Conlang Relay 15/Mirexu: Difference between revisions
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by Amanda Babcock Furrow | by [[User:Ababcock|Amanda Babcock Furrow]] | ||
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"neatarbesosup" is "how they sleep" and "neatarbesosupu lupsi" is "the | "neatarbesosup" is "how they sleep" and "neatarbesosupu lupsi" is "the | ||
way that they sleep". | way that they sleep". | ||
{{relay|relay=Conlang Relay 15|prev=Conlang Relay15/Old Draconic|prevname=Old Draconic|next=Conlang Relay 15/Vozgian|nextname=Vozgian}} |
Revision as of 04:06, 22 September 2012
Text
ifwefu neatarbepukopu lupsia ajaelup
ifwefu tidu nultitei kjeluapasep, tidu nisozhutei luapasep. pulkoa attijukwiv. ti jedeweso isewedu luapasep. ti apukop. pukowetei kjemni jutjurausapu kujufemerusap. kwipwena kjeataduirupse ti vapasesep. ti siwedu lutepu reapasep. tigi kjeankehisepi tia anatjurausadep. pulok femeruresapu kjedarauresapu tameluskisuresapu aletamlusap.
Smooth translation
One sees the way that they dance
One moves not with their music, but with their voices. They have studied dance. They move with creativity and possibility. They dance. Their style of dancing is the happiest and most beautiful. Because they do not have learning they can move. They circle and move as one. That they are unable not to try makes them happy. The dances are more beautiful, more unsaddening, more complex, and different.
Interlinear
ifwefu | ne- | at- | a- | rbepuko | -p | -u | lupsi | -a | aj- | a- | el | -up |
N | REL- | 3pl.erg- | PR- | V | -IMP | -ADJ | N | -ACC | 3sg.m.erg- | PR- | V | -IMP |
ifwefu | ti | -du | nulti | -tei | kje- | lu- | a- | pase | -p |
N | 3pl | -OBL | N | -3pl.poss | NEG- | COM- | PR- | V | -IMP |
ti | -du | nisozhu | -tei | lu- | a- | pase | -p |
pulko | -a | at- | ti- | jukwi | -v |
N | -ACC | 3pl.erg- | PT- | V | -PERF |
ti | jedewe | -so | isewe | -du | lu- | a- | pase | -p |
3pl.nom | N | -CONJ | N | -OBL | COM- | PR- | V | -IMP |
ti | a- | puko | -p |
3pl.nom | PR- | V | -IMP |
pukowe | -tei | kjem | -ni | jutjurausa | -p | -u | ku- | jufemerusa | -p |
N | -3pl.poss | N | -3sg.n.poss | V | -IMP | -CONJ | FUT- | V | -IMP |
kwipwe | -na | kje- | at- | a- | duiru | -p | -se |
N | -SUB.OBL | NEG- | 3pl.erg- | PR- | V | -IMP | -ADVCLAUSE |
ti | v- | a- | pasese | -p |
3pl.nom | REAS- | PR- | V | -IMP |
ti | siwe | -du | lute | -p | -u | re- | a- | pase | -p |
3pl.nom | N | -OBL | V | -IMP | -CONJ | SUBS- | PR- | V | -IMP |
ti | -gi | kje- | a- | nkehise | -p | -i | ti | -a | an- | a- | tjurausade | -p |
3pl | -SUB.NOM | NEG- | PR- | V | -IMP | -COMP | 3pl | -ACC | 3sg.n.erg- | PR- | V | -IMP |
pulok | femeruresa | -p | -u | kje- | darauresa | -p | -u |
N | V | -IMP | -CONJ | NEG- | V | -IMP | -CONJ |
tameluskisuresa | -p | -u | a- | letamlusa | -p |
V | -IMP | -CONJ | PR- | V | -IMP |
Key
- 3pl
- third person plural
- 3pl.erg
- " " " ergative
- 3pl.nom
- " " " nominative
- 3pl.poss
- " " ", possessive
- 3sg.m.erg
- third person singular, male, ergative
- 3sg.n.erg
- third person singular, neuter, ergative
- 3sg.n.poss
- " " " ", possessive
- ACC
- accusative case
- ADJ
- adjectival relative clause ending
- ADVCLAUSE
- adverbial clause ending
- COM
- comitative/instrumental role marker, agrees w/argument in oblique case
- COMP
- subordinate complement clause ending
- CONJ
- conjunctive ending
- FUT
- future tense
- IMP
- imperfective aspect
- N
- noun
- NEG
- negation
- OBL
- oblique case (agrees with role marker on verb)
- PERF
- perfective aspect
- PR
- present tense
- PT
- past tense
- REAS
- reason clause agreement marker (agrees with adverbial clause)
- REL
- relative clause
- SUB.NOM
- nominative case in subordinate clause
- SUB.OBL
- accusative/oblique case in subordinate clause
- SUBS
- substitutive role marker, agrees with argument in oblique case
- V
- verb
Glossary
- a
- accusative case
- a
- present tense marker
- aj
- 3rd person singular male ergative agreement marker
- an
- 3rd person singular neuter ergative agreement marker
- at
- 3rd person plural ergative agreement marker
- darauresa
- to be sadder
- du
- oblique case ending
- duiru
- to have
- el
- to see
- femeruresa
- to be more beautiful
- gi
- nominative case ending in subordinate clauses
- i
- subordinate complement clause ending
- ifwefu
- someone
- isewe
- possibility
- jedewe
- creativity
- jufemerusa
- to be the most beautiful
- jukwi
- to study, to master
- jutjurausa
