Kelanian: Difference between revisions

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The class of inanimate nouns consists of anything non-living (besides abstract nouns). Since they are not seen as having a will of their own, the inanimate nouns are not found in the nominative case, which shows intent and thoughtful purpose. Some inanimate nouns, the so-called "mass nouns," (e.g. water, knowledge, information, &c.) can also not be pluralized.
The class of inanimate nouns consists of anything non-living (besides abstract nouns). Since they are not seen as having a will of their own, the inanimate nouns are not found in the nominative case, which shows intent and thoughtful purpose. Some inanimate nouns, the so-called "mass nouns," (e.g. water, knowledge, information, &c.) can also not be pluralized.


Based on these distinctions, nouns are split into 5 declensions, each with its own characteristic vowel. The 1st ('''u''' declension) and 2nd ('''o''' declension) include the animates, the 3rd ('''a''' declension) and 4th ('''e''' declension) the inanimates, and the 5th ('''i''' declension) is for the abstracts.
Based on these distinctions, nouns are split into 5 declensions, each with its own characteristic vowel. The 1st ('''u''' declension) and 2nd ('''o''' declension) include the animates, the 3rd ('''a''' declension) and 4th ('''e''' declension) the inanimates, and the 5th ('''i''' declension) is for the abstracts. For proper nouns, these distinctions are not maintained-names may fall into any declension.


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Revision as of 10:36, 26 July 2007


Kelanian
Spoken in:
Timeline/Universe:
Total speakers: ???
Genealogical Classification: (Proto-Language)
Basic word order: OSV, free
Morphological type: agglutinating > fusional
Morphosyntactic alignment: fluid-S
Created by:
Andrew 2007

Phonology

Consonants

Kelanian contains 21 consonantal phonemes. The majority, 13, of these are stops. It has labial, dental and velar aspirated and unaspirated stops, both voiced and unvoiced, as well as the glottal stop 3, as in "uh-oh". There is only 1 fricative, s. The remaining 7 are sonorants. It has three nasals, m, n, and ñ (pronounced as is "ring", not as in Spanish "piñata"). Each nasal is inherently linked to a certain group of stops- m with the labials, n with the dentals, and ñ with the velars. There are two liquids, l and r, and two semivowels w and y.

Labial Dental Palatal Velar Glottal
Stops, unaspirated p b t d k g 3
Stops, aspirated ph bh th dh kh gh
Fricatives s
Nasals m n ñ
Lateral l
Trill r
Semivowels w y

Allophony

r is realized as [ɾ] (an alveolar flap) when not initial or geminated.

Before or after voiced stops, s is realized as [z].

Vowels

There are 5 vowels, a, e, i, o, and u, which can all be short or long. Long vowels are written with a macron, ā, ē, ī, ō, ū. The two mid vowels, e and o, are tense when they are long, /e: o:/ and lax when they are short /ɛ ɔ/.

Front Central Back
Close i u
Mid e o
Open a

There are also 8 diphthongs, essentially treated as long vowels. They are formed when i follows a, e, o, or u and when u follows a, e, o, or i. The first element becomes long (the macron isn't written), and the second becomes a semivowel, ai ei oi ui au eu ou iu are /a:j e:j o:j u:j a:w e:w o:w i:w/.

Phonotactics

Consonants and consonant clusters are always viewed as syllable onsets. There may only be a coda on a final syllable. Word initial or medial syllables are of the form (C)(C)(w,y)V, though there are very strict rules for what clusters can be formed (see below). Final syllables are of the form (C)(C)(w,y)V(sonorant, fricative). Only a vowel or diphthong is required to form a syllable.

Consonant Clusters

There are rules for what consonant combinations form permissable clusters. All of the clusters formed by the following rules may be medial, but not all may be initial. The ones that can are marked so.

Note: 3 is a stop, but cannot be used to make clusters. All of the rules that refer to "stops" do not apply to 3.


Liquids can precede nasals and stops.

Anything but stops can be geminated.

s can precede or follow stops. (can be initial)

Stops can follow their matching nasals. (can be initial)

The semivowels w and y can follow a consonant or cluster. (allowed initial clusters followed by w and y are also allowed initially)

Accent

In Kelanian, the accent is always found on the word's root vowel. For words that have two or more syllables after the root vowel, every second vowel from the root vowel gets a secondary accent.

Words that don't have analysable roots, e.g. pronouns, prepositions,&c., are always three or less syllables, and are accented on the first.

