Draga

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This page provides an overview of the draqa (or, "draga", pron. '/t◌̪ɚ. æ. ɦæ/' ) language, and some of its lexical items. Draga is my own personal conlang, and is in daily use by a speakership of one. It is intended to useable by human beings, but I wanted to break a few universals in the process. The phonology comes from analysis of my personal random "babbling". I also wanted to pursue ways of thinking mostly alien to my native language (English) and culture (American/Black), and create a better vehicle for expressing certain personal, perhaps "mystic" experiences in everyday speech. The "lofty" goals, however, are relatively recent. Originally, it was just something fun to do.


Xeanpasyufei-vert.jpeg


Introduction

draqa (draga) is a personal constructed language, "spoken" by an exile population who call their homeland Qhyra. Technically, "draqa" (with a 'q') refers to an ancient form of the language, and "draga" (with a 'g') to the modern language; however, the spelling "draqa" is often used for either. Even more ancient -.preceding draqa - is draga (pronounced /dra. ga/ and technically referred to as proto-draga), which evolved from dragat.


The history of the draga people is quite mysterious. Apparently, the civilization of Qhrya arose in the North American continent, contemporary with (but not related to) the Atlantean civilization of the second destruction (~13,500 B.C.) Within 1.000 years of that cataclysm, Qhrya was completely sacked, leaving fewer than 2,000 souls to wander for almost 200 years. Finding no respite, apparently the nation astrally projected themselves en masse into a parallel reality, where they have continued to thrive. The prophecies say that eventually the nation will reincarnate into this world in the 20th, 21st and 22nd centuries, at first scattered across the continents but eventually re-unified into a small nation again.

The draga are a dream-travelling people, whose primary mode of long-distance (as well as inter-dimensional and temporal) travel is astral-projection. Hence, culturally and linguistically, they are easily adapted to "primitive", "high-tech" and even "psychic" environments.


Phonetic Inventory

Consonants

labial dental alveolar palatal velar post-velar glottal
plosives: pʼ (p) t_ tʼtz ʈ cʼ(c) kʷ kʲ q ʔ
aspirates:
fricative: f (ʰɸ) (ð) s ʃ (ç) (x) ʜ ɦ
liquids: w l j
trills: ʙ̥ ʀ̥
nasals: m (n_) (n) ɲ
implosives: ɓ (ʘʷ) ǃ


Vowels

i ʊ
ʷɔˑ
ə(ʌ) ɚ
æ


Orthography / Phonological Considerations

Transliteration of the draga language uses 25 characters of the Roman alphabet: a, b, c, d, e, f, g, h, i, j, k, l, m, ñ, o, p, q, r, s, t, u, w, x, y, z - and both the single-quote ( ' ) and double-quote ( " ) symbols to represent the sounds. In addition, the acute accent is used to represent pitch-accenting: á í ú. Traditionally, draga is written in a native alphabetic script that is supplemented by many logographs which are used to represent the most frequently used particles and lexemes. For some unfathomable reason, there is also a rare transliteration scheme which utilizes the Coptic alphabet.


Consonants

p [pʼ] or [p] ph [pʰ]
d [t_] initially ; [d_] or [ð] medially ; [ð] after 'ñ': ñd [n_ð]
t' [tʼ] t [tʰ] ty [ʈ]
c [cʼ] or [c] ch [cʰ]
q [q] qh [qʰ] kw [kʷ] ky [kʲ]
f [f], [ʰɸ] before 'w': fw [ʰɸw]
s [s] j [tʼz] or [tz] x [ʃ]
m [m]
ñ [ɲ], [n_] before 'd': ñd [n_ð]
w [w], [ʘʷ] (bilabial click) following initial syllabic 'm': mw [mʘʷ]
l [l]
y [j]
h [ʜ], [x] before 'l' or 'w', [ç] before 'y' g [ɦ] (voiced /h/)
b [ɓ] (bilabial implosive)
z [ǃ] (alveolar implosive, i.e. click)
p" [ʙ̥] (voiceless bilabial trill)
t" [r̥] (voiceless alveolar trill)
q" [ʀ̥] (voiceless post-velar trill)
' [ʔ] ; or abbreviated spelling of certain prefixes: x'-, h'-, f'-


Vowels

There are 12 vowels in the draga language:

  • ï, í, i /i/
  • á, a /æ/
  • ae /æeˑ/
  • e /əˑ/
  • ou /ʷɔˑ/
  • ú / ó, o /ʊ/
  • r, rr (ë) /ɚˑ/


Draga is a pitch-accented language:

  • i, a, e, o, rr (ë) are intoned at median pitch. They are considered unaccented.
  • í, á, r are intoned at high pitch - typically 3-5 whole tones above the median.
  • ï is intoned at very high pitch - typically 5 - 8 whole tones above the median.
  • ú is intoned with a high, falling pitch, while ó is intoned with a high pitch.
  • ae is obviously a dpthong, but is treated as an invididual vowel. It is intoned at median pitch.
  • ou is always intoned with a slightly long, low pitch - typically 3-5 whole tones below the median.



Rhoticization.

