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Nother/Trentish

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Revision as of 20:22, 12 June 2004 by Muke (talk | contribs) (=Voice=)
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Description

A priori conlang for a race of entlike creatures in Nother. Polysynthetic.


Phonology and Orthography

Phonemic Inventory

Consonants

labial alveolar palatal velar glottal
plosive p pʼ pʰ tʼ tʰ tʷ c cʰ cʷ k kʼ kʰ kʷ ʔ
nasal m n ɲ ŋ
lateral l tɬ
fricative s ʃ x

Vowels

i y ʊ u
e ø o
ʌ ɔ
ɑ

Internal Sandhi

Word-level

  • Trentish words can only end in a vowel or a nasal. Stops and /l/ occurring at the end of a word are nasalized, thus /thɑk/ "wear" becomes [thɑŋ]. /ʔ/ and the other consonants are dropped.

Syllable-level

Syllable-final
  • Plain voiceless consonants disappear, lengthening the previous vowel:
    /xlɔʔ/ "washed, clean" → [xlɔɔkʷʌ] "be washed".
  • Ejectives and /l/ turn to nasals as at the word level:
    /tʰɔl/ "upon" → [tʰɔŋkʷʌ] "be on top of".
  • Labialized consonants reduce to [w]:
    /kitʷ/ COLL → [kiwcʷecʷe] "set of journeys".
  • Aspirated consonants fricativize:
    /pʼɑlɑkʰ/ "hate" → [pʼɑlɑxpʼɑlɑŋ] "grudge".
Syllable-initial after a nasal
  • Aspirated stops are ejectivized by a preceding original nasal:
    /tʰɑŋ/ "wear" → [xɑntʼɑŋ] "wear that"
  • Labialized stops inherit preceding nasality:
    /cʷe/ "go" → [xɑnɲʷe] "go up yonder".
  • Plain stops are aspirated by a preceding nasal:
    /pɑ/ TOP → [xɑnpʰɑ] "yonder"
  • Ejective stops geminate a preceding nasal:
    /pʼɑlɑŋ/ "hate" → [xɑmmɑlɑŋ] "hate that"

Morphology

Reduplication

Reduplication produces resultative nouns from verbal roots.

  • /mɑli/ "speak" → /mɑli-mɑli/ "speech, message"
  • /pʼɑlɑŋ/ "hate" → /pʼɑlɑŋ-pʼɑlɑŋ/ "hatred, grudge" (i.e., [pʼɑlɑxpʼɑlɑŋ])

In reduplication, no more than the first two syllables are reduplicated:

  • /ikʼɑtɬi/ "barter" → /ikʼɑ-ikʼɑtɬi/ "transaction"

Voice

Trentish verbs are marked for voice.

There are five voices, active, unergative, unaccusative, passive, and middle. Their use depends on the presence of and importance given to the agent and patient.

agent patient voice marker
high low active / middle
high none unergative /tɬi-/
low high passive / middle
none high unaccusative /ʔuu-/

The middle voice is used if the agent and patient refer to the same entity (me and myself) or an entity and a part of itself (me and my nose).

The high agent or patient is marked with the topic marker /-pɑ/. The low agent or patient is marked with /-(ɔ)m/.