Baljek
Baljek jîi géman lé jé | |
Spoken in: | The northern and northeasten regions called Northwest Atipica |
Timeline/Universe: | - |
Total speakers: | Approx. 2.8 million |
Genealogical classification: | Family: Weyr |
Basic word order: | SOV |
Morphological type: | - |
Morphosyntactic alignment: | Nominative-Accusative |
Created by: | |
bornforwater | 2009- |
Baljek (also known as Baljek Weyr, jéi kémani, or jîi géman lé jé) is one of several languages spoken by the people of the planet Ŵadin on the continent called Wytn. The meaning of the name of the language is unclear, but it appears to be influenced or perhaps indirectly descended from an older name for Badis, Parej. It is a language in the family called Weyr, and counts among its closest relatives Pantrelai (also called Pantrelan), and tréi kémani (which is also called Sandic Weyr or Sandic). At this time any divergent dialects have not yet been recorded, but this does not indicate that they do not exist.
The dialect represented here is the one considered by speakers in Mégabo (the region's capital) to be the standard.
Grammar
Letters and such
Note: all pronunciations are based off of the sound of the highlighted parts of the given words as they appear in American English, except where otherwise stated.
Words are spelled as they are pronounced in the dialect of Mégabo.
Vowels
a e é i î o u ú
- a as in ball
- e as in grief
- é as in lay
- i as in in
- î as in eye
- o as in over
- u as in you
- ú as in under
Consonants
b d f g h j jj k l m n p r s t v w z
- b as in ball
- d as in dull
- f as in fast
- g as in girl
- h as in how
- j as in choose
- jj as in just
- k as in cow
- l as in late
- m as in man
- n as in number
- p as in purse
- r as in are
- t as in toggle
- v as in vest
- w as in vest
- z as in zoom
Nouns
Nouns have no separate ending which distinguishes them from verbs (or vice-versa), which can make telling the two apart a skill which must be acquired through much practice (or learning the language natively).
There are is only one definite article: lé, which is used to mark both singular and plural nouns and is not affected by noun declension.
Nouns decline both by number and by case.
Declining by number:
- meka (meaning 'cat')
becomes
- mekan (meaning 'cats')
Note that to create a plural one simply adds +(a)n to the noun. To give a further example of creating a plural noun, we'll use 'gém', which means person.
- gém ('person')
becomes
- géman ('people')
Declining by case:
- meka ('cat')
becomes
- mekat ('cat' in the accusative)
- mekan ('cats')
becomes
- mekatan ('cats' in the accusative)
Again, we'll use gém as a second example:
- gém ('person')
becomes
- gémit ('person' in the accusative)
- géman ('people')
becomes
- gémitan ('trees' in the accusative)
Pronouns
Base pronouns
- I -- Fia
- You -- Pé
- He -- Ka
- She -- é
- It -- Da
- We -- Us
- You (pl/fml) -- Péan
- They -- Also
Pronoun verb markers
Every pronoun has an associated verb-marker which is derived from the full form of the given pronoun. These are used to conjugate verbs (see the verb section for more details).
- I -- ia
- You -- pé
- He -- a
- She -- é
- It -- da
- We -- us
- You (pl/fml) -- na
- They -- al
Pronoun accusative forms
- I -- fiat
- You -- pét
- He -- kat
- She -- ét
- It -- dat
- We -- ust
- You (pl/fml) -- nat
- They -- sot
Adjectives
Adjectives decline neither by number or case. Adjectives have no distinct markers which make them easy to distinguish in sentences, which makes picking them out a skill to be learned.
Adjectives are normally linked to the noun they are modifying by the particle 'lé'. Note that this 'lé' is not the same as the definite article 'lé', despite the fact that they are homophones.
Examples of adjective use:
géma lé aso Person (x) good (a) good person
géman lé aso People (x) good good people