Some vowels can be found rhoticized. The r here is intoned at median pitch:

  • ír, ir, ár, ar, aer, or



Special Cases:

  • ïr is intoned falling from very high pitch to median.
  • úor is intoned falling from high pitch to low pitch.
  • ra is intoned falling from high pitch to median.



Spelling Conventions

The following spellings are found interchangably in draga transliteration, ea and eu being the most commonly used:

  • io <-> iu <-> eu
  • ia <-> ea


Syllable and Word Structure

draga Syllables are formed as follows:


C1 = Any Consonsant, or †Cluster ; V = Any Vowel or Compound ; C2 = Any Final Consonant: ( f, m, w, p", s, c, x, ñ, q)

(C1) - (V) - (C2 |/ʔ/)
  • V (/ʔ/).
  • C2.
  • C1 - V (/ʔ/).
  • C1 - C2.
  • C1 - V - C2.

†Allowable Consonant Clusters: pw, py, phw, phy, phl, tw, tl, jw, zw, z', qhw, qhl, xw, xl (sl), fw/hw, hl, hy, gw, gy, ml, lw, ly, bw, by


draga Words (Roots) are typically 2-4 syllables in length, and generally begin with any sound but g /ɦ/. The phone e /ə/ is thus far unattested formally as a final vowel, and the phone ' /ʔ/ never ends a word. Many Roots may also have more than one related form, which are pretty much interchangeable and are selected for by context, e.g. ftyeañ /f. ʈiæɲ/, might alternatively be pronounced 'ftyañ' /f. ʈæˑɲˑ/, or 'ftyaña' /f. ʈæ. ɲæ/. Orthographically, this phenomenon is very much up in the air: There is some debate around whether certain "standard" forms of words should be written at all times, or whether actual or intended pronunciation should be indicated.


Grammar Notes

Preface

draga has two types of morphemes, Particles and Roots. Roots are generally "content" words, and include what would be Nouns, Verbs and Adjectives in English, even Adverbs. None of those distinctions are made in the draga language, and theoretically, any applicable Particle can be used with any Root. So, to say lyíañc "Home + My (My home)", skyaác "Running + My (I run)", and phoiac "Joyful + My (I am happy)" - the same construction is used throughout. Of course, skyaác could also mean "My running" or "My run"; and phoiac could mean "My joy" depending on context.


This context is based on a relationship between a Predicate and its Argument(s), which are the roles available to Roots in the draga language. A Predicate may or may not be modified, or juxtaposed, with one or multiple Arguments - and the relationship of these Roots (or phrases) to each other may or may not be made more explicit by some Particle. This is the general role of Particles in the draga language: to modify the meaning of a Root, or to clarify the relationships among Roots or phrases.


However, there is a special type of Particle in draga which is always essential. This is the Speech Act Particle (SAP), which is always the beginning of a sentence. The SAP may contain evidential, or mood information - or it may indicate that a question is being asked, a command given, etc. Often, an SAP may be the whole sentence all by itself.


Some basic SAPs that will be useful right away:


  • ía Introduces a subjective personal 1st person (me, my) experience: ía phoia: "I am happy, i.e. I experience joy."
  • fwoia Indicates that "I witness(ed) this personally": fwoia phoiada: "I see that s/he is happy."
  • Is used to asked a 2nd person (you) question: mú phoia: "Are you happy?"
  • eia Is used when telling stories, or relating information one has overheard at some point, but not having experience it personally: eia phoiada: "S/he was happy", "They say that s/he is happy."
  • es Is used to express a negative sentence: es phoiada: "S/he is not happy


BTW, the punctuation mark ' : ' indicates the end of a draga sentence.


Definite Articles

There are two in draga, the weak and the strong definite articles. The weak article acts like "the", "some", "this", etc. in referring to a specific instance of what you're talking about:


  • pha-lyíañ, lyíañ-paá Home, the home, this home, my home, etc.
  • pha-haña, haña-paá This / that / the human being
  • pha-síaha, síaha-paá The deer, etc.
  • pha-laex, laex-paá The drinking water
  • pha-skyaá, skyaá-paá Running, The run, this running, etc.


The weak (or Iconic) definite article creates a word referencing an iconic or essential form of the concept at hand. Examples of this kind of thing in English would be: "The MAN", "Big Government", "Justice", "The Law", "God", "They", etc. Fittingly, of course, none of those particular examples are concepts that actually exist in the draga language:


  • xían-pa
  • syú-pa
  • hluiso-pa



Pronominals

Personal Pronominal forms come in two flavors: Generic and Agency. The Generic form does not specify anything about the relationship between the pronominal (i.e. the "person") and the Predicate it is related to. The Agency form specifically indicates that the "person" has acted in some way with regard to the concept described by the Predicate. This agency is not necessarily volitional (intentional) or even animate.