- to be the happiest
- kje
- negation marker
- kjem
- type, style
- ku
- future tense marker
- kwipwe
- learning, study
- letamlusa
- to be different
- lu
- comitative role marker
- lupsi
- manner, way
- lute
- to move in a circle
- na
- accusative/oblique case ending in subordinate clauses
- ne
- relative clause prefix
- ni
- 3rd person singular neuter possessive ending
- nisozhu
- voice
- nkehise
- to be able not to try
- nulti
- music
- p
- imperfective aspect marker
- pase
- to move
- pasese
- to be flexible, to be able to move
- puko
- to dance
- pukowe
- dancing
- pulko
- a dance
- pulok
- dances, plural
- rbepuko
- to dance in some manner
- re
- "acting as" role marker (can't remember the name for this)
- se
- adverbial clause ending
- siwe
- being one, a unit
- so
- conjunctive suffix for nouns
- tameluskisuresa
- to be more complex
- ti
- 3rd person plural pronoun
- ti
- past tense marker
- tei
- 3rd person plural possessive ending
- tjurausade
- to make happy
- u
- adjectival relative clause ending
- u
- conjunctive suffix for verbs
- up
- imperfective aspect marker (after consonants)
- v
- reason clause agreement marker on main verb
Grammar
Verbs are marked for: agreement with certain types of subordinate clause; negation; agreement with any ergative argument; agreement with non-third-person absolutive arguments; agreement with each oblique argument; tense; and aspect. Verbs frequently contain many derivational morphemes which are not given separately above for time and space reasons. The verb paradigm is as follows:
[ ADV ] [ NEG ] [ ABS ] [ ERG ] [ OBL [ OBL ...] ] TENSE verb-base ASPECT
Verbs may form subordinate clauses in the following ways:
- adverbial clauses: the adverbial clause marker -se is appended to a fully declined verb. Its arguments take on subordinate clause suffixes. In the main clause, an agreement morpheme is prefixed to the verb complex.
- complement clauses: the complement clause marker -i is appended to a fully declined verb. Its arguments take on subordinate clause suffixes. In the main clause, the appropriate agreement for a third person singular neuter argument is used (usually null, as complement clauses are usually not agents).
- relative clauses: the relative clause marker ne- is prefixed to a verb with core argument agreement, tense, aspect, and optional negation, but no oblique arguments or subordinate clause agreement markers. If an external head exists, the adjectival marker -u is appended. The position relativized is that of the absolutive argument.
Verbs may combine through conjunction if they share all arguments (and therefore also degree of transitivity) and tense. All but the final verb are marked for aspect and negation only, and the conjunctive ending -u appended. The final verb is an ordinary fully declined finite verb.
Nouns and free pronouns show nominative/accusative alignment, in contrast with the absolutive/ergative alignment of verb agreement. Since the ergative and absolutive agreement markers on the verb are really incorporated pronouns, any standalone pronoun agreed with by such a marker will not appear. However, as absolutive third person pronouns are not marked on the verb, they do appear either in the accusative as objects of transitive verbs, or in the nominative (with null case ending) as subjects of intransitive verbs. Nouns with the oblique case ending have their role marked on the verb. In subordinate clauses nominative nouns take the subordinate nominative ending, and accusative and oblique nouns take the subordinate oblique ending.
Nouns may be possessed. If this is the case, instead of their case ending they have a possessive suffix. They will be preceded by their possessor (unless it is a pronoun which has been subsumed by a verb agreement marker), on which their case will be marked. Agreement on the verb is with the possessor, but the actual argument is the possessed noun.
Nouns in the same case and to which all the same arguments (adjectives, relative clauses, possessors) apply may form conjunction by all but the first noun having the conjunctive noun suffix -so instead of a possessive or case suffix.
The derivational verb prefix rbe- is used to create relative clauses of manner. For example, if "sosu" is "to sleep", "ti asosup" is "they sleep", "[...] atarbesosup" is "they sleep-in-manner [...]", then "neatarbesosup" is "how they sleep" and "neatarbesosupu lupsi" is "the way that they sleep".