Folksprak: Difference between revisions
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== Anthropology == | == Anthropology == | ||
[[File:Flag of Folkspraak.svg|thumb|left|Flag of Folkspraak]] | |||
{{Main|Folksprak/Anthropology}} | {{Main|Folksprak/Anthropology}} | ||
The language can easily be understood by any speaker of a Germanic language (a group numbering over 110 million native speakers with an additional 300 to 900 million speaking English which is nearly-Germanic) without much teaching. For example, a native speaker of German, Dutch, Swedish, Norwegian, Danish, Icelandic, Afrikaans, Yiddish or some other Germanic language, can understand a sentence like {{Rune|ᛁᛣᛣ ᚻᚪᚹ ᛋᛣᚱᛁᚹᛏ ᛖᚾ ᛞᛖ ᛒᚢᛣ}}/'''Ik hav skrivt en de buk''' with little or no thought. | The language can easily be understood by any speaker of a Germanic language (a group numbering over 110 million native speakers with an additional 300 to 900 million speaking English which is nearly-Germanic) without much teaching. For example, a native speaker of German, Dutch, Swedish, Norwegian, Danish, Icelandic, Afrikaans, Yiddish or some other Germanic language, can understand a sentence like {{Rune|ᛁᛣᛣ ᚻᚪᚹ ᛋᛣᚱᛁᚹᛏ ᛖᚾ ᛞᛖ ᛒᚢᛣ}}/'''Ik hav skrivt en de buk''' with little or no thought. |
Latest revision as of 13:58, 20 March 2025
Folksprak is a Universal Language for the Germanic language.
ᚠᚩᛚᛣᛋᛈᚱᚪᛣ ['fɔlk.sprak] | |
Timeline/Universe | Universal Languages |
Period | Future Utopia |
Spoken in | Germania |
Total speakers | 500 million |
Writing system | Runes |
Classification | Proto-Germanic |
Typology | |
Basic word order | V2 |
Morphology | Fusional |
Alignment | N-A |
Credits | |
Created by | Committee |
Anthropology
- Main article: Folksprak/Anthropology
The language can easily be understood by any speaker of a Germanic language (a group numbering over 110 million native speakers with an additional 300 to 900 million speaking English which is nearly-Germanic) without much teaching. For example, a native speaker of German, Dutch, Swedish, Norwegian, Danish, Icelandic, Afrikaans, Yiddish or some other Germanic language, can understand a sentence like ᛁᛣᛣ ᚻᚪᚹ ᛋᛣᚱᛁᚹᛏ ᛖᚾ ᛞᛖ ᛒᚢᛣ/Ik hav skrivt en de buk with little or no thought.
Design goals include
- intelligible with little or no training to Germanic speakers
- simple enough for ease of learning to write or speak about normal topics
- precise enough to deal with more complex topics (e.g. science, maybe philosophy)
where the importance descends from first to last.
Phonology
- Main article: Folksprak/Phonology
The rhotic varies across the region, and h is sometimes voiced, but neither of these pose a problem to intelligibility. Icelandic-speakers would have to learn the traditional voiced-unvoiced distinction whatever language they wanted to learn!
Labial | Alveolar | Post. | Velar | Glottal | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nasal | /m/ | /n/ | *ŋ | ||
Voiced Stop | /b/ | /d/ | /g/ | ||
Unvoiced Stop | /p/ | /t/ | /k/ | ||
Voiced Fricative | /v/ | */z/ | */θ~ð/ | ||
Unvoiced Fricative | /f/ | /s/ | /ʃ/ | /x/ | /h/ |
Approximant | /r/ | /j/ | |||
Lateral | /l/ |
There are set digraphs for non-Germanic sounds: Some non-Germanic sounds are used in transcription:
- zj = [ž] or [zh] or /ʒ/
- cj = [č] or [ch] or /tʃ/
Vowels
There are twelve vowels, six short and six long. All vowels raise when they lengthen, except a, which moves further back. A vowel is long when it is:
- stressed and
- followed by no more than a single consonant
All other vowels are pronounced short, or even reduced. Vowels written twice are said over two syllables.
Round | Front | Middle | Back | |
---|---|---|---|---|
High | /ʏ/ /yː/ | /ɪ/ /iː/ | /ʊ/ /uː/ | |
Mid. | /œ/ /øː/ | /ɛ/ /eː/ | /ə/ * | /ɔ/ /oː/ |
Low | /a/ /äː/ |
Diphthongs are oi, ou, ai, ei. au is the same as ou. eu is just long u.
Orthography
- Main article: Folksprak/Orthography
Consonants
English [th] and [z] are rather late additions to the alphabet, and not part of Folksprak today. There are, in fact, many such letters which would be needed for place names around Europe. ᛊ/Z, ᛢ/Q, ᛝ/Ŋ, and ᚦ/Þ are not productive and part of "historic" name spellings only. Swedish /ɧ/ may be written ᚺ. (Other "old" letters include ᛠ/Ä, ᚫ/Æ, ᛡ/Ï, ᛥ/ST, ᚸ/Ȝ, and ᛤ/KK.)