Generic Root Agency Root Generic Particle Agency Particle Person
phayac phaxían -(w)(e)c -xían, -xi 1st Person Exclusive
phawix phawaqs -wix -weaqs, -waqs 1st Person Inclusive
phameí phamagyi -mei -magyi 2nd Person
phayañ phalor -ña -lor *Referent (2nd or 3rd Person)
phayañ phadae -da -dae 3rd Person Animate/ Abstract
phakwoi phakwoi -kwoi -kwoi 3rd Person Inanimate
phafeas phafeas -feas -feas 4th Person (Obviate) Animate/ Abstract
phakwoiaf phakwoiaf -kwoiaf -kwoiaf 4th Person (Obviate) Inanimate


  • The Referent is the "person" under discussion, or the "main character", per se. In classic draga there was no specific Pronominal form for 2p direct address, and it's use is still relatively infrequent - primarily for clarity, emphasis or endearment. The Referent is a 3rd person form (animate, abstract or inanimate), whose reference can be "switched" to indicate a 2nd person, i.e. "S/he (which is you)." The referent switches include: mú, m and añmagyi.


Examples: (fbaí "surface, table", skyaá "running", phoia "joy", siha "green")

  • fbaí-c "My table" (That I own, or is related to me in some way)
  • fbaí-xïañ "My table" (That I act upon in some way)
  • skyaá-wíx "Our running", "We run/ran¨ or even ¨We were run¨
  • skyaá-waqs "Running that we do/did/are doing"
  • phoia-da "His/her joy", "S/he is happy"
  • siha-ña "It's green-ness", "It is green", "Her/your green (-ness) (-ing) (thing)", etc.
  • siha-lor ¨The greening/greenness/etc. that s/he (or you) influence/act-upon¨, etc.



wañ

phawoi, paá

Locatives

The Locatives are Particles that indicate location, motion and direction. However, their broad usage allows for simple creation of useful sentences:


Unbound Semi-bound Fully Bound
ie -qor at, in, on, to, toward, from
yor- -yir toward
fwor-, yor- -tyíar at, in, on
hyañ- -pyír successfully to
swor- -sear unsuccessfully toward
jwor- -tyoi, -chou (originating) from
-fir in the general direction of
-teyou in a general direction away from


Examples: (lyaña "home", kyïafa "understanding", phuia "joy")

  • yor-lyíañ "Toward home", "Going home"
  • kyïafa-sear "Try unsuccessfully to understand"
  • phoia-tyoi "Originating from (a place of ) joy," e.g. within one'sself, etc.


Example Sentences:

  • ía yor-lyíañ: "I am going home."
  • mú hyañ-kyïafa: "Were you able to finally understand?"
  • fwoia phoia-teyou-da: "I see that s/he is becoming less joyful."


Some other locative particles inlude:

  • haya- Inside of
  • wosa- On the border, surface, edge, at the entrace, etc.
  • sdáña- Outside of
  • -jïila Through
  • -de'tew Throughout



Genitives

The Genitives are the Particles that clarify the relationship between Roots. The structure used is Predicate - Genitive - Argument - where the Predicate is a Root, of which further information about it is given by the Argument , which is also a Root. The meaning would translate to "The X (Predicate) OF Y (Argument)". The Genitive, then, clarifies what type of OF is being referred to:


xor-, x'- Of (generic)
cor- Of (explicit) Agent ...
háñ- Associated with, Correlated with, Identified with
em- Portion, part of
ho-, húa- Attributed with, Filled with
mes- Composed of
war- Functioning as, In the role of
tañ- (Of) Benificiary
táyañ- (Of) Benefactor


Examples: (skyaá "running", síaha "deer", qhowa "writing, book", sohoi "student", tiñtá "wall (freestanding)", peuñ "stone", ñama "food, meal" )

  • skyaá x'síaha - "Deer's running"
  • síaha ho-skyaá - "Deer which is/are running"
  • qhowa háñ-sohoi - "Book for students, i.e. which is associated with students / studenthood"
  • peuñ em-tintá - "Stone from a/the wall, Stone part of the wall"
  • tiñtá mes-peuñ - "Wall made of stone"
  • ñama tañ-ec - "Meal for me "
  • ñama táyañ-magyi - "Meal that you (2p) prepared (for someone)"
  • ñama tañec táyañmagyi - "Meal that you prepare for me"


x'- / cor-

These Generic forms are often the basis for complete sentences:

  • fwoia skyaá corsíaha: "I see deer running."
  • eia phoia x'síaha: "(They say) the deer are happy."
  • mú sohui x'phayañ: "Is that your student?"


When a Root ends with a "-c", the "-c" becomes "-q" in front of the Generic Genetive Particle "x'-". Also notice the distinction in meaning (as well as form) when using the non-Agency form of Generic Genetive as compared to the Agency form. This is the distinction the applies the Agency vs. Non-Agency across the board in the draga language:


(míac means "aid, facillitate, allow, give, etc.")

