Cernelian: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
|||
Line 31: | Line 31: | ||
|- | |- | ||
! Author | ! Author | ||
| [[User:DanishtD|DanishtD | | [[User:DanishtD|DanishtD<br>Danisht Dzakwan]] | ||
|- | |- | ||
! Date of creation | ! Date of creation |
Latest revision as of 13:57, 9 November 2021
Cernelian | |
---|---|
stómiesiewę czel | |
Number of speakers | 8 million |
Country | Cernelia |
Classification | |
Language family |
|
Word order | Subject–verb–object |
Typology | Mostly fusional |
Actual world facts | |
Author | DanishtD Danisht Dzakwan |
Date of creation | October 2021 |
Cernelian (Cernelian: stómiesiowę czel, stómiesioko, IPA: /stumʲjɛˈɕɔvɛ t͡ʂɛl/) is a fictional divergent Finnic alternative language (altlang) spoken in the fictional country Cernelia (Stómiesie), which actually made by an Indonesian named Danisht Dzakwan (User:DanishtD). It develops from southern Proto-Finnic under influence of sound changes that affected Polish, a Slavic languages, including some early internal Finnic changes, that make it so divergent from other natural languages like Finnish and Estonian. Therefore, Cernelian uses Polish orthography.
Premise
The Cernelian language is spoken by 8 million people in a fictional country in Eastern Europe named Cernelia. Cernelia is mostly located in our world's Belarus, except it excluded Gomel region, and the country took southern parts of Pskov Oblast, Russia and territories east and north of Bug, Narew, and Vistula rivers. The native name stómiesieko comes from the country name Stómiesie, deriving from earlier Mstómiesie, ultimately from Proto-Finnic *musta meccä "the black forest". The English name, is from Latin Cernaelis, borrowed from Proto-Slavic *černъjь lěsъ (cf. Polish Czarnylaska), in turn a calque from Proto-Finnic.
Cernelian is classified as a fusional language, although nonetheless features some remnants of a agglutinative feature prototypical to Proto-Finnic, where Cernelian, Estonian, and Finnish descends; for example the ablative ending -sto can to be separated from the infixes -o- and -(i)a- (for example), as in j-a-ł-k-o, j-a-ł-g-o-sto, j-e-ł-dz-a-sto, while most others are completely unseparable and obscured by historical regular sound change. Compare with Latin urbibus:
- Latin urbibus: urb- (stem of urbs "city") + -ibus (dative plural and ablative plural ending)
- Cernelian lgną: lgn- (stem of lgno "city") + -ą (dative plural ending)
- Cernelian lgniasto: lgn- (stem of lgno "city") + -ia (plural marker for locatives) + -sto (general ablative marking
Contents
~To be developed, incomplete