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Elbic

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Helvica
Pronounced: /"ElvIk@/
Timeline and Universe: Ill Bethisad
Species: Human
Spoken: Elba
Total speakers: 30,000
Writing system: Latin
Genealogy: Indo-European

 Italic
  Romance
   South-Central Romance
    Central-Southern Italian

     Elbic
Typology
Morphological type: Inflecting
Morphosyntactic alignment: Nominative-Accusative
Basic word order: SVO
Credits
Creator: Sectori
Created: May 2006

Nota bene: Elbic has undergone extreme reforms of late. Bear with me as I update the page.

Elbic is the language of the Principality of Elba, an island off the coast of Tuscany. It is a Central and Southern Italian language, related to Neapolitan and Tuscan Italian. It has two sets of changes to initial consonants, similar to the mutations found in the Celtic consonants: the geminate mutation (also found in Neapolitan), and the soft mutation (Tuscan Italian).

Phonotactics/Orthography/Stress

The Elbic alphabet contains 37 distinct letters. There are 15 vowel letters representing ten sounds. Elbic has the following vowels:

Vowels


Vowels
Front Near-front Central Near-back Back
High i u
Near-high
High-mid e o
Mid
Low-mid
Near-low
Low a

Orthographically, these are represented by:

Vowels
Front Near-front Central Near-back Back
High i u
Near-high
High-mid e o
Mid
Low-mid
Near-low
Low a

Consonants


Consonants
Bilabial Labiod. Dental Alveolar Post-alv. Palatal Velar Glottal Labiovelar
Nasal m n ɲ
Plosive p b t d k g
Fricative ɸ β f v θ ð s ʃ ʒ x ɣ ɣʷ
Affricate dz t∫ (ks)
Approximants (w) (j)
Trill r
Lateral Approximant ɬ l ʎ


Consonants
Bilabial Labiod. Dental Alveolar Post-alv. Palatal Velar Glottal Labiovelar
Nasal m n gn
Plosive p b t d c(') g(') qu gu
Fricative f/ph v/bh fh vh th dh s x j ch gh chu ghu
Affricate z c(i) g(i) (x)
Approximants (i) (u)
Trill rh r
Lateral Approximant lh l gl

Stress

To place the stress of a word, follow these rules in the order they are presented here.

  • When determining the stress of a word, always initially place it on the final syllable.
  • If the final sound is a vowel, stress moves back one syllable.
  • If anywhere in the word there is a vowel with an acute or grave, move the stress to the accented vowel.
  • In monosyllabic words, the vowel is always treated as if it were stressed.

Thus, México, the Elbic name for Mexico, is /mˈɛksɪko/, and Helva, the Elbic name for Elba, is /ˈɛlvə/. No Napolitanno, or "a Neapolitan", is /no napɔlitˈannɔ/.

Allophony

There is a significant amount of allophony in Elbic, especially with regards to the vowels. Consonants are fairly simple:

  • /∫/ is [ks] in loanwords.
  • /dz/ is [ts] word-initially.
  • /u/ is [w] intervocalically.
  • /i/ is [j] intervocalically.

I'll do the vowels later.

Nominal Morphology

Phew. That's over. Good. Now we can get onto the interesting bit. Nouns in Elbic belong to one of three genders: masculine, feminine, and neuter. There are also two numbers: singular and plural. All Elbic nouns end in vowels. The changes applied to vowels to go from singular to plural are as follows:

  • -o>-i (in cases where the noun ends in -io, the i becomes -í); gatto>gatti
  • -a>-e; cossina>cossine
  • -u>-e; frasu>frase
  • -e>-i; traduzione>traduzioni
  • -i>-e (very few nouns end in -i); spaghetti>spaghette

The singular endings can tell you a significant amount about the gender of a noun. Here are some basic guidelines.