  • ía míac: "I help, etc. or, am helped, etc."
  • ía míaq x'sohoi: "I help (a/the) student." or, "A/the student helps me" literally, "I experience aiding of student."
  • ía míac cor'sohoi: "The student helps me." i.e. the student is the Agency of the aid


In case you might be wondering how the specify that it is "I" who helps the student, the best way to go would probabaly be: "ía míac tañsohoi:"


tañ- / táyañ-

war-

This Particle means "(used) in the role of" or "as". However, its broad usage allows for a good deal of information to be expressed in a compact way:


  • ía tiñtá warhióc: "I use the wall as a seat."
  • eia peuñ warqhowa: "They say it's written on a stone.", literally, stone as book (i.e. any written media)
  • fwoia síaha warñamaña: "I saw [them] making a meal of the deer.", i.e. deer as a meal


-dei... -dá

This pair of Particles is used to embed Genitive phrases within other Genitive phrases.:

  • qhowa hañ-sohoi ho-tintáyir "Student's book, which is at the wall"
  • qhowa hañ-sohoi-dei ho-tintáyir "Book of the student who is at the wall"
  • qhowa hañsohoidei hotintáyir- warñama x'síaha "Book of the sudent who is at the wall, which the deer makes a meal of"



Active Particles

There are several Particles which can be used to modify the meanings of Roots to make them refer to various manners of activity or action:

  • ïama- Approaching / arriving at a state
  • sama- Departure from a state
  • hi-, hieñ- Associated action or result
  • fía- Multiple manifestations grouped as a single instance; Done totally, completely, to the fullest extent
  • hío- Using


Examples:

  • ïamaskyaá Starting to run, Coming into a state of running, etc.
  • ïamapeuñ Turn into stone
  • ïamakyïafa Coming to understand, know, etc.
  • samaphoia, samphoia Becoming unhappy
  • samasohoi Quitting being a student
  • hiqhowa Read a book; write a boot, etc.
  • hiskyaá Run, really running, etc.
  • hiñama Eat a meal; Prepare a meal
  • fíañama Banquet, huge meal; A group of meals; Meals (we had together, etc.)
  • fíakyïafa Completely, thoroughly understand
  • fía-hi-ñama Totally devour
  • hío-pha-chaeq Using this/ that cutting implement
  • ía híokyïafa: "I [do it by] using [my] understanding / knowledge."





Phrase-Final Root Forms

There are certain Roots which are used commonly in a nearly auxiliary function, and are often pushed to the end of a phrase. Whether their roles would or could be analyzed as displaced Predicates or, instead, as Particles is a source of debate. In any case, the phrase-final Root forms are used quite frequently and regularly.


Root Phrase-final form Meaning Example
kyíañ kyae want. need ía phoia kyae: "I want to be happy."
haán hae something finished, done, completed ía phoia hae: "I was happy, I enjoyed, I achieved joy, etc."
fwaí fwae like ía phoia fwae: "I like happiness, like to be joyful."
mïac mae let, allow, help, give ía phoia mae: "I give joy, permit enjoyment, aid happiness, cause joy. etc."
seia sae no, not ía phoia sae: "I did not experience joy, am not happy."
jweya jwae "yes, certainly" ía phoia jwae: "I am definitely happy!"



Conjunctions

Root Level

hya And; And / Or (Inclusive 'Or')
s.ña Exclusive 'or'; Negative 'Or' ("nor")
xwío Together with (inclusive emphasis)
xwoi Along with (exclusive emphasis)



Phrasals: h' (hei) and dañ

The phrasal Conjunctions h' and dañ are extremely important in creating lengthier and more complex sentences in draga. They are used to join one phrase to another.

h' has the meaning of "In addition, and also, etc." and continues to add information to the idea expressed in the previous phrase:

  • eia xrla, h' ïamasohoi:
  • ía ïamapa'o, h' ïamacawo, h' ïamamadr, h' ïamaphaex, h' ïamaxoq, h' ïamapa'o:



dañ has the meaning of "With regards to, about, concerning, etc.":




Speech Act Particles

Any draqa sentence begins with a Speech Act Particle (SAP), often used in conjunction with a Qualifier. The SAPs fall into three types: Evidentials, Mood Indicators, and Speech Act Indicators. More than one SAP can also be used sometimes at the beginning of a sentence. A complete sentence often may consist of nothing but the Speech Act Particle:


Evidentials

hoia

1st Person Objective, i.e. "I experienced it (external perception)"

fwoia

1st Person Visual. i.e. "I witnessed it"

awo

1st Person Auditory, i.e. "It sounds to me like"

ía

1st Person Subjective, i.e. "I experienced it (internal perception)"

skyea-tae

1st Person Psionic i.e. "I know it from a dream, vision, intuition, etc."

