Dwekoenish: Difference between revisions

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ɒ → o<br />
ɒ → o<br />


Consonant allophony is conditioned and predictable.
Consonant allophony is completely conditioned and therefore predictable.


n_{g, k} → ŋ<br />
n_{g, k} → ŋ<br />

Revision as of 11:47, 17 June 2012


Dwekoenish (/dʷə.ˈkʰeɪ.nɪʃ/, native: Dvekönešč /dvɛ.ˈkʰœ.nɛʃʧ/) is a fictional diachronic language created by Marko Stanković, aka Stelvojoj. The following article details characteristics of High Dwekoenish, the dialect most closely observed in public media and governmental affairs.

Dwekoenish
Двекӧнешч
Spoken in: Dwekoenia (Dveköneyya)
Conworld: Alternate Earth
Total speakers: Unknown
Genealogical classification: Arvaši
Continental
Northwestern Continental
Dwekoenish
Basic word order: VSO
Morphological type: Fusional
Morphosyntactic alignment: nominative-accusative
Writing system:
Created by:
Stelvojoj 2008 CE-present


Phonology

The phonology of Dwekoennish largely mirrors the articulatory contrasts of most Indo-European languages, i.e., voiced vs. voiceless consonants, a vowel inventory which elaborates that of e.g. Latin, and the absence of such contrasts as pharyngealization, vocalic nasalization, and retroflexion. It is not without a few oddities (when compared to other IE languages). Of special note are the abundance of coronal fricatives, affricates, and the presence of two fully open front vowels, /a/ and /ɶ/.

The tables below list the full range of phonemes within standard Dwekoenish. Note that /w/ and /ɫ/ both represent co-articulated phonemes; they are positioned in accordance with their secondary point of articulation in the table for convenience.


Consonants


Consonants
Bilabial Labiod. Dental Alveolar Post-alv. Palatal Velar Glottal
Plosive p b t d k g
Nasal m n (ŋ)
Tap, Flap ɾ
Fricative f v θ ð s z ʃ ʒ x h
Affricate ʦ ʣ ʧ ʤ
Approximant w (ɹ) j
Lateral Approximant l ɫ

Vowels


Vowels
Front Near-front Central Near-back Back
High i y u
Near-high ɨ
High-mid (e) (ø) ɤ (o)
Mid
Low-mid ɛ œ
Near-low ɒ
Low a ɶ

Phonological Processes

Allophony

Dwekoenish phonemes are regarded as exhibiting a particularly narrow range of allophony; this is especially true in the case of vowels, but this is not to say that vowels (or consonants) display no such variation.

Noticeable vocalic allophony only occurs in the middle vowels. (In what would seem to be a slight misnomer, this includes the phoneme /ɒ/.) These variations occur optionally in open stressed monopthongal syllables, or in word-final monophthongal open syllables (stressed or unstressed). They never occur in monosyllabic words. The following transformations reflect these variations:

ɛ → e
œ → ø
ɒ → o

Consonant allophony is completely conditioned and therefore predictable.

n_{g, k} → ŋ
B_l_V → ɫ
V_ɾ_{C, #} → ɹ
#_{p, t, k}_V → {pʰ, tʰ, kʰ}

Here B represents a back vowel, V represents any vowel, C, represents any consonant, and # represents a word boundary.

Vowel Harmony

Old Dwekoenish exhibits strong characteristics of vowel harmony, but this feature is mostly lost in the modern era. It has, however, resulted in various forms of words that resemble ablaut, and in some cases still triggers certain palatalizations. All such mutations are always reflected in the orthography of the language. While none of the synchronic processes in Dwekoenish are fully documented, the most general rules are well-understood.

The rules are known to be nuanced, and they typically apply only when the triggering vowel occurs either as a monophthong or as the first vowel in a polypthong, and when the affected vowel occurs either as a monophthong or as the last vowel in a polyphthong. The probability that a rule will hold appears to be at least partially dependent on these conditions; it is mostly likely to occur, for example, when both trigger and triggered occur as monophthongs. The details beyond these conditions are less clear.

I-E-mutuation generally holds in syllables preceding those which contain /ɛ/ or /i/. Note that this rule can also be applied when triggering vowels proceed triggering vowels:

i → ɛ → a → ɤ

These rules, however, are not hard and fast, and often appear to be blocked for reasons that can't be traced by diachronic linguistics alone. Some dialects observe this variant of the rule:

i → ɛ → a → u

A-mutation occurs in syllables preceding those which contain /a/, either as a monophthong or the first vowel in a polypthong:

œ → ɶ

A currently popular theory in Dwekoenish linguistics is that this shift is entirely responsible for the existence of phonemic /ɶ/, but there exist sufficiently many cases in which the hypothetical triggering /a/ is now absent that further study is needed.

Palatalization

Orthography

Dwekoenish is written with variants of both the Latin and Cyrillic alphabets. Historically, the Cyrillic orthography has been in use since before the Latin, and is typically the more common of the two, except among a few smaller municipalities (and the later generations of many emigrant families). A few centuries ago, the Latin orthography underwent a major revision which was eventually reflected in the Cyrillic (e.g., as in the written representation of /j/). The changes were never intended to be applied to the Cyrillic, and while the origins of their reapplication are not fully known, they are often attributed to a particular journalist in one of the popular kingdom periodicals of the time. (It is worth noting that the Cyrillic counterpart of the letter <yy> is often referred to colloquially as "idiot's y" in Dwekoenish.)

In the table that follows, when more than one phoneme is present in a letter's description, the latter indicates a context-dependent allophone. (NOTE: To be elaborated later.)