  • Most nouns ending in -o are masculine; il gatto
  • Most nouns ending in -a are feminine; la ccossina
  • Most nouns ending in -u are neuter; lu ffrasu
  • All nouns ending in -zione are feminine; la ttraduzione
  • All nouns ending in -ismo are neuter; lu ffaxismo
  • Nouns ending in -e or -i can be of any gender, and so you just have to memorize them; lo cambiatte, lu mmomenti

Articles

Along with nouns must come articles. Elbic has six definite articles and four indefinite articles. The definite articles are equivalent to English "the" and precede the noun they modify. There are both singular and plural definite articles. The indefinite articles are equivalent to English "a/an" and precede the noun they modify. There are only singular indefinite articles. The definite articles are as follows.

  • il: masculine singular; il gatto
  • la: feminine singular; la ccossina
  • lu: neuter singular; lu ffrasu
  • l: singular (substitutes for lo, la, or lu before a vowel); l'arbollo
  • i: masculine plural; i gatti
  • le: feminine and neuter plural; le frase

The indefinite articles are as follows.

  • no: masculine singular; no gatto
  • na: feminine singular: na ccossina
  • nu: neuter singular; nu ffrasu
  • n': singular (substitutes for no, na, or nu before a vowel); n'arbollo

The masculine articles contract with several prepositions:

  • de + il = del (causes soft mutation)
  • de + i = di (causes soft mutation)
  • a + il = al (causes geminate mutation)
  • a + i = e (causes geminate mutation)
  • in + il = nil
  • in + i = ni

Geminate Mutation

You may have noticed that some of the nouns changed when articles were placed in front of them. This is the geminate mutation, one of the more unique features of Elbic, shared with Neapolitan. The geminate mutation is a doubling of the initial consonant of a word. It is triggered by the feminine articles and neuter singular articles. Any word following these articles will experience the doubling. However, only certain consonants are doubled. Here is the list. It includes the soft mutation for future reference as well.

Initial Consonant Geminate Form Soft Form
t tth ht
d ddh hd
c cch
cc'
hc
g ggh
gg'
hg
s ssh s
z zzh z
p pph hp
b bbh hb
ch cch' hch
gh ggh' hgh
qu cquh hcu
n nnh hn
m mmh hm
l llh hl
r rrh hr
f ffh hf
v vvh hv
x xxh x

So you can see how the transfer from frasu to lu ffrhasu occurs.

  • cossina /kɔsˈsinə/>la cchossina /la ˈkkɔssinə/
  • napolitanna /nəpɔlɪ'tannə/>la nnhapolitanna /la ˈnnapɔlɪtannə/
  • frasu /ˈfrasʊ/>lu ffrhasu /lu ˈffrasʊ/
  • nome /ˈnomɛ/>lu nnhome /lu ˈnnomɛ/

N.B.: The geminate mutation moves the stress of a word to the geminated syllable. This is noted by placing (or moving) an <h> there. If putting an <h> before the geminated syllable would change the pronunciation of the consonant (e.g. c>cch before <e> or < i>), or the consonant is adigraph (like <ch gh>) ending in <h>, an apostrophe is used instead.

Verbal Morphology

Elbic has a great many verbs. All verbs belong to one of four types: -ha, -he, -hi, and irregular. This section will demonstrate the conjugations of verbs from each type.

Subject Pronouns

Before conjugating a verb, it is important to learn Elbic's subject pronouns. There are six personal subject pronouns, corresponding to English "I, you, he, she, we, you (all), and they". In Elbic, they are:

Person Singular Plural
1P io noi
2P tu voi
3Pm lei lori
3Pf lui lore

Like many European languages, Elbic differentiates between formal and informal pronouns. Similarly to French, Elbic uses the plural second person pronoun, voi, to refer to a person you wish to address formally. In practice, however, this is infrequently used, as the Elbans are a generally relaxed and informal group.

Verb Conjugation: Simple Tenses

Elbic verbs are composed of three parts:

stem+h+theme vowel

Elbic verbs are conjugated by removing the final -h-theme vowel from the verb stem and adding a different ending. Note that irregular verbs have stem vowels as regular verbs. For example, ésshe is an irregular verb, but appears as an -he verb.

