Revived Middle Cornish: Difference between revisions
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| colspan=4 | ''An vro yw Pow Frynk.'' | | colspan=4 | ''An vro yw Pow Frynk.'' | ||
|- align="left" | |- align="left" | ||
! an || | ! an || AGR\bro || yw || Pow.Frynk | ||
|- | |- | ||
| DEF || | | DEF || AGR\country || be.3SG || France | ||
|- | |- | ||
| colspan=4 | ''The country is France.'' | | colspan=4 | ''The country is France.'' | ||
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| colspan=2 | He/she/it is a dog. | | colspan=2 | He/she/it is a dog. | ||
|} | |} | ||
''Yma'' is the copula that tells where something is. Yma is usually placed at the beginning of the sentence. | ''Yma'' is the copula that tells where something is. Yma is usually placed at the beginning of the sentence.[http://www.kesva.org/assets/files/KDL/kdl03.pdf] | ||
{| | {| | ||
| colspan=4 | ''Yma Truru yn Kernow.'' | | colspan=4 | ''Yma Truru yn Kernow.'' | ||
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| colspan=4 | ''Yma gwerthji y'n dre.'' | | colspan=4 | ''Yma gwerthji y'n dre.'' | ||
|- align="left" | |- align="left" | ||
! yma || gwerthji || y'n || | ! yma || gwerthji || y'n || AGR\tre | ||
|- | |- | ||
| be || shop || in.DEF || | | be || shop || in.DEF || AGR\town | ||
|- | |- | ||
| colspan=4 | There is a shop in the town. | | colspan=4 | There is a shop in the town. | ||
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=== Particles === | === Particles === | ||
The particle ''a<sup>2</sup>'' is used before verbs in nominal sentences to mark for [[Wikipedia:Grammatical polarity|affirmative polarity]].[http://www.kesva.org/assets/files/KDL/kdl02.pdf] | The particle ''a<sup>2</sup>'' is used before verbs in nominal sentences to mark for [[Wikipedia:Grammatical polarity|affirmative polarity]].[http://www.kesva.org/assets/files/KDL/kdl02.pdf] | ||
{| | |||
| colspan=5 | ''Hi a skrif dhe goweth.'' | |||
|- align="left" | |||
! hi || a || skrif || dhe || AGR\koweth | |||
|- | |||
| she || PPI || write || to || AGR\friend | |||
|- | |||
| colspan=5 | She writes to a friend. | |||
|} | |||
== Syntax == | == Syntax == | ||
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|- | |- | ||
| colspan=3 | The fisherman's fishing boat. | | colspan=3 | The fisherman's fishing boat. | ||
|} | |||
Have-constructions, e.g. "X has Y", are construed as ''yma Y dhe<sup>2</sup> X''.[http://www.kesva.org/assets/files/KDL/kdl03.pdf] | |||
{| | |||
| colspan=4 | ''Yma kok dhe byskador.'' | |||
|- align="left" | |||
! yma || kok || dhe || AGR\pyskador | |||
|- | |||
| be || fishing.boat || to || AGR\fisherman | |||
|- | |||
| colspan=4 | A fisherman has a fishing boat. | |||
|} | |||
This literally translates as "there is a fishing boat to a fisherman". Dhe<sup>2</sup> combines with [[Revived_Middle_Cornish#Personal_Pronouns|personal pronouns]] however. | |||
{| | |||
| colspan=3 | ''Yma chi dhodho.'' | |||
|- align="left" | |||
! yma || chi || dhodho | |||
|- | |||
| be || house || to.him | |||
|- | |||
| colspan=3 | He has a house. | |||
|} | |} | ||
{{Natlangs}} | {{Natlangs}} |
Revision as of 09:53, 11 November 2012
I, Qwynegold, am writing this article while self-studying Cornish online, as a way of sorting out what I have learned. Maybe others will have use of this as well? I'm expanding the article little by little as I progress in my study. I'm using the online course Kernewek Dre Lyther (KDL), so most references will be of that. There are also some references to the PDF An Outline of the Standard Written Form of Cornish.
