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Ilya

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Revision as of 11:41, 2 January 2017 by Masako (talk | contribs) (→‎case)
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introduction

Ilya is an artlang designed for aesthetic reasons. It borrows heavily (if not exclusively) from Arabic, Basque, Japanese, Quechua, Spanish, and Turkish.

sounds

consonants
Bilabial Alveolar Palatal Velar Labiovelar Glottal
Plosives p   b t   d k   g ʔ (q)
Nasals m n
Fricatives s ʃ (sh)
Approximants l j (y) w h
Trill r

Note: The glottal stop /ʔ/ q, is used as a "buffer" to keep vowels apart when adding suffixes.

vowels
Front Central Back
Close i~ɪ u~ʊ
Mid e~ɛ
Open a~ə

nouns

number

Nouns are commonly preceded by determiners. Plural nouns are formed by appending -im. Dual nouns are formed by appending -ik.

singular [sg] dual [du] plural [pl]
"house" beta betim betik
"dog" kupu kupim kupik
"lie" ulya ulyim ulyik
"ten" da daqim daqik

gender

Gender is typically not indicated. If necessary, nouns may be prefixed with mu(l)- (male) or she(n)- (female):

  • mukawal / shekawal — a stallion / a mare

A few terms for family members and traditional roles do show distinctions of gender. For example:

  • ena / aba — mother / father
  • sema / neska — son / daughter

case

nominative accusative genitive dative locative ablative comitative
"house" beta betwa betai beten betush betiga betak


nominative

The basic form of each noun, and the one cited in dictionaries, is the nominative singular. All the other forms can be derived from it.

oblique

  • -o / -wa
beto - the house, to the house, etc.

genitive

The genitive for possessors, composition, and partiality.

  • -ai / -ya
tibin kawalya - the horse's hay
gohan tibinai - a meal of hay
kawal tibinai yemeshu - the horse ate some hay

locative

The locative case is used for:

  • -(u)sh / -da
location
muhitush - in the ocean
toshida - in the city
betush - in, at, on the house
placement in time
gesheda - at night
puyush - in the winter

instrumental

The instrumental expresses what an action is performed with. An important use of the instrumental is as an adverbial, since Ilya lacks a morphological adverb.

  • -ak / -ha
betak - using; with the house
sarha - quickly (with quickness)

degree

pronouns

singular plural
1 -an -uk
2 -ti / -e -ut
3 -u / -a / il -um

case

nominative accusative genitive
1s -an eyan nai
2s -ti / -e eti / eye tiya
3s -u / -a eya ai
1p -uk eyuk kai
2p -ut eyut tai
3p -um eyum mai

direct object incorporation

Direct object pronouns are incorporated to the verb inflection. So, instead of eya rayeshan (I saw her), rayeshana is grammatical. The DO pronouns are not used when the object is specified. So, instead of kawal rayeshanu (I saw (it) the horse), kawal rayeshan is grammatical.

verb tense / aspect / mood subject object
ray -esh -an -a
see simple past 1sg 3sg.FEM
I saw her.

demonstrative

prepositions

adjectives

comparison

numbers

Ilya number English Ilya number English Ilya number English
nul 0 zero sha 6 six kishada 500 five hundred
wa 1 one seb 7 seven hesha 103 (one) thousand
ni 2 two oka 8 eight dahesh 104 ten thousand
ush 3 three nen 9 nine sadahesh 105 (one) hundred thousand
ha 4 four da 10 ten
kish 5 five sada 100 (one) hundred

ordinal

questions

verbs

Verbs are the workhorses of Ilya. They can mark for both agent and patient as well as tense. Many simple sentences are composed of only a verb. Generally, verb roots start and end with a consonant.

tense

Non-past is not marked. Past tense is marked with -esh, and remote with -ur.

  • mashan - walk-1SG - I walk. / I am walking.
  • masheshuk - walk-PST-1PL - We walked.
  • mashuru - walk-REM-3SG - She (has already) walked.

aspect

mood

special verbs

syntax