First Conjugation Verbs

Elbic verb conjugations for -ha verbs are conveniently arranged on this table:

Present Indicative Simple Past Indicative Imperfect Indicative Future Indicative Present Subjunctive Imperfect Subjunctive Present Conditional
1Ps -o -i -avo -*ro -e -assa -*ri
2Ps -ai -aste -avai -*rai -ei -assai -*rei
3Ps -a -ava -*ra -e -assa -*ri
1Pp -ammo -amo -avammo -*rammo -emmo -assammo -*rimmo
2Pp -atte -asti -avatte -*ratte -ette -assatte -*ritte
3Pp -anno -arono -avanno -*ranno -enno -assanno -*rinno

The *asterisk indicates that the shown ending is added to the entire verb infinitive, not just to the verb stem. So, the full simple conjugation of cántha, to sing.

Present Indicative Simple Past Indicative Imperfect Indicative Future Indicative Present Subjunctive Imperfect Subjunctive Present Conditional
1Ps cánto cánti cántavo cánthero cánte cántassa cánthari
2Ps cántai cántaste cántavai cántharai cántei cántassai cántharei
3Ps cánta cántò cántava cánthera cánthare cántassa cánthari
1Pp cántammo cántamo cántavammo cántharammo cántemmo cántassammo cántharimmo
2Pp cántatte cántasti cántavatte cántharatte cántette cántassatte cántharitte
3Pp cántanno cántarono cántavanno cántharanno cántenno cántassanno cántharinno

Second and Third Conjugation Verbs

The conjugation paradigm for -he and -hi verbs is below. If there are two entries in a box, the second is the ending for -hi verbs. A parenthetical -iss- marks third conjugation (-hi) radical-shift verbs.

Present Indicative Simple Past Indicative Imperfect Indicative Future Indicative Present Subjunctive Imperfect Subjunctive Present Conditional
1Ps -o -i -ia -*ro -a -issa -*ri
2Ps -ei -iste -iai -*rai -ai -issai -*rei
3Ps -e -io -ia -*ra -a -issa -*ri
1Pp -emmo/(iss)immo -imo -iammo -*rammo -ammo -issammo -*rimmo
2Pp -ette/(iss)itte -isti -iatte -*ratte -atte -issatte -*ritte
3Pp -(iss)enno -irono -ianno -*ranno -anno -issanno -*rinno

And the full conjugation of scrivhi, a regular -hi verb.

Present Indicative Simple Past Indicative Imperfect Indicative Future Indicative Present Subjunctive Imperfect Subjunctive Present Conditional
1Ps scrivo scrivi scrivia scrivhiro scriva scrivissa scrivhiri
2Ps scrivei scriviste scriviai scrivhirai scrivai scrivissai scrivhirei
3Ps scrive scrivio scrivia scrivhira scriva scrivissa scrivhiri
1Pp scrivimmo scriviimo scriviammo scrivhirammo scrivammo scrivissammo scrivhirimmo
2Pp scrivitte scrivisti scriviatte scrivhiratte scrivatte scrivissatte scrivhiritte
3Pp scrivenno scrivirono scrivianno scrivhiranno scrivanno scrivissanno scrivhirinno

Elbic's radical-changing verbs developed from Latin fourth conjugation verbs, and the specific changes applied come from Elbic mixing with French. Here is the conjugation of sentendrhi, the verb for to hear.

Present Indicative Simple Past Indicative Imperfect Indicative Future Indicative Present Subjunctive Imperfect Subjunctive Present Conditional
1Ps sentendro sentendri sentendria sentendrhiro sentendra sentendrissa sentendrhiri
2Ps sentendrei sentendriste sentendriai sentendrhirai sentendrai sentendrissai sentendrhirei
3Ps sentendre sentendrio sentendria sentendrhira sentendra sentendrissa sentendrhiri
1Pp sentendrissimmo sentendrimo sentendriammo sentendrhirammo sentendrammo sentendrissammo sentendrhirimmo
2Pp sentendrissitte sentendristi sentendriatte sentendrhiratte sentendratte sentendrissatte sentendrhiritte
3Pp sentendrissenno sentendrirono sentendrianno sentendrhiranno sentendranno sentendrissanno sentendrhirinno