A long accented vowel is written with a circumflex, a short accented vowel with an acute. A secondary accent is written with a grave.

Elision

If one word ends with a vowel and the next begins with one, the first vowel is dropped in speech if it is short. If it is long and the second vowel is short, that one is dropped. If both are long, neither is dropped.

Morphology

Word Derivation

Primitive Root Structure

The roots of Kelanian are of the structure (C)(C)(w,y)VCV. The initial cluster may only be one of the clusters outlined above as permissible initially. Other than this, there is only one rule concerning the consonants in a root: there must be one between the vowels.

There are two vowels in every root. The second is called the "determining vowel" of the root, because it determines what the first vowel, the "root vowel," will be. (It is not very common for two roots to differ only by the determining vowel.) If the determining vowel is e or i, the root vowel is e. If it is o or u, the root vowel is o, and if the determining vowel is a, in the majority of cases the root vowel will be e, though it may be o if the initial consonant cluster contains a w. The root vowel, as mentioned above, is the vowel that is accented in all words derived from a certain root.

Lexeme Formation

Lexeme derivation from primitive roots is accomplished through the addition of suffixes, though sometimes the root vowel is also lengthened. The suffixes are of the form CV. For example, by using the suffix -nū, the root ETA gives étanū man/person.

When nouns are derived, the form produced is the absolutive singular. When modifiers are derived, the form produced is the imperfective stative or the imperfective active.

Word Formation

Lexemes themselves are words, though there are a variety of words that can be derived from them, as well as many inflections that can be added. To derive totally new words from lexemes, the final vowel is dropped and suffixes are added. These suffixes are of the form (V)VC or (V)VCV. For example, étanū gives étanothē, a host of men by dropping the final vowel and adding the suffix -othē.

The various inflections that can be added onto a lexeme or a new derived word include suffixes and prefixes of many different forms. They are clearly marked throughout the rest of this article.


Nouns

Nouns are split into 5 declensions and are marked for 3 numbers and 8 cases.

Declensions

Nouns fall into three main categories: animate nouns, a small group of abstract nouns, and inanimate nouns.

Animate nouns include people, animals, and anything else that was seen as having a will of its own. This includes some things that, to us, are inanimate, but were perceived as being conscious, such as the sun and the moon. The reason for this is mythological.

The abstract class of nouns is not found in anything but the singular, since they are intangible concepts and cannot logically be pluralized.

The class of inanimate nouns consists of anything non-living (besides abstract nouns). Since they are not seen as having a will of their own, the inanimate nouns are not found in the nominative case, which shows intent and thoughtful purpose. Some inanimate nouns, the so-called "mass nouns," (e.g. water, knowledge, information, &c.) can also not be pluralized.

Based on these distinctions, nouns are split into 5 declensions, each with its own characteristic vowel. The 1st (u declension) and 2nd (o declension) include the animates, the 3rd (a declension) and 4th (e declension) the inanimates, and the 5th (i declension) is for the abstracts. For proper nouns, these distinctions are not maintained-names may fall into any declension.

Number

Kelanian nouns are marked for three numbers: singular, paucal and plural. Singular refers to a single object. Paucal refers to a small, usually countable, number of something. For certain nouns (e.g. ears, eyes, hands, &c.) it refers to exactly two of something (dual). The paucal is formed by adding the prefix e- to the singular form of the noun. Plural refers to a large, usually uncountable, number of something. It is formed by adding the suffix -i after the stem, before the case ending. When a specific number of something is referenced, the adjectival number is applied to the singular form.

Cases

Kelanian nouns are marked for 8 cases: nominative (agentive), absolutive (patientive), dative, genitive, instrumental, comitative, locative/temporal, and essive.

The nominative marks the agent of an active verb or the willing subject of a stative verb. Inanimate nouns cannot have a will and, therefore, cannot be in the nominative.

The absolutive marks the patient of an active verb or the unwilling subject of a stative verb.

The dative marks the indirect object of verbs of giving or transferring. It also marks alienable possessions or qualities, purpose, or something/someone with a vested interest in the action (benefactive). It can also have an allative meaning.

The genitive marks the literal or figurative source of something, and inalienable possessions or qualities (as opposed to the dative). It can also have an ablative meaning.

The instrumental marks the tool or instrument, be it a physical object or figurative concept, used to perform an action or instigate a state. It is also used to introduce an inanimate agent or to make an animate agent non-volitional.

The comitative marks the company an action or state is done with.