ámiña

,i.e. "I heard from someone who said s/he experienced it"

ámiñ-tae

i.e. "I heard from someone who said s/he witnessed it"

(a') phx-a

,i.e. "I heard from someone unreliable who said s/he experienced it"

phx.a-tae

,i.e. "I heard from someone unreliable who said s/he witnessed it"



Mood Indicators

mpaha

Opiniative (Probable) Mood

sempa

Opiniative (Negative Probability) Mood

xweña

Expectant Mood

qhwui-a

1st Person Imperative Mood

fo

Irrealis Mood

(a)skyea

Dreaming (Psionic) Mood


Speech Act Indicators

eia

Narrative Speech Act

a

Subjective (Non-Realis) Speech Act

xe'a

Interrogative Speech Act

2nd Person Interrogative Speech Act

sei, es

Negative Statement or Negative Imperative Speech Act


Qualifiers

ido-

Indicates the Evidential source

añ-

Topicalizing Particle

m, -magyi

Phrase Level Conjunctions

dañ "About, Regarding, With respect to, Concerning..."
ou "And correspondingly / correlatedly / provoking..."
pái "Intentionally provoking..."
la.qs.a "Unintentionally provoking..."
z'ou "And of increasing correlation... "
dasi "In response to...", "Motivated by... "
dada "Intending (that)...", "In order to..."
he'ae "And surprisingly..."
chúmae "And unsurprisingly..."
kwmaskwa, msqa "And then / simultaneously / simulfactively..."
m.yamwa "Otherwise... "
saáñ "Rather / Instead / But not... "
ñáwa "However..."
ñúwi "Although / Despite..."
m.miema "Except... "
haf "In comparison to... "




Other Useful Particles

Negative

The draga langauge has several negatory Particles:

sei'


s'-


-sieñ


Count Particles

Any draga Root can be prefixed with one the number particles to indicate a count of up to six:


  • f- one
  • ñ'- two
  • d'- three
  • w'- four
  • m'- five
  • xw'- six
  • fae- many, a multitude



Demonstrative

síaf- -seaf Reflexive
tyigi - -tyigi Reciprocal
fir- -fír Immediate
qhwú- -kwo Proximal
yálo- -yalo Peri-Proximal
báo- -bao Distal
t'ou- -tou Absent


Examples: (aqa "person", phoia "joy")

  • aqa-seaf "The person her/himself"
  • phoia-seaf "Self-joy, enjoy one's self"
  • aqa-tyigi "Those reciprocating each other"
  • phoia-tyigi "Enjoy each other, Give each other joy"
  • fir-aqa "This person here, me"
  • phoia-fír "This (immediate) joy"
  • t'ou-aqa "Person who is not here"
  • phoia-tou "Joy which is (perhaps figuratively) absent"


Compound Locatives

This set of locatives express relative position rather direction. They are combined forms of 2 parts:


Heads: fwía- "Above", jeuq- "Below", daea- "Level with", qhow- "In front of", qhaw- "Behind", duia- "Next to"

Codas: -da- "Located", -ha- "Touching, Connected or Attached", -sui- "Not touching or attached, disconnected, separate from"


The combined forms appear as prefixes:

fwíada- jeuqda- daeada- qhowda- qhawda- duiada-
fwíaha- jeuqha- daeaha- qhowha- qhawha- duiaha-
fwíasui- jeuqsui- daeasui- qhowsui- qhawsui- duiasui-


Examples: (fbaí "surface, table")

  • fwíada-fbaí - "(Somewhere) above the top the table"
  • fwíaha-fbaí - "On top of the table"
  • fwíasui-fbaí - "Above the table (not touching it)"



Classification:

aqa- person: human, animal, spirit, etc. xigi- round object
phoso- plant hyoci- open sided structure
dowa- location, situation quiyo- box-shaped object
hayou- action, process, occurrence, state kwú- type, class; ethnic group
hío- Tool sakyií- flying thing
sbor- spatial area; integral portion, body part o'ya- container, ceramic, dish
tfuio- (tfoyo-) flat discrete object phesqa- textile, clothing
xwao- mass object tasi- machine
peda- long, narrow object


Numbers

The draga number system is base-6. During the material height of the draga civilization, a base-30 system was devised and used for hundreds of years alongside the original base-6, and some vestiges can still be found, especially in the writing system and the calendar.

base-6 base-10 base-6 base-10
ifa 01 * pinky 1 íwa ñaxwae 24 16
aña 02 * add ring 2 amwa ñaxwae 25 17
dows 03 * add middle 3 doxwae 30 18
íwa 04 * add pointer 4 íxwae 40 24
amwa 05 * add thumb 5 maxwae 50 30
ihoa 10 * close fist 6 walo 1,00 36
hyawo 11 7 ifa walo 1,01 37
fawo 12 8 ihoa walo 1,10 42
bií 13 9 walo aña 2,00 72
qhowei 14 10 walo dows 3,00 108
amwae 15 11 walo íwa 4,00 144
ñaxwae 20 12 walo amwa 5,00 180
ifa ñaxwae 21 13 walo ihoa 10,00 216
aña ñaxwae 22 14 wegwalo 1,00,00 1,296
dows ñaxwae 23 15 '


Although the numbers are base 6, you will notice that the counting numbers run from 1-12 (1-20, baqe 6), and once the count has arrived past 36 (100 base 6) - it continues to use the 1 -12 count, and it uses groupings of 36's rather than 6's:

  • ifa walo (37), aña walo (38), dows walo (39), íwa walo (40), amwa walo (41), ihoa walo (42), ...
  • hyawo walo (43), fawo walo (44), bií walo (45), qhowei walo (46), amwae walo (47), ñaxwae walo (48) ...
  • ifa ñaxwalo (=ñaxwae walo) (49) , ..., mamaxwalo (=amwamaxwae walo) (71) , walo aña (72)



Ordinals:



Special Roots

There are many Roots in draga whose meanings are often grammaticized in other languages. These include Roots that are Pronomial, Aspectual, that indicate Number, Intensity, Frequency, Consistency and even words with meanings like 1p acting on 2p ("I do to you"), 3p acting on 1p ("S/he does to me"), etc.


