Ălyis

From FrathWiki
Jump to navigationJump to search


Ălyis /ˈaʎis/ is the language of the ĭdharash, former inhabitants of the Mĕzelis Valley, located in the southwest of the continent of Năshelas, and dwellers of the Ĭdharos island. The word ălyis itself means simply “speak” and, when referred to as a proper name, it means “the speak”.

Phonology, pronunciation, and orthography

Phonology

Consonants Bilabial Labiodental Dental Alveolar Postalveolar Palatal Velar Glottal
Nasals m n ɲ
Plosives p b t d k ɡ
Fricatives f v θ ð s z ʃ ʒ x ɣ ɦ
Flaps & Taps ɾ
Lateral Approximants l ʎ

¹ The sound /h/ is considered a “foreign” sound and usually appears only in loanwords and foreign names, although it can appear as an allophone of /ɦ/.

Vowels Front Central Back
Close i u
Close-mid e o
Open-mid ɛ ɔ
Near-open ɐ
Open a

Pronunciation

Pronunciation of consonants and vowels

The position in a word doesn't change a consonant sound. The consonant L, however, can become labialized as /lʷ/ before other consonants or in word-final positions.

Vowels, on the other hand, usually don't become nasalized before /m/, /n/, and /ɲ/, but the vowel e is pronounced as /e/ in such positions even when stressed.

  • A: /a/ when stressed, /ɐ/ otherwise.
  • Æ: /e/ when stressed, /ɐe/ otherwise.
  • E: /e/ when followed by /m/, /n/, or /ɲ/, otherwise /ɛ/ when stressed, /e/ elsewhere.
  • I: /i/ in all positions
  • O: /ɔ/ when stressed and followed by /i/, /l/, or /ʎ/, /o/ elsewehere.
  • U: /u/ in all positions

Stress

Disyllabic words are, in general, paroxitones, and the stressed vowel — indicated with a macron (ǣ, Ǣ) or with a breve (ă, ĕ, ĭ, ŏ, ŭ, Ă, Ĕ, Ĭ, Ŏ, Ŭ) — usually doesn't change with the addition of prefixes and/or suffixes — for example, ănis (life) shinănis (their (f) life); ăle (to love) shăle (they (f) love) shălete (they (f) love you (s)) shiălete (they (f) loved you (s)) oshiălete (they (f) would love you (s)). Exceptions to this rule are the preposition + demonstrative pronoun combinations — ǣkis (this) ĭdækis (of this); words with three or more syllables are, in general, proparoxytones.

When a prefix is linked to a monosyllable, the stress falls on the prefix, as, for example, is the case of iv- (with) + -te (you) = ĭvite (with you).

Orthography

The above phonemes are rendered in writing as follows:

B b P p D d T t Z z S s G g K k L l R r M m N n
/b/ /p/ /d/ /t/ /z/ /s/ /ɡ/ /k/ /l/ /ɾ/ /m/ /n/
V v F f DH dh, Ð ð TH th, Þ þ ZH zh, J j SH sh, Ʃ ʃ GH gh, Ɣ ɣ KH kh, C c LY ly, Ł ł H h Ħ ħ NY ny, Ŋ ŋ
/v/ /f/ /ð/ /θ/ /ʒ/ /ʃ/ /ɣ/ /x/ /ʎ/ /ɦ/ /h/ /ɲ/

The consonant variants in italics are used when one desires to be as faithful as possible to the native orthography when transliterating.

A a Æ æ E e I i O o U u
/a/, /ɐ/ /e/ /ɛ/, /e/ /i/ /ɔ/, /o/ /u/

Grammar

Pronouns

Masculine and feminine pronouns are only used when applied to humans.

Personal pronouns (subject)

d- I dh- we
t- you th- you (pl)
s- she sh- they (f)
z- he zh- they (m)
l- it n- they (n)

Personal pronouns (object)

-de me -dhe us
-te you (obj) -the you (pl, obj)
-se her -she them (f)
-ze him -zhe them (m)
-le it (obj) -ne them (n)

Demonstrative and indefinite pronouns

The prefixes are linked to consonant-starting words with the vowel -i-, except when its absence would cause a double consonant; in this case, the consonants merge into a single one.

æg- this noun (close to the speaker) æk- this noun (close to the person spoken to) ærk- that noun
ægis this (close to the speaker) ækis this (close to the person spoken to) ærkis that
æl- many noun [pl] æv- all, every noun æf- no noun
ælis multitude ævis everything æfis nothing

Examples:

  • Ægrĭs = this sand
  • Ækĕsh = these rocks
  • Æfăus = no dogs
  • Ælăush = many dogs
  • Ævăush = all [the] dogs

Article

The only article is the definite, li, and it is only used when the context alone is not enough to precisely identify the object being referred to.

Nouns

To be expanded

Adjectives

Possessive adjectives

din- my dhin- our
tin- your thin- your (pl)
sin- her shin- their (f)
zin- his zhin- their (m)
lin- its nin- their (n)

Verbs

The general structure of a verbal word is [second temporal prefix] + [personal prefix] + [first temporal prefix] + [verb root] + [mode suffix] + [object suffix]. Not all combinations are possible for all verbs.

The three mode suffixes are -e, -i, and -a, and they are used as follows:

  • Infinitive: root + -e
  • Participle: root + -a
  • Gerund: root + -i

For the following list, the -e ending can be changed to -i to give the idea of progression or continuous action. In some cases, it is possible to use the participle mode suffix to express a past, present or future state without using a copula.

  • Indicative:
    • Simple Present: person + root + -e (action in course or true at the moment of speaking)
    • Finished Past: person + -i- + root + -e (action completed in the past)
    • Perfect Past: i- + person + -i- + root + -e (action completed before a past event)
    • Simple Future: person + -o- + root + -e (action to be executed in the future)
    • Past Future: o- + person + -i- + root + -e (a future action relating to a past event)
  • Subjunctive:
    • Ve + corresponding indicative
  • Imperative:
    • + Simple Present

Examples:

  • ve diĕni = “if I were”
  • hæ tăhe ǣgis = “do this”
  • săla = “she is loved”
  • liărka = “it was weakened”
  • doărka = “I will be strengthened”

Adverbs

Prepositions

Conjunctions

Numerals

Sample texts

To be expanded

Lexicon

To be expanded