouns
Sg. | Pl. | |
---|---|---|
1st p. | mi I |
mikal we |
2nd p. | tu you |
tukal you |
3rd p. | o s/he |
okal they |
Plural pronouns are formed the same way as plural nouns: with the suffix -kal. Unlike in some other languages, the second person plural pronoun is not used as a polite form of address for one person.
Demonstratives
The demonstratives are es (this), on (that) and pe (what). When used as pronouns, es and on can be pluralized with the plural suffix -kal, but when they are used attributively they are not pluralized. Since Omni-kan lacks definiteness marking, es is often used for referring back to things the speaker has brought up. On can be used for the same purpose, but also for things that the listener or some third person has brought up.
The demonstratives are combined with some other words to form meanings for which English uses completely separate words. Some examples include es/on/pe lokus (here/there/where), es/on/pe wakte (now/then/when).
Prepositions
- co ‒ to
- ni ‒ at, in, on
- te ‒ of, -'s
- Menten is used for telling what way something is going, like the words along, through and via in English.
See Location for examples of how locational relations are expressed.
Derivation
There are many derivational suffixes in Omni-kan, used for creating new words. All derivational suffixes are actually shorter forms of other words with independent meanings. An -s- is added between a root that ends with a vowel and a suffix that begins with a vowel. If the root ends with, and the suffix begins with a consonant, an -e- is inserted between them.
Original word | Meaning | Suffix | Meaning/use | Example |
---|---|---|---|---|
aprofa | child | -apro | Turns a word for an animal specie into a word meaning "the infant form of that animal". | hunto (dog) > huntosapro (puppy) |
epitatai | know | -epi | Used for making words with the meaning "the teaching of X". | kanatlai (animal) > kanatlaisepi (zoology) |
person | -ren | Turns a country name into an ethnicity, or a verb into the agent of that verb. | ||
mama | mother | -mam | Turns a word for an animal specie into a word meaning "a mother of that specie". | *** (goose) > ***mam (mother Goose) |
mekas | big | -meka | Adds a meaning of "largeness". | winakil (human) > winakilmeka (giant) |
mikros | small | -mikro | A diminutive suffix. | winakil (human) > winakilmikro (dwarf) |
ona | woman | -on | Makes a word feminine. | aprofa (child) > aprofason (girl) |
otoko | man | -oto | Makes a word masculine. | aprofa (child) > aprofasoto (boy) |
papa | father | -pap | Turns a word for an animal species into a word meaning "a father of that species". | awahahufokaho (bird) > awahahufokahopap (bird father) |
sekop | stick | -seko | Used for deriving a word for the handle of a tool. | *** (broom) > ***seko (broomstick) |
language | -kan | Used for deriving names of languages from names of countries or ethnic groups. When added to a country name, the suffix -(i)stan is replaced by -kan. | ||
winakil | human | -wina | Used for deriving words of mythical beasts who are half human, half animal. | awahahufokaho (bird) > awahahufokahowina (birdman) |
Syntax
Location
Location is usually expressed by a locational preposition followed by a noun in genitive and a locational noun. The preposition tells the direction: to, from, along or not moving. The locational noun (LOC.NOUN) tells the actual place. The locational can be combined with the prefix ka-, which means that the subject has physical contact with the place. In the following list, the different ways of telling location has been likened to different noun cases.
- Adessive - tou NOUN GEN fukan.
- Apudessive - tou NOUN GEN wijeri.
- Inessive - tou NOUN GEN in.
- Intrative - tou NOUN and NOUN GEN aita.
- Pertingent - tou NOUN GEN ka-LOC.NOUN.
- Subessive - tou NOUN GEN alat.
- Superessive - tou NOUN GEN (ka)-soharu.
- Ablative - ta NOUN GEN fukan
- Delative - ta NOUN GEN (ka)-soharu.
- Egressive, initiative - ta NOUN (GEN LOC.NOUN).
- Elative - ta NOUN (GEN in).
- Allative - si NOUN GEN fukan.
- Illative - si NOUN GEN in.
- Terminative - si/tou NOUN (GEN LOC.NOUN).
- Perlative (penetrating) - menten NOUN GEN aita.
- Perlative (going through a space) - menten NOUN GEN in.
- Prosecutive - menten NOUN GEN soharu.
- Vialis - with NOUN GEN use.
- Temporal (at an exact point of time) - tou TIME.NOUN (GEN in).
- Temporal (around some time) - tou TIME.NOUN GEN fukan.
- Temporal (sometime during a time span) - tou TIME.NOUN GEN aita.
- Benefactive - si NOUN (GEN sake).
- Dative, orientative - si NOUN.
- Exessive - ta NOUN (GEN LOC.NOUN) (si NOUN (GEN LOC.NOUN))
This article is part of a series on International Auxiliary Languages. Romance-based Auxlangs: Aercant * Atlango * Interlingua * Latin Nov * Novial * Occidental (Interlingue) * Panroman * Romanal |
This article is part of a series on Engineered languages. Arithmographic languages: Characteristica universalis |