Nytal: Difference between revisions

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Revision as of 09:04, 15 February 2006


Nytal is a costructed fantasy language, born to be isolated and not related to any linguistic family in the world.

Phonology and Pronounce

Basical pronounce

  • a = like a in father
  • b = as in English
  • c = always like ch in church
  • d = as in English
  • e = like open e in lady or close e in men
  • f = as in English
  • g = always like g in get
  • h and ' = these two graphemes represent a phoneme which is unknown to the most European languages: the glottal stop. Danish language has it and use it very often for distinguishing words but does not give it an alphabetic sign. Semitic languages use it more and more largerly, in fact it is considered as a single consonant. It is not easy to pronounce, in English we can find some example in the stop we make when we pronounce Bat'man. The real glottal stop is a fast movement open/closed of the vocal cords, but for the speakers who do not know how to pronounce it we advise to pronounce it as a little stop during pronunciation.
  • i = always like ee in meet
  • j = always like ee in meet
  • k = as in English
  • l = always like l in lane
  • lij = as in Spanish ll or Italian gl
  • m = as in English
  • n = as in English
  • nij = as in Spanish ñ
  • o = like open o in rock or close o in orange
  • p = as in English
  • q = sounds like k
  • r = rolled Italian/Spanish-like r
  • s = as in English, but can only be unvoiced
  • š = like sh in shop
  • t = as in English
  • u = like u in put
  • v = as in English
  • x = as in English
  • y = this is the most difficult vowel to pronounce, because it appears rarely in romance or germanic languages. Instead, it is present in English, it is the schwa. It almost corresponds also to Russian Ы. A romance or germanic speaker can pronounce it by saying the ee of meet (or i in "ilusiòn" for Spanish, "illusion" for French and German) but lowering the tongue in the middle of the oral cavity and obtaining a sound middle-way between close e and ee.
  • z = as in English, it can be voiced or unvoiced

Phonology in IPA

Consonants

This is the consonant system in the IPA consonant table:

Bilabial Labio-
dental
Dental Alveolar Post-
alveolar
Palatal Velar Glottal
Plosive
p b
t d
k ɡ
   ʔ
Nasal
   m
   ɱ
   n
   ɲ
   
   
Vibrant
   
   r
   
Fricative
f v
s   
ʃ ʒ
   
   
Affricate
ʦ ʣ
ʧ   
   
   
 
Approximant
   
   
   
   j
   ɰ
   
Lateral approximant
   l
   ʎ
   

Vowels

This is the vowel system in IPA vowel table:

Front Near-front Central Near-back Back
Close
i
u


e
o
ə
ɛ
ɔ


a
Close-mid
Mid
Open-mid
Open

Morphology

Nytal is an isolating language. It means that its particles (substantives, pronouns, adjectives, verbs, etc...) never flect according to their quality or function.

Substantives

Nytal substantives never flect for genre, number or cases.

They only can be accompanied by the pluralizing particle le which is placed before them

  • city: syr
  • cities: le syr

There are no articles at all, neither definite articles nor indefinite ones.

Adjectives

Nytal adjectives never flect according to their substantive. They are placed always after their substantive.

  • the big city: syr haron
  • the big cities: le syr haron

Adjectival comparison

Nytal has two degrees of comparison: the comparative and the superlative:

  1. Comparative. Adjectives build their comparative by placing the particle ty before the adjective. The second term is expressed by particle udh.

They do not usually use less-comparative.

  1. Superlative. Adjectives build their superlative by placing the particle jrje before the adjective. The second term can be expressed with the preposition yd (of) or okled (between, among)
  • she is the most beautiful woman of the entire city: si ad’jo mec jrje skon yd syr vsj

Pronouns

Personal pronouns

Nytal has only three forms for personal pronouns:


Person
Pronoun
First person
ni
Second person
ok
Third person
si

They never flect for genre, number or cases. They can only be accompanied by their pluralizing particle la, which is placed after them.

  • I love: ni a'ljek
  • we love: ni la a'ljek
  • I love you: ni a'ljek ok
  • you love me: ok a'ljek ni

The role played by the pronoun is decided by the position in the sentence word order, not as in English where there are different form like I / me.

If a personal pronoun is placed after a substantive, it plays the role of a possessive adjective:

  • my husband: sik ni
  • their cities: le syr si la

It exists also a proper reflexive possessive pronoun, su, which is used when the subject and the owner are the same, for all persons.

  • I love my wife: ni a'ljek mec su

In third person, if it is used the proper third person pronouns, it means that the owner is not the subject itself:

  • si a'ljek mec su: He loves his own wife
  • si a'ljek mec si: He loves his wife (of another man).

Demonstrative pronouns and adjectives

They can be used both as pronouns and adjectives.

This
tjel
That (near to the listener)
afris
That (far from both speakers)
skj

When they are used as pronouns they can take the pluralizing particle la after themselves, when they are used as adjectives they follow all adjectives' rules.

Relative pronoun

There is only one indeclinable relative pronoun kj.

  • The cows you see belong to my husband (the cows, which you see, are of my husband): le desti, kj ok a'ljub, ad'jo yd sik ni

Interrogative pronouns

These are the interrogative pronouns; they are all indeclinable.

who
ejik
what
ejek
which
kjel
how much/many
tyka

Adverbs

Nytal adverbs, which are derived from an adjective, are distinguished by the particle klo which is placed just before the adjective. You can find many isolated adjectives, used as adverbs anyway.

  • finally: klo blek

Numbers

Cardinal

Nytal number system is a 10 base one:

1
js
2
do
3
vif
4
ti
5
so
6
kha
7
ejk
8
tjhr
9
von
10
djneh

Numbers over 10 are constructed:

  • numbers x 10: add -'djn.
  • numbers x 100: add -'odhj
  • numbers x 1000: add -'medjh


composed numbers are formed with a (and). Examples:

  • 25: do'djn a so (twenty and five)
  • 456: ti'odhj a so'djn a kha (four hundert and fifty and six)

Each number has to be intended as an adjective but it can be placed before its substantive.

Ordinal

The ordinal numbers are formed by placing the particle tjux after all simple numbers:

  • first: js tjux
  • fifteenth: djneh a so tjux

and they follow all adjectives' rules.

  • the fifth city: syr so tjux

Verbs

Nytal verbs do not decline as Indo-European verbs do according to number and tenses.

They only take some particles which indicate the temporal position of the action.

Infinitive
- (zero)
Present
a'-/ad'-
Past
be'-/bed'-
Future
fi'-/fid'-
Conditional
bif'-
Imperative
- (zero)


As in English, Nytal verbs always require the presence of a subjects, substantives and personal or demonstrative pronouns.

To negate a verb you have to place the particle ta just before the verb.

  • I love you: ni a'ljek ok
  • I do not love you: ni ta a'ljek ok

From the verb we can obtain an adjective with a passive meaning which corresponds to our past participle, by placing -'lo after the verb

  • to see: ljub
  • seen: ljub'lo

This is a special form because Nytal verbs do not have a passive form.

Each verb has to be intended as transitive and intransitive if possible: With an object it must be translated it with the transitive form, without any object it must be considered as an intransitive verb.

In English it is the same in the sentences: The boy broke the window (transitive) / The window broke (intransitive)

  • the man broke the window: sik be'krijg eknje
  • the window broke: eknje be'krijg