Kinship / Relationship

More commonly than Pronominal Roots, especially when talking in the Second person, it is preferable and considered much more sociable to use kinship or other personal-relationship terms:

pae Mother, Mama
payá Mother, Mother's sibling
fipi Mother's younger sibling
piñó Mother's older sibling
fifipi Youngest of Mother and her siblings
pippiñó Eldest of Mother and her siblings
mae Grandma
mayá Grandmother, Grandmother's sibling
fimi Grandmother's younger sibling
miñó Grandmother's older sibling
fifimi Youngest of Grandmother and her siblings
mimiñó Eldest of Grandmother and her siblings
wica Younger sibling
wiwica Youngest sibling
piwí Older sibling
pipiwí Oldest sibling
tyíwa Cousin
tití Younger cousin
cáwi Older cousin
twií Offspring, Sibling's offspring
------------
figwi Primary partner
pwouxi "Soul" friend or partner
swae Lover, Sexual friend or partner
xaf Survival, domestic friend or partner
sehwiñ Mother's partner
sepaxi Mother's romantic / sexual partner at the time of pregnancy
se'alo Mother's friend
------------
hiñda Acquaintance
hiña Friendly Acquaintance
hoi Friend
haxa Very close friend
Temporary immediate friend
fago Stranger
xamtií Suitor, Person of mutual interest
twiís Classmate, Fellow, Group member
q"aña Friendly client or customer
q"om Regular client or customer
t'aám Business partner; Co-worker
chakyi Rival
jáo Adversary


Interpersonal Action

xweiam, xwemi 1p Excl. → 2p "I do it to you", "What I did to you"
xweiar, xir 1p Excl. → 3p "I do it to her/him", "What I did to her/him"
xweiaf 1p Excl. → 4p "I do it to the other one", "What I did to the other one"
------------
phweiañ 1p Incl. → 3p "We do it to her/him", "What we did to them"
phweiaf 1p Incl. → 4p "You do it to the other one", "What we did to the other one"
------------
mweiax, mwexi 2p → 1p "You do it to me/us", "What you did to me/us"
mweiar, mir 2p → 3p "You do it to her/him", "What you did to her/him"
mweiaf 1p → 4p "You do it to the other one", "What you did to the other one"
------------
lweiax, lwix 3p → 1p "S/he does it to me/us", "What s/he did to me/us"
lweiañ, lwim 3p → 2p "S/he does it to you", "What s/he did to you"
lweiaf 1p → 3p "S/he does it to the other one", "What s/he did to the other one"
------------
feiax 4p → 1p "The other one does it to me/us", "What the other one did to me/us"
feiam 4p → 2p "The other one does it to you", "What the other one did to you"
feiar 4p → 3p "The other one does it to her/him", "What the other one did to her/him"


Aspectual

yom Progressive "Right now", "Doing it right now"
hae Perfective "[Something that] Has/had/will have been done or completed"
seu Discontinuous "Used to do / was doing, but no longer"
pyío Continuous "Still doing, Keep on doing"
kyila Habitual "Done regularly", "Habit"
------------
kwiha "Not yet", "Something not yet happened", before
kyaha "Already", "Something already completed", after
yom-kwiha "About to begin"
kwiha-yom "Just starting"
yom-kyaha "Finishing up"
kyaha-yom "Just finished"
------------
sya'a "A short time"
íoyo "A long time"
trwa "Ending abruptly, suddenly"
wíwa "Ending gradually"
sya'atr "Short and suddenly ending"
sya'awíw "Short and gradually ending"
íotr "Lengthy and suddenly endling"
íowiw "Lengthy and gradually ending"



Particle-like Roots

Intensity

úalo , úgalo, lawor Extreme intensity, "Very, very"
skwui High intensity,"Very"
skwaer Moderate intensity, "Moderately"
skwala Mild intensity, "Mildly"
skwemya Low intensity, "Very slightly"
fewa / kyeu Overly-intense, Too (much)
sasa Under-intense, Too little
phweilo Good, "right" intensity or level
áwei(kya) More, More intense
weiwa(kya), wiwi Less, Less intense
ajíawa Of varying/ modulating/ oscillating intensity


Number

fía-fikwo All, every, each
fikwo Most
fíañ Many
kyíeca Some
tío A few
síama Very few
síama-fiq None
fewei Too many
míewei Too few
phweawei Good or "right" number
ajíawei Of varying/ modulating/ oscillating degrees of number
áwei More
wiwi Fewer, Less
zewetya Usual, Quite Often
sbaelo Half the time, Somewhat often or common
sfíoña, safíoñ Infrequent, Unlikely
sfeudiñ Rare, Highly unusual / unlikely


