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Adverbs may be identified by adding ''-di'' to an adjective.
Adverbs may be identified by adding ''-di'' to an adjective.
:''garm'' (warm) -> ''garm-di'' (warmly)
:''garm'' (warm) ''garm-di'' (warmly)
The particle is pronunced separately from the root, whose pronunciation is left unchanged.
The particle is pronunced separately from the root, whose pronunciation is left unchanged.



Revision as of 15:36, 30 January 2014

Ardlang (/aɾd.laŋg/) is a constructed worldlang created by Elia Ansaloni in 2013. Its main features are a regular phonetic inventory, a strict Subject-Verb-Object sentence order and a vocabulary that aims to defy Eurocentrism without renouncing to widely known translations. While its main inspiration is Lingwa de Planeta, Ardlang has some traits in common with Sambahsa, like the use of proto-languages and a rather wide vocabulary base.

The main linguistic influences of Ardlang are Indo-European languages, Mandarin Chinese (from which most of the isolating grammar is derived) and Arabic, but its a posteriori vocabulary is built considering many other languages, including Austronesian languages, Altaic languages, Swahili, Basque and Nahuatl. This approach is remarked by Ardlang's motto Ab hol dunya, pro hol dunya (From the whole world, for the whole world).

As of 2014, no dictionary of Ardlang has been released, but some translations and lexicon are available on the Unilang forum and on Tumblr.

Phonology and Orthography

Ardlang can be written using both the Latin and the Cyrillic alphabet.

Latin a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z
Cyrillic а б ц д е ф г х и ж к л м н о п ч р с т у в ў ш й з
IPA ä b ʦ/ʣ d е/ɛ f g h/x i ʒ/ʤ k l m n/ŋ о/ɔ p ʧ ɾ/r s t u v w ʃ j z

Some letters can be pronounced in two different ways in order to make the pronunciation easier to the majority of speakers. For example, a Russian or a French speaker would find more natural to pronunce j as /ʒ/, while an English or an Hindi one would rather choose /ʤ/. Both are equally valid and mutually interchangeable. It should be noticed that ng is always pronounced as /ŋg/ and not as /ŋ/ (as it would be in English or Indonesian). N is pronunced as /ŋ/ before velar plosives.

Morphology

Generally, the only way to identify a word as a noun, adjective or verb is the context and the position in the phrase. For example, tuk may stand for "poison", "poisonous" or "to poison".

Articles

There are two determinative articles: al (singular) and li (plural). There is only one indeterminative article: un, which is only singular. Articles are required when it's necessary to clear the status of a noun as singular or plural, or when the noun can't be immediately identified in the phrase.

Nouns

Nouns in Ardlang are static; they do not change for number or case. Some nouns have a masculine and a feminine form that can be obtained by adding o or a to the root.

bin - son or daughter (gender not specified)
bino - son
bina - daughter

However, a noun ending in o or a doesn't necessarily have a specified gender.

kiba - fang
feno - appearance

Few nouns have two different versions.

patro/matra - father/mother
bratro/sestra - brother/sister

Adjectives

Adjectives always precede the noun they're related to.

un hwan dom - a yellow house
al xao kal kat - the small black cat

Adverbs

Adverbs may be identified by adding -di to an adjective.

garm (warm) → garm-di (warmly)

The particle is pronunced separately from the root, whose pronunciation is left unchanged.

Personal pronouns

Ardlang English
me I
tu you
ho/ha/he he/she/it
na we
vo you
le they

Possessive adjectives and pronouns are formed by adding y to the personal pronouns.

Ardlang English
mey I, mine
tuy your, yours
hoy/hay/hey his/her, hers/its
nay our, ours
voy your, yours
ley their, theirs