Deleted
łaá siri (ASCII transcription lhaa: siri) is an minimalist artlang created by Zach Wellstood for personal use. Interesting characteristics include deictic verbal conjugation for the subject and object, a phonological inventory of 10 (or 13, depending on your view, or maybe more depending on other views) phonemes, and a 4-way system of animacy.
Phonetics & Phonology
Consonants
Alveolar | Palatal | Glottal | |
---|---|---|---|
Plosive | ' [ʔ] | ||
Fricative | s [s] | ||
Lateral Fric. | ł [ɬ] | ||
Lateral Aff. | tł [tɬ] | ||
Approx. | r [ɹ] - l [l] | y [j] |
A note of transcription: Typically, the symbols used above will be used by default. If a system doesn't support unicode, or you're in a rush, it's okay to transcribe <ł> as <lh> and <tł> as <tlh>.
Vowels
Front | Back | |
---|---|---|
Close | i [i] ii [iː] u [y] uu [yː]1 | |
Open | a [ɑ] aa [ɑː] |
^1 This phoneme may be realized as [u] or [uː].
Vowel Qualities: Glottal Reinforcement
The presence of a coda with [ʔ] is referred to as "glottal reinforcement." All vowels can be reinforced with a glottal stop at the end. This will be transcribed <a'>, <aa'>, etc. All vowels/chronemes can take on this quality, but rhotic vowels cannot. If two glottal stops approach each other at syllable boundaries, they assimilate into a single phoneme.
Vowel Qualities: Rhotacization
The only other phoneme that can fill a syllable coda is /ɹ/. This is referred to as "rhotacization." English has rhotic vowels, as in waiter. Mandarin Chinese also has this. It's referred to in Mandarin as erhua, or "er-speech" and is represented orthographically using the syllable -er, 儿.
All vowels can be rhotacized except those that are glottaly reinforced. When this does occur, the vowel melds in with the /ɹ/ phoneme, and is articulated for roughly the length of a lengthened vowel. The IPA should reflect this change with the combining hook character: [ɑ˞] or [ɑ˞ː] for <ar> and <aar> respectively. For more on rhotacization, see the Wikipedia Page
Vowel Qualities: Length
Vowels that are transcribed twice (aa, ii, uu) contrast in length with their singular counterparts. It is generally acceptable to assume that a chroneme is held for roughly the equivalent of two vowels, thus /aa/ should be as long as /a/ + /a/. Vowel length is contrastive!
Example
latła [lɑ.tɬɑ] | łatłaa [ɬɑ.tɬɑː] |
---|---|
to move or shift position | big |
Syllable Structure
Syllables are always in a CV{ʔ, ɹ} pattern. If there is ambiguity between syllables, a hyphen can be written for purely aesthetic reasons. The hyphen must be written between two syllables, not in the middle of one: CV-CV, rather than C-VCV. Additionally, rhotacized or reinforced vowels are considered a single unit to a speaker of łaá siri, so <ar> is different from <ra>, and that is why vowels can be r-colored without violating the phonosyntactic constrictions.
Pitch-Accent System
Some syllables will take on a higher/rising pitch, which is part of łaá siri's pitch-accent system. Only the final syllable of a word can take on this feature. It is transcribed using an acute accent over the syllable's (last) vowel (á, aá). The pitch accent of a syllable can also be written (in ASCII transcriptions) using a colon (a:, aa:).
This process is grammatical, occuring in changes of evidentiality and animacy, and is also lexical (e.g., the difference between sár, sleep and sar, good). The change in pitch of a syllable is largely dependent upon the speaker – some have a slightly rising pitch, while others simply have a higher pitch relative to other syllables. It is more common in lengthened vowels for the pitch accent to change to a rising pitch as the speaker moves from low to high in their pitch (/a/ + /á/ > /aá/). In standard IPA transcriptions, pitch accent is shown as a contour pitch [˧˥].
Sound Change & Allophony
Where applicable, some rules have notes. Please note that some are variable rules, while others are obligatory.
Rule | Example |
---|---|
/j/ → [ɥ] / ___V[+round] | yu /jy/ → [ɥy] |
/ɬ/ → [ҫ] / # ___V[-back] | /ɬisi/ → [ҫisi] |
/ʔ/ → [h] / V___ ]σ | /jɑʔ.lɑ/ → [jɑh.lɑ]1 |
/C[-voice]/ → C[+voice] / ɹ]σ ____ | yaa'yirłasaa /jɑːʔ.ji˞.ɬɑ.sɑː/ → [jɑːʔ.ji˞.ɮɑ.sɑː] 2 |
^1 Non-standard sound change. Speak this way if you want to be judged! ;)
^2 Indicative of improper speech or little education. Colloquial.
Morphology
Typically, łaá siri is fairly isolating, with more synthesis shown on verbs than anywhere else. Verbal morphology utilizes prefixes only, while nominal morphology uses only suffixes.
Nominal Morphology
Animacy
Pronouns
Verbal Morphology
Proximity of Subject
Proximity of Object
Evidentiality
Negation
Aspect
Descriptive Morphology
Syntax
Possession
Simple Questions
Wh- Questions
Colloquialisms
Because colloquialisms between languages are rarely mutually intelligible and often rooted in culture, the closest English equivalent to the succeeding phrases has been provided as well. This is often not a direct translation, but something that carries a similar connotation in English.
Literary łaá siri
Most prevalent in łaá siri are numerous constructions and names of constructions used in poetry. Because of the minimal phonetic inventory of vowels, rhyme is very common, but beyond acoustic properties of poetry are many metaphorical constructions.
Counting
łaá siri uses a base-5 (quinary) number system.