Irregular Verbs

Elbic has many irregular verbs. Most belong to the second conjugation. Two of the most important are ésshe and avhe. ésshe means "to be", and avhe "to have". Avhe also is "to have" in the auxiliary sense, e.g. "I have done this before". Ésshe is conjugated as follows:

Present Indicative Simple Past Indicative Imperfect Indicative Future Indicative Present Subjunctive Imperfect Subjunctive Present Conditional
1Ps sonno fui ero shero sea fuissa srhi
2Ps sei fuiste erai sherai seai fuissai srhei
3Ps é fuo era shera sea fuissa srhi
1Pp sammo fuimo erammo sheremmo seammo fuissammo srhimmo
2Pp satte fuisti eratte sheratte seatte fuissatte srhitte
3Pp sanno fuirono eranno sheranno seanno fuissanno srhinno

And here is the conjugation of avhe:

Present Indicative Simple Past Indicative Imperfect Indicative Future Indicative Present Subjunctive Imperfect Subjunctive Present Conditional
1Ps ho hi avevo avrho he hissa avrhi
2Ps hai histe avevai avrhai hei hissai avrhei
3Ps ha hio aveva avrha he hissa avrhi
1Pp hammo himo avevammo avrhemmo hemmo hissammo avrhimmo
2Pp hatte histi avevatte avrhatte hette hissatte avrhitte
3Pp hanno hirono avevanno avrhanno henno hissanno avrhinno

Also, the conjugationn of andha, "to go".

Present Indicative Simple Past Indicative Imperfect Indicative Future Indicative Present Subjunctive Imperfect Subjunctive Present Conditional
1Ps vo fui ivo vharo ve fuissa vrhi
2Ps vai fuiste ivai vharai vei fuissai vrhei
3Ps va fuo iva vhara ve fuissa vhri
1Pp andammo fuimo ivammo vharemmo vemmo fuissammo vrhimmo
2Pp andatte fuisti ivatte vharatte vette fuissatte vrhitte
3Pp vanno fuirono ivanno vharanno venno fuissanno vrhinno

The conjugation of bhe, "to drink".

Present Indicative Simple Past Indicative Imperfect Indicative Future Indicative Present Subjunctive Imperfect Subjunctive Present Conditional
1Ps beo bi bia bhero bea beissa brhi
2Ps bei beiste biai bherai beai beissai brhei
3Ps beio bia bhera bea beissa brhi
1Pp bemmo beimo biammo bheremmo beammo beissammo brhimmo
2Pp bette beisti biatte bheratte beatte beissatte brhitte
3Pp benno beirono bianno bheranno beanno beissanno brhinno

The conjugation of dha, "to give".

Present Indicative Simple Past Indicative Imperfect Indicative Future Indicative Present Subjunctive Imperfect Subjunctive Present Conditional
1Ps duo di dia dharo due dassa drhi
2Ps duai daste diai dharai duei dassai drhei
3Ps dua dia dhara due dassa drhi
1Pp duammo damo diammo dharemmo duemmo dassammo drhimmo
2Pp duatte dasti diatte dharatte duette dassatte drhitte
3Pp duanno darono dianno dharanno duenno dassanno drhinno

Finally, the conjugation of fha, "to make; do".

Present Indicative Simple Past Indicative Imperfect Indicative Future Indicative Present Subjunctive Imperfect Subjunctive Present Conditional
1Ps fuo fi fia fharo fue fassa frhi
2Ps fuai faste fiai fharai fuei fassai frhei
3Ps fua fia fhara fue fassa frhi
1Pp fuammo famo fiammo frhemmo fuemmo fassammo frhimmo
2Pp fuatte fasti fiatte fharatte fuette fassatte frhitte
3Pp fuanno farono fianno fharanno fuenno fassanno frhinno

Verb Conjugation: Compound Tenses

Elbic compound tenses are formed by combining a conjugated form of one verb and one of the participles of another. Most are formed with avhe, but the passive and progressive tenses are formed with ésshe and the periphrastic future is formed with andha.