Constistency

wáowo Extremely consistent
íwo Highly consistent
pomwo Moderately consistent
eswo Mildly inconsistent
p"ckya Highly inconsistent
fewo Overly-consistent
síawo Under-consistent
áweiwo More consistent
weiwo Less consistent
phwíawo Good, or "right" consistency, About the same consistency as
ajíawo Of varying/ modulating/ oscillating consistency


Useful Expressions

a píawañ ciñ: Hello, Goodbye
a cawa: Thank you, Your welcome, Please, It's okay
mú wañ: How are you? What's up with ya?
ía phuia: I'm happy
ía phíw: I'm not doing so well
ía xapo: All's well, I'm chillin'
fo mae: Excuse me, May I?, Help!
a jwae: Yes
a seiañ: No
ía meqeña: I'm hungry
mú meqeña: Are you hungry?
mú fwae: Do you like it? Would you recommend it?
ía fwae: I like it
a hleu: How nice! Beautiful!
qhwúi! a jwae: Let's do it!
kyeafasae: I don't know
íasefwae: I don't like it
ía ñamaxa-meu: I very much enjoy the meal
fei-acawa:, acawafei: Thank You Universe! (Almost like "Thanks be to God" or "Thank (you) God")
xe'a wañ mieqs dañ... Where can I find ...
xe'a wañ t'aí dañ... Which way to ...
xe'a wañ dañ fou: What's up with the cannabis - (could you pass it please?)



añ dañ phíacaxou-papeloxui ("The Tower of Babel") | .mp3

a phawui pei -

eia fe'alatew dañ pígwokyeax ho-feañsieñ dirxeñamesis:


eia cada x'kyíeñewapa, hei hyañ-doasbaí húahamorxiñdarxui, hei yíamphalyaña-mei:


eia pígwotyigi, báwa - "qhwui! a xígwo, hei heuxaeq dañ phawui, hei píoñ war quiokwae, hei lofoña war cwae":


eia pígwotyigi, báwa - "qhwui! a pehwo, hei xígwo dañ phíacalyañ xwui phaphíaca húa-úaloxou":

h'báwa - "yíamhíesda-skwaer dañ xeñaweiaqs: h'xweña, fo phawuisieñ ou yamargya-daqtew yíamxqaweipaweiaqs":


eia fwíatyui YaHWaHoxui, dada yíamkyeafalor dañ xígwo-phahaña, hei phíacalyañ xwui phíaca-xou:


eia pígwo YaHWaHoxui, báwa - "qoei! a-wui dañ haña":

h'báwa - "añfe'alatew fwuia dañ phakyíeñewa: añfe'alatew fwuia dañ hyiírxñ:

fwuia añpehwo hokwihayom, ou phyáoqo sei jiwa dañ híewajorga-mei":

báwa - "fo jeuqyir-xeañ, hei phapígwomei xqemi x'phayac, dada kyíafasieñtyigi hañpígwo-mei":


eia wui YaHWaHoxui, pái fíaxqaweipa-fñmei yamargya-daqtew,

he'eia sehae x'phíacalyañ hopapoloxui-dirxeña, dasi ie yr-mieqspa xqemi-YaHWaHoxui dirpígwo,

ou mieqspachou yíámfíaxqaweipa-hañapa, hei yarmargya-daqtew:

Example.jpg



Sentence Patterns

So... for years I've tried to describe draga sentence structure in "technical" or "scientific"-type terminology, but it has been so unintuitive with regards to how the language is actually used to translate thoughts into sounds. Very little gets done this way. draga really does have quite a simple structure, probably better illustrated in terms of its regular sentence patterns:


ía ... / mú ...

This is a very basic, common and useful sentence pattern. Learn a few vocabulary words and you can begin very rudimentary draga conversation. The Speech Act Particle (SAP) ía means I experience(d) it internally or subjectively. The SAP is used to ask a question where you (2nd person) are the subject. Thus:

  • ía sofa: I am content.
  • mú phuia: Are you happy?
  • mú fwae: Do you like it?
  • mú yrlyaña: Are you (going) toward home?
  • ía lyañadae: I am at home.
  • mú skyá: Are you running? Do you run?
  • ía haña: I am (a) human/person -or- I experience (that it was) a person/human. So, for further clarification:
  • ía wui haña: / ía haña wui: I experience that there/it was a person. (wui means Manifestation, instantiation)
  • ía haña-tui: I experience (some) people/person.
  • ía phahaña-tui: I (viscerally) experience a/the person. The strong definite article is needed here, because a specific person is being referred to.
  • ía yíam-haña: I [experience(d)] becoming-a-human. i.e. I am human. But this more likely means "I am becoming a human":
  • ía yíamhaña hae: I becoming-a-human have-done-it(perfective). Which fully clarifies "I am (a) human" . Despite this clarification, the ambiguous original (ía haña) is the most likely off the cuff usage.

The affixes -tui (strong visceral experience) and yíama- (becoming, arriving at a state) are listed above under Root Morphology. The word hae belongs to a class of words that are phrase-final forms of specific roots. These forms always appear only at the end of a phrase, and cannot be modified by prefix or suffix. hae is the phrase final form of haáñ which means "Something that has (already) been done or completed":

  • mú haáñ: / mú hae: Have you done it (yet)? Are you done?