Labial | Alveolar | Post. | Velar | Glottal | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nasal | /m/ ᛗ | /n/ ᚾ | *ŋ *ᛝ | ||
Voiced Stop | /b/ ᛒ | /d/ ᛞ | /g/ ᚷ | ||
Unvoiced Stop | /p/ ᛈ | /t/ ᛏ | */θ~ð/ *ᚦ | /k/ ᛣ | |
Voiced Fricative | /v/ ᚹ | */z/ *ᛊ | |||
Unvoiced Fricative | /f/ ᚠ | /s/ ᛋ | /ʃ/ ᚳ | /x/ ᛉ | /h/ ᚻ |
Approximant | /r/ ᚱ | /j/ ᛄ | |||
Lateral | /l/ ᛚ |
Vowels
Round | Front | Middle | Back | |
---|---|---|---|---|
High | /ʏ/ /yː/ ᚣ | /ɪ/ /iː/ ᛁ | /ʊ/ /uː/ ᚢ | |
Mid. | /œ/ /øː/ ᛟ | /ɛ/ /eː/ ᛖ | /ə/ * | /ɔ/ /oː/ ᚩ |
Low | /ä/ /aː/ ᚪ |
Morphophonology
- Main article: Folksprak/Morphophonology
- definite article ᛞᛖ/de
- indefinite article ᛖᚾ/en, same as 'one' (different vowel length)
- possessive (genitive) ending -ᛋ/s
- plural ending -ᛖᚾ/en (pronounced enn)
- Adjectives do not inflect for number, gender, or case
- comparative adjective ending -ᛖᚱ/er (pronounced err)
- superlative adjective ending -ᛖᛋᛏ/est
- ordinal number suffix -ᛞᛖ/de
ᛗᚪᚾᚾmann ᛗᚪᚾᚾᛖᚾmannen ᛗᚪᚾᚾᛋmanns ᛗᚪᚾᚾᛖᚾᛋmannens
Morphosyntax
- Main article: Folksprak/Morphosyntax
- the Subject may not be separated from the finite verb by any other word.
- the ordinary position for the verb in a declarative sentence is as second element and in imperatives or questions as the first element.
- the grammatical Subject must always come before any objects
Pronouns
# | Case | Person | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
First | Second | Third | |||||
Masculine | Feminine | Neuter | Reflexive | ||||
Singular | Nominative | ᛁᛣᛣ ikk | ᛞᚢ du | ᚻᛁ hi | ᛋᛁ si | ᛁᛏᛏ itt | No |
Genitive | ᛗᛁᚾ min | ᛞᛁᚾ din | ᚻᛁᛋᛋ hiss | ᚻᛁᚱ hir | ᛁᛏᛋ its | ᛋᛁᚾ sin | |
Poss. | ᛗᛁᚾᛋ mins | ᛞᛁᚾᛋ dins | ᚻᛁᚱᛋ hirs | ᛋᛁᚾᛋ sins | |||
Accusative | ᛗᛁ mi | ᛞᛁ di | ᚻᛁᛗᛗ himm | ᚻᛁᚱᚱ hirr | ᛁᛏᛏ itt | ᛋᛁᚷ sig | |
Plural | Nominative | ᚹᛁ vi | ᛄᛁ ji | ᛞᛖᛁ dei | No | ||
Genitive | ᚢᚱ ur | ᛄᚢᚱ jur | ᛞᛖᛁᚱ deir | ᛋᛁᚾ sin | |||
Poss. | ᚢᚱᛋ urs | ᛄᚢᚱᛋ jurs | ᛞᛖᛁᚱᛋ deirs | ᛋᛁᚾᛋ sins | |||
Accusative | ᚢᛋ us | ᛄᚢ ju | ᛞᛖᛗᛗ demm | ᛋᛁᚷ sig |
Verbs
- Verbs inflect for tense, not number or person.
- The lexical form is the infinitive (+e)
- Infinitive is +ᛖe
- Present and Imperative are the bare form (-e)
- Past tense is +ᛞᛖde
- Active participle +ᛖᚾᛞᛖende
- Passive participle +ᛏt
- ᚹᚪᚱᛖvare (to be) is the only irregular verb
- ᚹᚪᚱᛖvare - infin.; ᚪᚱar - pres.; ᚹᚪᚱvar - imper.,preterite;
- Auxiliaries abound, normally with infin., but sometimes past part.
- ᚹᛁᛚᛚᛖville + infin. = future
- ᚻᚪᚹᛖ have + PP = perfect
- ᚹᚪᚱᛖ vare + PP = passive
- ᛞᚢᚱᚠᛖdurfe to be allowed
- ᛣᚢᚾᚾᛖ kunne can
- ᛗᚪᚷᛖ mage might, may
- ᛗᛟᛏᛖ møte must
- ᚳᚢᛚᛚᛖ culle should
Adverb making suffix: -ᛚᛁᛣlik (cp. English -ly). Elatives need ᛗᛖᚱmer more and ᛗᛖᛋᛏmest most
Lexicography
- Main article: Folksprak/Word formation guidelines
see also Folksprak/Swadesh
Links
- https://folksprak.org/wiki/doku.php
- https://drive.google.com/file/d/0Bx0T9Dxrods1dVVqaXVyOVZmSTg/view?resourcekey=0-WYLPqy51AGPHfYAe9-eZcQ
- https://drive.google.com/file/d/0Bx0T9Dxrods1em9yRGh6d1BacEU/view?resourcekey=0-Sqd1WLkyjADRQ1rcOeggzQ
Universal Languages | ||
---|---|---|
AFRICA | SEDES (Horn of Africa), Middle Semitic (Semitic languages), Kintu (Bantu languages), Guosa (West Africa) | ![]() |
CENTRAL ASIA | Jalpi (Turkic languages), Zens (Iranian languages), Dravindian (Dravidian languages), Neo-Sanskrit (Indo-Aryan languages) | |
EUROPE | Interlingua (Romance languages), Folksprak (Germanic languages), Interslavic Slavic languages, Balkan (Balkans) | |
FAR EAST | Dan'a'yo (CJKV), MSEAL (Mainland Southeast Asia), Indo-Malay (Maritime Southeast Asia) |