Forming the Participles

Elbic verbs have three participles. The Latin inflected passive has in Elbic become a passive participle. The Latin past and present participles are retained as well. To form any participle, add certain endings to the end of the full infinitive of a verb. These endings are:

  • Passive Participle: -tto
  • Perfect Participle: -tte
  • Present Participle: -nte

Compound Tenses with Avhe

The tenses formed with avhe are the perfect tenses. They are formed by placing the various tenses of avhe before the perfect participle. The various tenses are:

  • Perfect: present avhe+perfect participle (ho fhatte: I have done)
  • Pluperfect: imperfect avhe+perfect participle (hia fhatte: I had done)
  • Remote Pluperfect: simple past avhe+perfect participle (hi fhatte: I had done)
  • Future Perfect: future avhe+perfect participle (avrho fhatte: I will have done)
  • Conditional Perfect: conditional avhe+perfect participle (avrhi fhatte: I would have done)

Compound Tenses with Ésshe

The "tenses" formed with ésshe are all of the passive voice tenses and the progressive tenses. The passive voice tenses are formed quite simply. The generic passive voice is the ésshe+the passive participle of a verb.

  • É disshitto chè...: it is said that...

Note, however, that the passive voice may also be formed in an impersonal manner, using the pronoun , one. We'll talk more about this later. There are also two progressive tenses, the present and imperfect progressives. They are formed simply: place the appropriate form of ésshe before the present participle of the verb.

  • Sonno disshinte chè...: I am saying that...
  • Erai disshinte chè...: you were saying that...

Compound Tenses with Andha

Andha is used in the construction of a periphrastic future tense. To form this tense, place an appropriately conjugated form of andha before the present participle of the verb.

  • Vo hdisshinte chè...: I'm going to say that...
  • Fuiste hdisshinte chè...: you were going to say that...

Verbal Morphology: Imperatives

The imperative is used to give commands. There are a number imperatives in Elbic. Firstly, the second person singular, covering the informal tu. Secondly, the first person plural, covering such constructions as let us go, and agreeing with the pronoun noi. Finally, the second person plural, covering voi, whether used as a singular or plural pronoun. The imperative forms differ depending on whether the command is affirmative (do that) or negative (don't do that). In many cases, object pronouns are affixed as clitics to the imperative verbs. In each entry, there is a note of how this is done. Note, finally, that there are a number of irregular imperatives. Where these exist, they will be noted.

  • The second person singular affirmative ending is the same as the third person singular present indicative ending. When clitic pronouns are attached to this imperative, place an -h- before the penultimate vowel of the word: parla speak>pharlame speak to me. If the imperative begins with a vowel or with h, the final vowel is instead removed from the clitic pronoun and precedes the verb: aprende learn>l'aprende learn it.
  • The second person singular negative ending is the same as the second person singular present subjunctive ending. When clitic pronouns are attached to this imperative, remove the final -i from it: non parlei don't speak>non parlemi>don't speak to me. If the imperative begins with a vowel or with h, the final vowel is instead removed from the clitic pronoun and it precedes the verb: non aprendai don't learn>non l'aprendai don't learn it.
  • The first person plural affirmative ending is the same as the first person plural present indicative ending. There are no changes when clitic pronouns are attached to this imperative: parlammo let's speak>parlammole let's speak to him. If the imperative begins with a vowel or with h, the final vowel is instead removed from the clitic pronoun and precedes the verb: aprendemmo let's learn>l'aprendemmo let's learn it.
  • The first person plural negative ending is the same as the first person plural present subjunctive ending. There are no changes when clitic pronouns are attached to this imperative: non parlemmo let's not speak>non parlemmole let's not speak to him. If the imperative begins with a vowel or with h, the final vowel is instead removed from the clitic pronoun and precedes the verb: non aprendammo let's not learn>non l'aprendammo let's not learn it.
  • The second person plural/formal affirmative ending is the same as the second person plural present subjunctive ending. There are no changes when clitic pronouns are attached to this imperative: parlette speak>parlettele speak to him. If the imperative begins with a vowel or with h, the final vowel is instead removed from the clitic pronoun and precedes the verb: aprendatte learn>l'aprendatte learn it.
  • The second person plural/formal negative ending is the same as the second person plural present indicative ending. There are no changes when clitic pronouns are attached to this imperative: non parlatte don't speak>non parlattele don't speak to him. If the imperative begins with a vowel or with h, the final vowel is instead removed from the clitic pronoun and precedes the verb: non aprendette don't learn>non l'aprendette don't learn it.