Revived Middle Cornish Kernewek | |
Spoken in: | Cornwall, United Kingdom |
World: | Earth |
Total speakers: | 3,500 (all varieties) |
Genealogical classification: | Indo-European
|
Basic word order: | |
Morphological type: | |
Morphosyntactic alignment: |
Phonology and Orthography
*sigh*
Initial Mutation
In Cornish, some words cause the initial consonant of the following word to change. This is called mutation. There are five different types of mutation in Cornish, called soft, breathed, hard, mixed and mixed after Th, referring to the sound changes involved. These are numbered 2-6, and are usually just referred to by their number.[1] For example dhe2 means that the word dhe causes soft mutation in the following word. This table shows which sounds change into what in different mutation states. An empty cell means that no change happens, and a dash means that the sound is elided. For example the word gramasek becomes ramasek in second state (soft) mutation.
1 Unmutated |
2 Soft |
3 Breathed |
4 Hard |
5 Mixed |
6 Mixed after Th |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
B | V | P | F | V | |
Ch | J | ||||
D | Dh | T | T | T | |
G+{a, e, i, y} | - | K | H | H | |
G+{o, u, ro, ru} | W | K | Hw | W | |
G+{l, r} | - | K | |||
Gw | W | Kw | Hw | W | |
K | G1 | H2 | |||
M | V | F | V | ||
P | B1 | F | |||
T | D1 | Th |
1No change if the previous word ends with S or Th.
2No change if followed by L, N or R.
Morphology
Articles
There was a word unn that was sometimes used as an indefinite article in old Cornish texts, but Revived Cornish seldomly use any indefinite article.[2]
Adjectives
Adjectives follow the noun they modify. Adjectives following singular feminine nouns take mutation form 2.[3]
Verbs
Copulas
Cornish has two copulas: One that tells who, what or how something is, and one that tells where something is. The former one is yw in the third person singular form.[4]
An vro yw Pow Frynk. | |||
an | AGR\bro | yw | Pow.Frynk |
---|---|---|---|
DEF | AGR\country | be.3SG | France |
The country is France. |
A third person singular subject pronoun may be dropped when yw is used, in which case yw is placed after its complement.[5]
Ki yw. | |
ki | yw |
---|---|
dog | be.3SG |
He/she/it is a dog. |
Yma is the copula that tells where something is. Yma is usually placed at the beginning of the sentence.[6]
Yma Truru yn Kernow. | |||
yma | Truru | yn | Kernow |
---|---|---|---|
be | Truro | in | Cornwall |
Truro is in Cornwall. |
No distinction is made between "is" and "there is" as in English.
Yma gwerthji y'n dre. | |||
yma | gwerthji | y'n | AGR\tre |
---|---|---|---|
be | shop | in.DEF | AGR\town |
There is a shop in the town. |
Particles
The particle a2 is used before verbs in nominal sentences to mark for affirmative polarity.[7]
Hi a skrif dhe goweth. | ||||
hi | a | skrif | dhe | AGR\koweth |
---|---|---|---|---|
she | PPI | write | to | AGR\friend |
She writes to a friend. |
Syntax
Possession
There is no genitive morpheme in Cornish. Instead possession is shown by simply placing the possessor after the possessee.[8]
Kok an pyskador. | ||
kok | an | pyskador |
---|---|---|
fishing.boat | DEF | fisherman |
The fisherman's fishing boat. |
Have-constructions, e.g. "X has Y", are construed as yma Y dhe2 X.[9]
Yma kok dhe byskador. | |||
yma | kok | dhe | AGR\pyskador |
---|---|---|---|
be | fishing.boat | to | AGR\fisherman |
A fisherman has a fishing boat. |
This literally translates as "there is a fishing boat to a fisherman". Dhe2 combines with personal pronouns however.
Yma chi dhodho. | ||
yma | chi | dhodho |
---|---|---|
be | house | to.him |
He has a house. |
This article is one of quite a few pages about Natlangs. Indo-european natlangs:
Uralic Natlangs: Finnish * Khanty * Mansi * Mordvinic * Proto-Uralic
Isolate Natlangs: Basque * * |