Archaic Imperial (Empire-in-the-West): Difference between revisions

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===Verbal Morphosyntax===
===Verbal Morphosyntax===
The AI verb was fairly simple. There are only two aspects: Perfective and Imperfective, as well as a Subjunctive and two Participles (Active and Passive). These are all created from the same triconsonantal root, the base form of which was the Imperfective (CiCiC or CiCC). All but the participles take the same agreement endings (participles taking the endings of nouns) which are given below:
The AI verb was fairly simple. There are only two aspects: Perfective and Imperfective, as well as a Subjunctive and two Participles (Active and Passive). These are all created from the same triconsonantal root, the base form of which was the Imperfective (CiC(i)C). All but the participles take the same agreement endings (participles taking the endings of nouns) which are given below:
 
{| border=1
  ! Person
  |align=center| Singular
  | Dual
  | Plural
  |-
  ! 1st
  | -ul
  | -utul
  | -rul
|-
  ! 2nd
  | -uk
  | -utuk
  | -ruk
|-
  ! 3rd an.
  | -ān
  | -utān
  | -rān
|-
  ! 3rd in.
  | -aw
  | -utaw
  | -raw
  |}


==See Also==
==See Also==

Revision as of 11:50, 13 March 2008

Archaic Imperial (AI) is the name given to the earliest attested ancestor of Modern Standard Imperial. The corpus of AI texts is fairly small: some runic carvings, and the Imperial Law Code of the Temple; the language has been reconstructed based on its daughter and sister languages with a fair degree of confidence.

Phonology

Consonants

POA Labials Dentals Emphatics Velars Uvulars Glottals
Voiceless stops p /p/ t /t/ ṭ /tˤ/ k /k/ q /q/ ? /ʔ/
Voiced stops b /b/ d /d/ ḍ /dˤ/ g /g/ ḡ /ɢ/
Fricatives f /f/ s /s/ ş /sˤ/ x /x/ ẋ /χ/ h /h/
Nasals m /m/ n /n/
Liquids l /l/, r /r/
Glides y /j/ w /w/

Vowels

  • Short: /i a u/ i a u
  • Long: /iː aː uː/ ī ā ū
  • Diphthong: /ai au/ ai au

Suprasegmentals

Allophony

There is strong vowel allophony in AI, with backed or lowered allophones of most vowels occurring near the emphatic consonants (ṭ /tˤ/ q /q/ ḍ /dˤ/ ḡ /ɢ/ ş /sˤ/ ẋ /χ/). /i/ > [e] /u/ > [o] /a/ > [A] /i:/ > [i@] or [@i] (The former if the emphatic consonants follows the vowel, the latter if it precedes it.) /u:/ > [u@] or [@u] (As with /i:/) /a:/ > [A:]

The diphthongs show allophony based on the following consonant, with raised allophones before voiceless ones. /aj/ > [Ei] /aw/ > [Ou]

The short vowel also have tense/lax allophony, with lax allophones occurring in closed syllables. This applies after the emphatic allophony, so /i/ has the realizations [i], [I], [e], [E]. The vowel /a/ has no tense/lax allophony.

Morphosyntax

Archaic Imperial was a VSO language, though it already showed signs of the shift to SOV that occurred in its descendants. Word order is consistently head-modifier, and therefore noun-adjective, noun-genitive, preposition-noun, noun-relative clause, etc. are all neutral word-orders. Clause-chaining was a common device.

Verbal Morphosyntax

The AI verb was fairly simple. There are only two aspects: Perfective and Imperfective, as well as a Subjunctive and two Participles (Active and Passive). These are all created from the same triconsonantal root, the base form of which was the Imperfective (CiC(i)C). All but the participles take the same agreement endings (participles taking the endings of nouns) which are given below:

Person Singular Dual Plural
1st -ul -utul -rul
2nd -uk -utuk -ruk
3rd an. -ān -utān -rān
3rd in. -aw -utaw -raw

See Also