Tense Clarification: Simple Past

The simple past is in many ways the most complicated of Elbic's many tenses. This section will attempt to clarify it.

Simple Past vs. Imperfect

On the surface, these two tenses are similar. Both describe past events. However, there are many differences. The simple past is used to...

  • ...describe events that occurred at a specific past time, with definite beginnings and ends.
  • ...describe events that occurred only once.
  • ...describe events in a story.

The imperfect is used to...

  • ...describe events that occurred at an indefinite time, or over a long, undefined period.
  • ...describe events that occurred habitually.
  • ...form the imperfect progressive.

Simple Past vs. Perfect

The simple past is even closer to the perfect. In fact, the simple past is often used in place of the perfect. The perfect typically occurs once every paragraph or so and is from then on replaced with the simple past. Usually the perfect is not used more than once or twice every few minutes in colloquial speech, though the simple past is in contrast almost never used, replaced exclusively by the perfect, in formal discussions.

Simple Past vs. Pluperfects

The simple past and the pluperfects seem similar, but there is an important difference: the pluperfects are used in only one place: when describing events that occurred at a specific time, with definite beginnings and ends (or only occurring once), before other events. The pluperfects are only used where English would use had done something and similar constructions. The remote pluperfect is especially select: it can only be used when something pluperfect occurred at a distant past time (usually more than a year before the speaking).

The Soft Mutation

There are two cases where the soft mutation occurs. Every conjugated verb causes the soft mutation in the word following it. This often occurs with the periphrastic future, and in fact is seen in both of the examples above. It also occurs in any case of a conjugated verb followed by another word: nechésitha, chirhe, dovhe, anything.

  • Nechésito hchiamha a mme má: I need to call my mom.
  • Chiro hchiamha a mme má: I want to call my mom.
  • Dovo hchiamha a mme má: I should call my mom.

This seems an opportune time to mention also that a, to, causes the geminate mutation, and de, of, from, causes the soft mutation.

The other time where the soft mutation occurs is adjectives. Adjectives can either precede or follow the noun they modify, with the difference only in emphasis. When adjectives are describing feminine or neuter nouns, one of two things can happen:

  • The adjective precedes the feminine or neuter noun. If the adjective is singular, the soft mutation occurs on the noun. If the adjective is plural and feminine, the soft mutation occurs on the noun.
  • The feminine or neuter noun precedes the adjective. If the noun is singular, the soft mutation occurs on the adjective. If the noun is plural and feminine, the soft mutation occurs on the adjective.
  • Lu ffrasu hbuonu: the good sentence
  • Na nnova hcossina: a new kitchen
  • Gorde hnapolitanne: fat Neapolitans (an Elban sterotype)

Adjectives

Adjectives are words that describe a noun. Adjectives must agree in gender and number with the noun they modify. There are two types of adjectives: -o-a-u adjectives have six forms; -e adjectives only two. The adjectives inflect as follows:

Masculine Feminine Neuter
Singular -o-a-u -o -a -u
Plural -o-a-u -i -e -e
Singular -e -e -e -e
Plural -e -i -i -i

So "the good sentence" is lu ffrasu hbuonu (remember the soft mutation!), and "the beautiful kitchens" is le bbelle hcossine. An adjective always has the endings shown here, regardless of the ending of the noun: il patre buono; la mmatre hbella.