Roman Cyrillic IPA
A a А а /a/
B b Б б /b/
C c Ц ц /ʦ/
Č č Ч ч /ʧ/
D d Д д /d/
Ð ð ДЬ дь /ð/
E e Е е /ɛ, e/
F f Ф ф /f/
G g Г г /g/
H h Х х /h/
Ħ ħ Ӿ ӿ /x/
I i І і /i/
K k К к /k, kʰ/
L l Л л /l, ɫ/
M m М м /m/
N n Н н /n, ŋ/
O o О о /ɒ, o/
Õ õ Ӯ ӯ /ɤ/
P p П п /p, pʰ/
R r Р р /ɾ, ɹ/
S s С с /s/
Š š Ш ш /ʃ/
T t Т т /t, tʰ/
Þ þ ТЬ ть /θ/
U u У у /u/
V v В в /v/
W w Ԝ ԝ /w/
Y y И и /ɨ/
Yy yy Ии ии /j/
Z z З з /z/
Ž ž Ж ж /ʒ/
Ö ö Ӧ ӧ /œ/
Öa öa Ӧа ӧа /ɶ/
Ü ü Ӱ ӱ /y/

In the Latin orthography, the letter <öa> is sometimes alternatively written <ȍ> (<o> with double grave); this is acceptable, but no longer considered standard, and it is never seen in current government or journalistic publications.

Grammar

Nouns

NOTE: This declension table is largely out of date. The case system of Dwekoenish now more closely reflects that of Indo-European languages; elaborated locative cases and those based on other prepositions can be formed by affixing the proper prepositions to the fundamental cases, but these are often considered contractions rather than genuine cases. This table will cleaned up in the near future.

Dwekoenish is a highly inflected fusional language with agglutinative characteristics. Nouns and adjectives are declined for three numbers and sixteen cases. Patterns of declension are grouped into three genders, though the distinction is only morphologically contrastive in the singular (with the exceptions of a few minor irregularities in the dual and plural). It is more significant with regards to adjectives and articles.

The first declension pattern applies to masculine nouns whose nominative forms end in -è or any non-sibilant consonant.


Könè, king

Singular Dual Plural
Nominative könè köneas kȍnás
Genitive könu köne könem
Dative kön könedast kȍnadast
Benefactive köné könea könia
Accusative könu köneai köniaš
Locative könest könist kȍnast
Illative könesten könisten kȍnasten
Inessive könestí könistí kȍnastí
Elative könestom könistom kȍnastom
Allative könesté könisté kȍnasté
Adessive könestje könistje kȍnastje
Ablative könestod könistoðy kȍnastoða
Terminative könestá könistá kȍnastá
Prolative könestav könistav kȍnastav
Abessive könedz könidz kȍnadz
Comitative kȍnat köneat köniat

Note that the letter -ö- is assimilated to -ȍ- when it is proceeded by -a- or -à- (but not -ia-) in the following syllable.

Numbers

Cardinal Numbers

Dwekoenish has two number systems: one decimal (base-10) and one undecimal (base-11). The terminology of both systems is the same concerning numbers between one and ten, and the differences in larger numbers are of minuscule value. Since the undecimal system is now largely unused, we here detail the decimal system.

Numbers in Dwekoenish do not exhibit case inflections. The number one, however, is inflected for gender, as are all integers with a 10^0 (or 11^0) place value digit of 1 (excluding those with a 10^1 place value digit of 1 as well; the declension of eleven, in other words, is much like that of other numbers which do not end in a digit 1).


Number Roman Cyrillic
1 Eives (Ei) Еівес (Еі)
2 Dveas (Dve) Двеас (Две)
3 Þriyyas (Þri) ТЬріииас (ТЬрі)
4 Čatvoras (Čar) Чатворас (Чар)
5 Pyyač Пииач
6 Syyoš Сииош
7 Šovam (Šom) Шовам (Шом)
8 Õč Ӯч
9 Dživam (Džam) Джівам (Джам)
10 Džišeþ (Džeþ) Джішеть (Джеть)
11 Eizodžeþ Еізоджеть
12 Dvezodžeþ Двезоджеть
13 Þrizodžeþ Тьрізоджеть
14 Čarzodžeþ Чарзоджеть
15 Pyyazodžeþ Пииазоджеть
16 Syyozodžeþ Сииозоджеть
17 Šomzodžeþ Шомзоджеть
18 Õzodžeþ Ӯзоджеть
19 Džamzodžeþ Джамзоджеть
20 Džešaþ Джешать
21 Džešaþ Eives Джешать Еівес
22 Džešaþ Dveas Джешать Двеас
... ... ...
30 Þriyyeþ ТЬріииеть
40 Setworeþ Сетԝореть
50 Pyyõčeþ Пииӯчеть
60 Syyošeþ Сииошеть
70 Šovõmeþ Шовӯметь
80 Õčeþ Ӯчеть
90 Dživõmeþ Джівӯметь
100
101
... ... ...
135
... ... ...
200

Forms in parentheses denote contractions. These variants are considered quite colloquial, and are typically not used in official contexts. They also represent (with minor exceptions) the forms which are inserted into compounds involving numbers, including constructions of larger numbers as shown above. This is illustrated in the numbers between 10 and 20, but they also appear in the names of polygons, multiple-birth siblings, etc.

In the historical undecimal number, system, the number 11 is referred to by the name "džišõt" (contracted as "džõt"). Numbers are built similarly from this base, with the addition of forms like "džeþzodžõt" for the undecimal number 1A, etc. The undecimal system disappeared from everyday use several centuries ago, and is typically only found in ancient runic inscriptions. Because numbers are rarely named in these documents, there is ongoing controversy over whether the term "džišõt" was artificially introduced by linguists or historians. Also because the runic numbers are no longer in use, the number corresponding to the term "džišeþ" is typically denoted A in discussions about the undecimal number system.

Ordinal Numbers