Tanemantin
Tanemantin is one of the Ke:tic languages and a descendent of the classical language Sarim.
Phonology
Tanemantin distinguishes between 16 consonant phonemes
Labial | Dental | Alveolar | Palatal | Velar | Glottal | |
Plosive/Affricate | p /pʰ/ b /p/ | t /tʰ/ d /t/ | j /ʨ/ | k /kʰ/ g/k/ | ||
Fricative | f /f/ | th /θ/ | s /s/ | x /ɕ/ | h /h/ | |
Nasal | m /m/ | n /n/ | ||||
Liquid | w /w/ | r /ɾ/ l /l/ | y /j/ |
The ten vowel phonemes are a e i u ā ē ī ū ai au /a e i u a: e: i: u: aj aw/. Vowel length is phonemic, and length alteration a fairly important part of Tanemantin morphology. /aj aw/ are considered to be long vowels, and their corresponding short forms /i u/.
Stress in Tanemantin is non-phonemic, always falling on the penultimate syllable of the word unless an adjacent syllable has a long vowel nucleus, in which case the stress shifts to that syllable. If both the final and antepenultimate vowels are long, stress falls on the final vowel.
Syllable Structure
Tanemantin has a (C)V(C) syllable structure. The vowel is the only compulsory element of a syllable, and CC clusters only occur word-internally. Most potential clusters are attested in the language except for fricative-fricative clusters, which simplified to single fricatives at an earlier stage (in the native orthography fricative-fricative clusters still appear, e.g. axu the Moon is written ath.xu from Sarim *ɛtsɛxu ); clusters including one of /j w/ (which presumably simplified before the modern orthography was set, e.g. danē yam from Sarim *θanwɛŋ; and clusters of stop+fricative, as attested in the lative case, e.g. yad all. singular yadi, all. plural yadithi . Word finally, only m t d n s th r l h' occur.
Morpho-phonological Processes
Although the number of Tanemantin coda consonants is limited, Tanemantin roots can end in any consonant or cluster of two consonants, for example mug- sea, mart- cut. In the absolutive singular and construct state of verbs, roots such as these undergo changes to make them meet Tanemantin's phonological criteria. For stems ending in a single consonant:
-k g x all become h. So mug- has the absolutive singular form muh -p b j w y are lost, with any preceding short vowel lengthened.
For roots ending in two consonants, the following rules apply:
- the second consonant of the cluster is deleted. - if the resulting single consonant is not a permitted coda consonant, it undergoes the same changes as for single consonants given above.
Nominal Morphology
Tanemantin is a largely fusional language - inflexional morphemes can carry more than one meaning. Tanemantin nouns are declined for six cases: Absolutive, Lative, Locative, Ablative, Partitive and Ergative, aswell as singular and plural numbers. There are six noun declensions in Tanemantin, based on the final sound of the root: The first consists roots ending in a consonant other than s, the second of roots ending in a or e the third in i, the fourth in u, the fifth declension is for nouns ending in a long vowel or diphthong and monosyllabic words ending in a vowel, and the sixth for roots ending in s.
First Declension
yad - farmer, sarn - village
Singular | Plural | Singular | Plural | |
Absolutive | yad | yadi | sar | sarni |
Lative | yadi | yadithi | sarni | sarnithi |
Locative | yada | yadī | sarna | sarnī |
Ablative | yadum | yadin | sarnum | sarnin |
Partitive | yadnu | yadinu | sarnanu | sarninu |
Ergative | yadas | yadī | sarnas | sarnī |
Second Declension
hathra - woman; nawe - language
Singular | Plural | Singular | Plural | |
Absolutive | hathra | hathri | nawe | nawi |
Lative | hathrathi | hathrithi | nawethi | nawithi |
Locative | hathrā | hathrī | nawē | nawī |
Ablative | hathram | hathrin | nawem | nawin |
Partitive | hathranu | hathrinu | nawenu | nawinu |
Ergative | hathras | hathrī | nawes | nawī |
Third Declension
ari - man
Singular | Plural | |
Absolutive | ari | arī |
Lative | arithi | arīthi |
Locative | arī | ariyā |
Ablative | arim | ariyam |
Partitive | arinu | arīnu |
Ergative | arī | ariyas |
Fourth Declension
nasu - son, child
Singular | Plural | |
Absolutive | nasu | nasī |
Lative | nasuthi | nasīthi |
Locative | nasū | nasū |
Ablative | nasum | nasuyam |
Partitive | nasunu | nasīnu |
Ergative | nasus | nasuyas |
Fifth Declension
kansau - port; ge - rice
Singular | Plural | Singular | Plural | |
Absolutive | kansau | kansauya | ge | geya |
Lative | kansauthi | kansauyathi | gethi | geyathi |
Locative | kansau | kansauyā | ge | geyā |
Ablative | kansum | kansauyam | geyam | geyam |
Partitive | kansaunu | kansauyanu | genu | geyanu |
Ergative | kansus | kansauyas | geyas | geyas |
Sixth Declension
mas - house
Singular | Plural | |
Absolutive | mas | mahi |
Lative | masi | mahithi |
Locative | masa | mahī |
Ablative | masum | mahin |
Partitive | masnu | mahinu |
Ergative | mas | mahī |