Telling the Difference

-o-a-u adjectives are so named because of the different endings they take in the singular. When reading an unfamiliar adjective, try to determine whether the noun is singular or plural. Based on that, match the noun's gender and number on this table to the ending it has.

The Origin of Mutations

This section describes, briefly, the generally agreed upon origin of the Elbic consonantal mutations.

The Geminate Mutation

The soft mutation's origin is quite simple. It occurs in two places: after the feminine and neuter articles, and after the preposition a. The geminate mutation originated in the town dialect of La Mmarina de hMarcianna

  • The description of the geminate mutation after a is simple: a comes from the Latin ad. The -d, over time, shifted to attach itself to the word after it: ad cassa > a dcassa. This extraneous d- soon shifted to match the initial consonant of the word it was applying to: a ccassa.
  • The progression for the feminine and neuter articles is a bit less straightforward. The Elbic article derives from Latin demonstratives. These gradually shifted in meaning from a classifier ("this sentence") to a definer ("the sentence"). The geminate after the article evolved by a vague analogy to the a ccassa situation. There were originally two l's in the Latin demonstratives. When the initial vowel disappeared in those, the now-initial l moved to be word-final. Gradually, it slipped across to the adjacent word and was assimilated similarly to (though over a longer period of time than) the -d of ad (it shifted first to a non-lateral approximant, r, then by analogy with ad to a voiced plosive, d, then assimilated at in the same manner that the -d did): illa cassa > lla cassa > la lcassa > la rcassa > la dcassa > la ccassa.

Of course, this is mostly speculation, and it may just be a borrowing from Neapolitan: there was a fairly large influx of Neapolitan immigrants to Elba in the mid-16th century.

The Soft Mutation

The soft mutation is a bit more difficult to rationalize as an Elbic-only developement. Fortunately, it is not. It evolved as a dialectical variation on the pronunciation of initial consonants, similar to the famed "Tuscan gorgia". In Elbic, the soft mutation originally began as a stress movement. But gradually, by way of trade with neighboring Tuscany, it began to soften or change the initial consonant. The reasons for its placement are yet unknown: it probably began as a stress shift in words starting with a consonant after de, and a similar shift in the context of feminine and neuter adjectives, then evolved parallel to the Tuscan gorgia. The soft mutation was originally a dialectical variation of Portoferraho.

Standardization

Little observed by the world, the Elbic language was ruthlessly standardized in the mid-17th century, around the time of its emergence as an individual language. The Elban Forza Par Independenza, a movement for independence from Italy, devised a new spelling system for Elbic, still used to this day, and also standardized both mutations to further differentiate between Elbic and Italian. There was some grumbling, but the Elbans seemed to know that the independence movement would be the second most interesting thing about their island in the future, so they grudgingly, gradually accepted it. In fact, this proved to be for the better, as the FPI instituted a number of public schools where children were taught the FPI-approved standard dialect. Thus, in a mere generation, and about the time that the FPI came to an end, collapsing in on itself, the Elbic langauge was standardized. In the centuries since, there are still few dialects of Elbic, and overall the dialects that there are (most notably a minority group in Tuscany which does not use the geminate mutation) are small enough that they will probably disappear, incorporated into mainstream Italian, within another century or so.

Spelling Conventions

There are a few important spelling rules in Elbic.

  • First, and most important: always spell correctly. This applies to any language, really.
  • Second: always include an orthographic h. Even if it's redundant (as in cánthara). It's an important part of the spelling of a word, even if it doesn't seem like it.
  • Third: when geminating a capitalized noun, the first of the pair of geminated consonants is capitalized. As in La Mmarina de hMarcianna.
  • Fourth: when softening a capitalized noun, the softening h is lowercase. As in parlo hFrancesse.
  • Fifth: i (and) before i is spelt (and pronounced) as e. As in Tintin e i Picari.

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