Tanemantin

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Tanemantin is one of the Ke:tic languages and a descendent of the classical language Sarim.


Phonology

Tanemantin distinguishes between 17 consonant phonemes

Labial Dental Alveolar Palatal Velar Glottal
Plosive/Affricate p /p/ t /t/ ts /ts/ ch /c/ c /k/
Fricative ph /ɸ/ th /θ/ s /s/ h /h/
Nasal m /m/ n /n/ ny /ɲ/
Liquid w /w/ l /l/ r /ɾ/ y /j/

There are five vowel phonemes /i e a o u/. Length is phonemic, and long vowels are distinguished with macrons. There are also three diphthongs, all falling: /ai au ei eu oi ou/.

Stress

Stress in Tanemantin is non-phonemic, always falling on the penultimate syllable of the word unless an adjacent syllable has a long vowel nucleus, in which case the stress shifts to that syllable. If both the final and antepenultimate vowels are long, stress falls on the final vowel. Monosyllabic semantic words are stressed, grammatical particles are not.

Syllable Structure

Tanemantin has a (C)V(C) syllable structure. Word-internally, /n/ is the only coda consonant that occurs. Word-finally, /m n t θ s h/ are permissible coda consonants.

Allophony

- Word-internal coda /n/ is realised as a nasal at the same point of articulation as the following consonant, e.g. /inɸe/ [ɪm'ɸe]; /ankas/ [ɐŋgɐs].

- Tanemantin has only voiceless stops. They are realised as either plain or lightly aspirated in most environments, except after a nasal where they are realised as voiced. Word final /t/ is realised as unreleased as unreleased.

- /h/ may be realised [x] word-finally.

- The short vowels /a e i o u/ tend to be realised as [ɐ ɛ ɪ ɒ ʊ] except word-finally, where they are realised closer to their cardinal values.

- The long vowels /a: e: i: o: u:/ have a tendency to develop a schwa-like glide: [aə eə iə oə uə].

Nominal Morphology

Noun Classes

Tanemantin has two noun classes: animate nouns include humans, animals, deities and spirits, aswell as certain other bodies such as inim 'the Sun' and 'fire'. Inanimate nouns are everything else.

Number

Tanemantin nouns are marked for singular, plural, and nullar numbers.

The plural morpheme differs with noun class:


The nullar is a fairly recent innovation, from the Sarim partitive case, the use of which was largely limited to the patient of negative verbs and *m(ə)ruʔ 'none' (cf. Tanemantin mai 'nothing'). By the time of Middle Tanemantin the old partitive had come to be the nullar number. Note that for this reason nullar nouns are not marked for case.

Cases

Tanemantin nouns are marked for two cases: the Absolutive and the Ergative.

Pronouns

Personal Pronouns

Tanemantin has the usual run of first, second, and third person pronouns in singular and plural. It also has an obviate "fourth person" pronoun, which is not declined for number. Unlike nouns, Tanemantin pronouns have a distinct genitive case in addition to the normal six cases, and for the first and second person pronouns the ergative, not the absolutive, is the base form of the pronoun.

First Person:

Singular Plural
Absolutive nan nagan
Lative nethī negī
Locative nagā
Ablative nam nagum
Partitive nānu naganu
Ergative naga
Genitive nar nagā

Second Person:

Singular Plural
Absolutive ligan
Lative lithī ligī
Locative ligā
Ablative liyum ligum
Partitive līnu liganu
Ergative li liga
Genitive lir ligā

Third Person:

Singular Plural
Absolutive un ini
Lative unī inithī
Locative una inī
Ablative unum inim
Partitive uneu iniu
Ergative us inī
Genitive una inī


Fourth Person (Obviate):

Singular Plural
Absolutive thi
Lative thī
Locative thī
Ablative thiyum
Partitive thinu
Ergative thī
Genitive thī