Sinatolean: Difference between revisions

From FrathWiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 125: Line 125:
| 12 || December || ''desembo''
| 12 || December || ''desembo''
|}
|}
''Tunanga Yādan''(Emeár: ''tõaanga'' [d̪ʷãːŋɐ]) is a calendar system of Emeárin origin that was the regional standard calendar before the arrival of Europeans. Most Sinatolean speakers don't use this system anymore, apart from the elderly as well as some disconnected tribes. The Sinatolean variation, often dubbed the ''Yādan'' variation, is still used by native Sinatoleans to form mononyms. For example, Dolekamrinu's<ref>a prominent Sinatolean independence activist</ref> birthname was ''Sinaginja'', "June person". His younger sister, born a year later in July, was named ''Adiasinamīlja'', "small July person"
''Tunanga Yādan''(Emeár: ''tõaanga'' [d̪ʷãːŋɐ]) is a calendar system of Emeárin origin that was the regional standard calendar before the arrival of Europeans. Most Sinatolean speakers don't use this system anymore, apart from the elderly as well as some disconnected tribes. The Sinatolean variation, often dubbed the ''Yādan'' variation, is still used by native Sinatoleans to form mononyms. For example, Dolekamrinu's<ref>a prominent Sinatolean independence activist</ref> birthname was ''Sinaginja'', "June person". His younger sister, born a year later in July, was named ''Adiasinamīlja'', "small July person."
===Nouns===
====Number====
Sinatolean differentiates between singular and plural nouns. Singular nouns are marked with an ''-a'' suffix, while ''-e'' is used to indicate plurality.
===Determiners===
====Demonstratives====
Sinatolean uses suffixes for demonstratives.
{| class=wikitable style="text-align: center;"
! !! Singular !! Plural
|-
! This
| ''-nga'' || ''-nge''
|-
! That
| ''-pya'' || ''-pye''
|}
These suffixes have to be used after the number-suffix(''-a'' or ''-e''), so ''dole'' would be "islands", while ''dolenge'' would be "these islands"; ''dolnge'' would be grammatically incorrect.
==Notes==
==Notes==

Revision as of 10:22, 23 July 2024

Sinatolean(sinadoleya; [ɕinaˈdɔleja]) is the official and national language of the Sinatolean Federation, a federative archipelago nation. Before the unification and subsequent formation of the Federation, Sinatolean was still used as a lingua franca in the region as far back as around 900 BCE. It is the most spoken Sinatolean language, with an estimated 680,000 total native speakers as of 2024.

Sinatolean is a heavily agglutinative language. In fact, the autonym of the language is itself an agglutinated phrase:

sin       -a        dol      -e   ya
person -SING island -PL speech

Thus, sinadoleya means "speech of the island person".

Phonology

Orthography

Consonants

Bilabial Dental Alveolar Palatal Velar Glottal
Plosive p b t d (c) (ɟ) k g ʔ
Nasal m (ɱ) n (ɲ) ŋ
Fricative (f) (v) s z, (ɕ) (ʑ) (x) h
Affricate t͡ɕ d͡ʑ
Semivowel w j
Lateral l̪~l

Broad and slender

Like in Irish, the realisation of consonants change depending on the vowel after it. For example, a /g/ before an /i/, /ø/ or /e/(slender vowels) changes to /ɟ/, while the same for /k/ changes it to /c/. These changes are not shown in the orthography.

Phoneme Broad Example
Slender
/p/ /p/ pola [pɔla] "move(jussive)"
/f/ pisani [fisaɲi] "those dogs"
/b/ /b/ boso [bɔsɔ] "roof"
/v/ labin [laviɲ] "wave"
/t/ tolo [tɔlɔ] "triggerfish"
/d/ /d/ dole [dɔle] "islands"
/ɟ/ didika [ɟiɟika] "beach"
/k/ /k/ angaka [aŋaka] "temple, shrine"
/c/ kēnene [ceːɲeɲe] "waterfalls"
/g/ /g/ ganeu [gaɲəw] "pet food"
/ɟ/ ginja [ɟiɲd͡ʑa] "june, 6 months"
/ʔ/ āyo [ʔajɔ] "hey (Sinatʼ regional variation)",
janiʼpi [d͡ʑaɲiʔfi] "jasmine tea"
/h/ /x/ sahala [saxala] "Sahara desert"
/h/ mēhi [meːhi] "May, 5 months"
/s/ /s/ sāno [saːnɔ] "wind"
/ɕ/ sinadoleya [ɕinaˈdɔleja] "Sinatolean language"
/z/ /z/ zon [zɔn] "zone"
/ʑ/ uklēzin [ukleːʑiɲ] "Ukrainian"

Vowels

Front Central Back
Close i u
Close-mid e ø
Mid (ə)*
Open-mid ɔ
Open a

/ə/ is a common unstressed allophone that can theoretically be used for any vowel, though it is mostly only used for /e/ when it precedes a semivowel like /w/ or /j/, such as in ganeu [gaɲəw], "pet food".

Morphology

Calendar

Months

Month
Number English Sinatolean
Modern Tuananga Yadān
1 January janua nganada
2 February peblan
3 March māja
4 April abīl ōneya
5 May mēhi kinānalua
6 June ginja
7 July geuli mīlja
8 August ogost
9 September setembo saukānān
10 October ōkotubo saukān
11 November nobembo sauke
12 December desembo

Tunanga Yādan(Emeár: tõaanga [d̪ʷãːŋɐ]) is a calendar system of Emeárin origin that was the regional standard calendar before the arrival of Europeans. Most Sinatolean speakers don't use this system anymore, apart from the elderly as well as some disconnected tribes. The Sinatolean variation, often dubbed the Yādan variation, is still used by native Sinatoleans to form mononyms. For example, Dolekamrinu's[1] birthname was Sinaginja, "June person". His younger sister, born a year later in July, was named Adiasinamīlja, "small July person."

Nouns

Number

Sinatolean differentiates between singular and plural nouns. Singular nouns are marked with an -a suffix, while -e is used to indicate plurality.

Determiners

Demonstratives

Sinatolean uses suffixes for demonstratives.

Singular Plural
This -nga -nge
That -pya -pye

These suffixes have to be used after the number-suffix(-a or -e), so dole would be "islands", while dolenge would be "these islands"; dolnge would be grammatically incorrect.

Notes

  1. a prominent Sinatolean independence activist