A couple other useful phrase finals include kyae (kyeañ) Need or want, and sae (sei) No, not

  • mú sofa kyae: Do / don't you need contentment?
  • ía sae: Not me. It wasn't me. It's not mine. etc.
  • ía sei kyeañ: / ía kyeañ sae: I don't want/need it.

A common shortened form of ía sei... is íase:

  • íase yrlyaña kyae: I don't want to go home.


mú wañ ... ( dañ ... )

The word wañ is the interrogative pronominal root. It means Who? What? Which? etc.. It is used in conjunction with the interrogative SAP's and xe'a :

  • mú wañ: What's up with you? How are you? What are you doing? Etc. A short colloquialism for this common sentence is múañ:
  • mú lyaña wan: / mú wañ lyaña: Which home is yours?
  • mú míeqs wañ: / mú wañ míeqs: Where are you? (míeqs means Place, location)
  • mú fwae wañ: / mú wañ fwae: What do you like?
  • mú haña wañ yrlyaña / mú wañ haña yrlyaña: What person/people are at your home.

The word dañ is a Conjunctive particle meaning About, Concerning, With regards to, etc.. It is the most commonly used and productive conjunctive particle in draga usage:

  • mú wañ dañ tyouñ: What are you thinking? (tyoun means Immediate, conscious thoughts)
  • mú míeqs wañ dañ kwou: Where are you going? (kwou means Movement in a direction)


fwuia ...

This is another very important basic sentence pattern. The word fwuia indicates that I (1st Person) personally witness this with my own eyes. It specifically refers to direct visual evidence without inference:

  • fwuia: I see. I witness it. etc.
  • fwuia hae: I saw what happened.
  • fwuia jwae: I see that it is indeed the case. The word jwae is the phrase-final form of jweia "Yes, Affirmative"
  • fwuia siha x'phyala: (I see) the grass is green, i.e. siha Green, x'phyala Of grass
  • fwuia skyá x'seahañ: (I see) the deer run, i.e. skyá Running, x'seahañ Of deer
  • fwuia lyañyir x'haña: (I see) a person going home,i.e. lyañayir (Going) toward home, x'haña Of (a) person
  • fwuia lyañyir x'phayañ: (I see) her/him going home.

The word phayañ illustrates how pronominal roots are formed, from the definite article + genitive suffix. The list being: phaxeañ / phayac, phaweiaqs, phamui / phayañ, phamagyi, phalor, phakwui, phafeas, phakwuifes. These have already been listed above in Root Morphology.


a ... dañ ...

The SAP a indicates an indeterminate truth or evidence value of the information that follows. The following pattern can be used with most any SAP. What is important here is the role of dañ, which as mentioned above is the most productive conjunctive particle in draga, and means About, concerning, with regards to, etc.

  • ía phui dañ kyíafa: I am happy to understand. (phui is a variation of phuia Joy, kyíafa means Recognize, realise, understand, "know", etc.)
  • a phuiamei dañ kyíafa: S/he is happy to understand.
  • a phuiamei dañ kyíafaxeañ: S/he is happy that I understand.
  • a píomei dañ tyouñ: He talks (pío) about what he is thinking.
  • a phaxeañ píomei dañ tyouñ: He talks (to) me about what he is thinking.

  • a kyíomei lagyi: = a kyíomei dañ lagyi: S/he gives (someone) a ring:
  • a kyíomei lagyi tañxeañ: He gives (kyío) me (the beneficiary) a/the ring (lagyi).
  • a kyíomei tañxeañ dañ lagyi: His gift to me was a ring, or The ring was his gift to me.
  • a kyíomei lagyi tañxeañ dañ haxa: He gives me a ring, (with regards to) love (haxa Deep Affection, or Romantic love).

  • íase fwae dañ lyeaq: I don't like that smell (lyeaq).


a... h' ...

The word hei is often pronounced /ʜə/, and usually spelled h' . It is a conjunctive particle that can often be translated as "and (also), in addition" - it indicates a concatenation or continuation of the preceding idea, or a compounding of the information:

The word hei takes variant forms when used as continuance of certain SAPs:


fo ... ( a ... )

The SAP fo indicates that the following statement is hypothetical. It begins if/then statements, but also commands and wishes:


xe'a wañ ... ( dañ ... )


xe'a ... ( dao ... )


a... ou ...


a ...



Brief Examples Using Other SAPs

  • huia
  • awo skyá x'seahañ lalyañ-deqtou: I hear deer running through the forest.
  • skyea kwou-weiaqs: I dreamt that we were going (someplace).
  • skyea-tae teia x'pía dañ paá: I know from my dream, that my mother will find it.
  • ámiña
  • ámiñ-tae
  • px.a
  • px.a-tae
  • mpaha jwae: I think so (too).
  • sempa
  • xweña hae: I expect that it will be done. (There is no future tense, but xweña will often express a similar idea)
  • qhwui! a ñayo: Let's eat!




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