Béu : Chapter 4 : The Adjective

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..... 72 Adjectives

..... 4 of which serve as intransitive verbs

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bòi * good boizora she is healthy bòis to be healthy/health
kéu bad keuzora he is ill kéus to be sick/illness
fái rich ** faizora she is interested fáis to be attentive/attention
pàu bland pauzora he is bored pàus to be bored/boredom

* Note that the adverb version of this word is slightly irregular. Instead of boiwe it is bowe. People often shout this when impressed with some athletic feat or sentiment voiced ... bowe bowe => well done => bravo bravo

Also instead of keuwe we have kewe. People often shout kewe kewe kewe if they are unimpressed with some athletic feat or disagree with a sentiment expressed. Equivalent to "Booo boo".

**In a non-monetary sense. If applied to food it means many flavours and/or textures. If applied to music it means there is polyphony. If applied to physical design it means baroque.

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... 12 of which don't serve as any type of verbs

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igwa equal, the same
uʒya different, not the same
sài young
gáu old (of a living thing)
jini clever, smart
tumu stupid, thick
wenfo new
yompe old, former, previous
cùa east, dawn, sunrise
día west, dusk, sundown
bene right, positive
komo left, negative

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(Of course you can always use a periphrastic expression if you wanted.)

... 54 of which serve as transitive verbs

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boʒi better kegu worse bozor he/she improves kegor he/she made something worse boʒido to improve kegudo to made worse
faizai richer paugau blander faizor she developed paugau she run something down faizaido to enrich/develope paugaudo to run down
maze open nago closed mazori he opens nagori he closes mazedo to open nagodo to shut
saco fast gade slow sacori she speeds up gadori she slows down sacodo to accelerate gadedo to decelerate
fazeu empty pagoi full fazor he empties pagor he fills fazedo to empty pagodo to fill
hauʔe beautiful ʔaiho ugly hauʔor she beautifies ʔaihor she makes ugly hauʔedo beautify ʔaihodo to make ugly
ailia neat aulua untidy ailor he tidies up aulor he messes up ailido to tidy up auludo to mess up
joga wide teza narrow jogor he widens tezor he narrows jogado to broaden tezado to narrow
ái white àu black aidor he whitened audor he turned something black aido to whiten audo to blacken
hái high ʔàu low haidor she raised ʔaudor she lowered haido to raise ʔaudo to lower
guboi deep sikeu shallow gubodor she deepens sikedor she makes shallow gubodo to deepen sikedo to make shallow
seltia bright goljua dim seltidor he brightens goljudor he dims seltido to brighten goljudo to dim
taiti tight jauju loose taitidor she tightens jaujudor she loosens taitido to tighten jaujudo to loosen
jutu big tiji small jutudor he expands tijidor he shrinks jutudo to enlarge tijido to shrink
felgi hot polzu cold felgidor she heats up polzudor she cools down felgido to heat up polzudo to cool down
baga simple kaza complex bagador she simplifies kazador she complicates bagado simplify kazado to complicate
naike sharp maubo blunt naikedor he sharpens maubodor he blunts something naikedo to sharpen maubodo to blunt
nucoi wet mideu dry nucodor she makes wet midedor she dries nucodo to make wet midedo to dry
wobua heavy yekia light wobudor he loads up yekidor he unloads wobudo to load up yekido to unload
pujia thin fitua thick pujidor he makes thin fitudor he thickens pujido to make thin fitudo to thicken
yubau strong wikai weak yubador she strengthens wikador she weakens yubado to strengthen wikado to weaken
fuje soft pito hard fujedor softens pitodor she hardens fujedo to soften pitodo to harden
gelbu rough solki smooth gelbudor she roughens solkidor she smoothes gelbudo to roughen solkido to smooth
ʔoica clear heuda hazy ʔoicador she explains heudador she confuses ʔoicado to explain heudado to muddy the waters
selce sparce goldo dense selcedor he prunes goldodor he intensifies selcedo to prune goldodo to intensify
cadai fragrant dacau stinking cadador she make fragrant dacador she makes stinky cadado to make fragrant dacado to make stinky
detia elegant cojua crude detidor he decorates/embellishes cojudor he spoils detido to decorate cojudo to decorate in a gauche style

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The top 4 adjectives in the table above are actually irregular comparatives.