The locative/temporal marks the location or time at which an action was done or a state was experienced. With prepositions it marks a referential location or time.

The essive marks a temporary state or being, usually the same as the English "like/as a...".

The genitive, instrumental, comitative, locative/temportal, essive and, in some usages, the dative all change nouns into modifiers.

Paradigms

Singular

1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th
Nom déranul rémadhol léranal sénesel mbênalìle
Abs déranū rémadhō léranā sénesē mbênalī
Dat déranur rémadhor léranar séneser mbênalìre
Gen déranòbhō rémadhòbhō léranèbhō sénesèbhō mbênalìbhō
Instr déranòtye rémadhòtye léranètye sénesètye mbênalìtye
Com déranum rémadhom léranam sénesem mbênalim
Loc déranu rémadho léranan sénesen mbênali
Ess déranuis rémadhois léranais séneseis mbênalīs

Paucal

The paucal is not included, as it is identical to the singular except for a prefixed e-.


Plural

1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th
Nom déranuil rémadhoil léranail séneseil no plural
Abs déranui rémadhoi léranai sénesei no plural
Dat déranùire rémadhòire léranàire sénesèire no plural
Gen déranòibhō rémadhòibhō léranèibhō sénesèibhō no plural
Instr déranòitye rémadhòitye léranèitye sénesèitye no plural
Com déranuim rémadhoim léranaim séneseim no plural
Loc déranui rémadhoi léranain sénesein no plural
Ess déranīs rémadhīs léranīs sénesīs no plural

Pronouns

Pronouns are stand-ins for nouns. Like nouns, they are also marked for case and number. Because of how they’re formed, all pronouns except for the 1st and 2nd person personals, come in pairs—one animate, used for nouns that can be in the nominative, and one inanimate, used for nouns that cannot be in the nominative. There are three types of pronouns: personal, demonstrative, and interrogative.

Personal

Personal pronouns substitute directly for a noun or a name. They come in all three persons. The first and second persons do not differentiate animacy, but the third person pronoun does. There are also both inclusive and exclusive first person plural pronouns, indicating whether or not the person being spoken to is included.

1st Person

Singular Plural-Inclusive Plural-Exclusive
Nom bhál bháril bhálil
Abs bhâ bhárī bhálī
Dat bháre bhárire bhálire
Gen bhábhō bhárbhō bhálbhō
Instr bhátye bháritye bhálitye
Com bhám bhárim bhálim
Loc bhá bhárei bhálei
Ess bhâis bhárīs bhálīs

2nd Person

Singular Plural
Nom lénal lénil
Abs lénā lénī
Dat lénare lénire
Gen lénabhō lénibhō
Instr lénatye lénitye
Com lénam lénim
Loc léna léni
Ess lénâis lénīs

3rd Person

Animate Inanimate
Singular Plural Singular Plural
Nom ñgwól ñgwíl dyél dyíl
Abs ñgwô ñgwî dyê dyî
Dat ñgwóre ñgwíre dyére dyíre
Gen ñgwóbhō ñgwíbhō dyébhō dyíbhō
Instr ñgwótye ñgwítye dyétye dyítye
Com ñgwóm ñgwím dyém dyím
Loc ñgwó ñgwí dyén dyín
Ess ñgwôis ñgwīs dyêis dyīs

Demonstrative

Demonstrative pronouns substitute for a specific noun with reference to its proximity to the speaker, be it physical or abstract. They should not be confused with demonstrative modifiers (see below):

Pronoun: I like this.

Modifier: I like this car.

The demonstrative pronouns are the substantive (see below) forms of imperfective demonstrative modifiers.

Interrogative

Interrogative pronouns are used to ask questions. Similar to the demonstrative pronouns, they are the substantive forms of the interrogative modifier (see below). Many of the various question words found in most languages are the declined forms of the two pronouns "who" and "which."

"Who?" "Which?"
Nom Who?
Abs Whom? Which?, What?
Dat For whom? For what?, Why?
Gen Whose? Of what?
Instr By whom? With what?, How?
Com With whom? (Along) with what?
Loc At what?, Where?, When?
Ess Like whom? Like what?

Prepositions

Prepositions are used just about as frequently as in English, with some exceptions. The use of “from” or its temporal equivalent “after” is taken over by the genitive, “to” or “towards” or its temporal equivalent “until” by the dative and “at,” “in,” or “on” by the locative.

Modifiers

The Copula

Verbs

Syntax