The standard method for forming the comparative and superlative is ... ái = white : aige = whiter : aimo = whitest

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However not quite all antonyms fall into the above pattern. For example ...


loŋga = tall, tìa = short

wazbia = far, mùa = near ... wazbo = distance, wazbai = about 3,680 mtr (the unit of distance)

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... Antonym phonetic correspondence

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In the above lists, it can be seen that each pair of adjectives have pretty much the exact opposite meaning from each other. However in béu there is ALSO a relationship between the sounds that make up these words.

In fact every element of a word is a mirror image (about the L-A axis in the chart below) of the corresponding element in the word with the opposite meaning.

ʔ
m
y
j ai
f e
b eu
g u
d ua high tone
l =========================== a ============================ neutral
c ia low tone
s/ʃ i
k oi
p o
t au
w
n
h



Note ... The original idea of having a regular correspondence between the two poles of a antonym pair came from an earlier idea for the script. In this early script, the first 8 consonants had the same shape as the last 8 consonants but turned 180˚. And in actual fact the two poles of a antonym pair mapped into each other under a 180˚ turn.


An adjectives is called moizana in béu .... NO NO NO

moizu = attribute, characteristic, feature

And following the way béu works, if there is an action that can be associated with noun (in any way at all), that noun can be co-opted to work as an verb.

Hence moizori = he/she described, he/she characterized, he/she specified ... moizus = the noun corresponding to the verb on the left

moizo = a specification, a characteristic asked for ... moizoi = specifications ... moizana = things that describe, things that specify

nandau moizana = an adjective, but of course, especially in books about grammar, this is truncated to simply moizana

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..... Adverbs

There are 4 types of word that function as adverbs in béu.

1) There are adjectives which are changed into adverbs by suffixing -we. For example ...

saco = quick

sacowe = quickly

THIS type of adverbs can have any position within a sentence. However if they immediately follow the verb which they are qualifying, the suffix is deleted. For example ...

doikora saco namboye = doikora namboye sacowe = sacowe doikora namboye = she is walking quickly home

2) There are nouns which are changed into adverbs by suffixing -we. For example ...

deuta = soldier

deutɘwe = "in the manner of a soldier"

Note that the final vowel in deuta changes here. This is because as well as being a suffix, is a noun in its own right meaning "way" or "method" (see the section on word building)

Just as saco is an adjective which is considered an adverb when immediately following a verb, so deutɘwe is an adverb that is considered an adjective when immediately following a noun.

Also a noun is formed by suffixing -mi to the end.

deutɘwemi = soldierliness

3) One of the functions of a nouns with pilana 1 => 8 + 15 is as an adverb. This type of adverb must follow the verb immediately. In a similar manner to type 2), if this form comes after a noun it is considered an adjective. For example ...

TABLEmau can be a noun meaning the space above the table. But in the sentence "monkey eats apple tableMAU", TABLEmau is an adjective describing the apple (i.e. where the apple is). However in the sentence "monkey eats tableMAU apple" TABLEmau is an adverb (describing where the "eating" takes place).

Note ... In English, the sentence "the monkey eats the apple on the table" is ambiguous. (as is "john eat the apple on the table")

Go thru the other pilana ???

4) This type of adverbs are nouns that are stand for time periods. For example tomorrow, yesterday, the past et. etc. Basically when they are not copula subjects, copula complements or in the ergative case, they are adverbs.

5) Words such as "often" ??? ( = many times ???) ... a particle ???

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..... The Way

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"béu" specifies certain "best practices" for many many aspects of life. These "best practices" encompass many varied aspects of life.

For example the manner in which the 5 yearly festivals should be celebrated, what screw shapes and sizes should be used, how a man should treat his wife and a woman her husband, the periods of fasting and dietary restrictions that each individual should undertake.

These are just some examples of these "best practices". Actually each of these "best practices" are given a level of importance. There are 3 of these levels ... "recommended", "highly recommended" and "an absolute must".

These "best practices" are set out in various books. Theses books are held to be "canonical" or holy. However these writings are not set in stone, and there are mechanisms where by these books are updated and also new books can be added to the "special books".

Some people consider these "special books" to constitute a religion that has no god. However other people follow these "best practices" as just "cool things to do" and fit them in to their lives under another over-reaching belief system, such as Christianity or Islam (in much the same way that the early Buddhist adherent were free either to forget the old hindu gods or to continue to venerate them).

At the centre of this body of work defining the "best practices" there are 3 important concepts.

1) angwa The closest translation is "harmony"

When used in relation to motion it can be translated as "grace" When used in relation to design it can be translated as "elegance" When used in relation to text it can be translated as "poetry"

The adjective corresponding to angwa is angwai

angwa is considered getting the right balance between "order" and "chaos"

2) honda This can be translated as "order"

3) aska This can be translated as "chaos"

I suppose the above 2 concepts can be considered the Yin and Yang of "béu"

However the secondary concepts that are associated with Yin and Yang, for the most part, do not fit into the honda/aska dichotomy.

Just for ease of reference I have listed the secondary concept associated with Yin and Yang below.


YIN YANG
femininity masculinity
soft hard
yielding solid
passive aggressive or active
fast slow
the moon the sun
black white
cold hot
wet dry
water fire
nighttime daytime
the earth the sky
diffuse focused


However "order" and "chaos" are associated with other concepts. They have each 2 "under-concepts" ...

honda is associated with the colour "sky blue" suna and "tranquility"

aska is associated with the colour "orange" nela and "activity"

And each under-concept is associated with one under-under-concept

And the under.concepts, have in turn, underconcepts of their own ...

sky blue => the sky

orange => the sun

tranquility => dead

activity => alive

As well as no associations (for the most part) with the concepts linked to Yin and Yang ... also there is strictly no association with

good/bad, truth/falsehood, right/wrong, north/south, beauty/uglyness, positive/negative, right/left ... etc etc etc


Minor points pertaining to honda and aska


The "béu.symbol" is a orange disk with a sky blue background (the "béu.symbol" has both a simple and a complex representation)

This imagery continues into the way that machines are marked ...

To show that a machine is working, an orange disc is illuminated To show that a machine is switched off, a sky blue square is illuminated

The button to switch a machine on, is an orange disk with a black ring on it The button to switch a machine off, is a sky blue square with a black ring on it

( Of course the functions of indication and switching are often combined in one button )

For rocker switches ( such as light swithes ) the top part is square and you push this to switch off ... the bottom part is semicircular and you push this to switch on

By the way "red" is associated with danger and "green" is associated with safety So for example traffic lights are exactly the same ( including the orange in the middle )

By the way there are no other associations with colour ... you do not talk about a blackheart or a yellow streak etc etc ... kids are not split up according to pink or blue clothes, etc etc

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... Index

  1. Introduction to Béu
  2. Béu : Chapter 1 : The Sounds
  3. Béu : Chapter 2 : The Noun
  4. Béu : Chapter 3 : The Verb
  5. Béu : Chapter 4 : Adjective
  6. Béu : Chapter 5 : Questions
  7. Béu : Chapter 6 : Derivations
  8. Béu : Chapter 7 : Way of Life 1
  9. Béu : Chapter 8 : Way of life 2
  10. Béu : Chapter 9 : Word Building
  11. Béu : Chapter 10 : Gerund Phrase
  12. Béu : Discarded Stuff
  13. A statistical explanation for the counter-factual/past-tense conflation in conditional sentences