Northeadish
Northeadish Druðþþȳðesc | |
Genealogical classification: | Indo-European
|
Basic word order: | SVO or SOV |
Morphological type: | fusional |
Morphosyntactic alignment: | accusative |
Created by: | |
BenJamin P. Johnson | 2000 |
Northeadish (Druðþþȳðesc) is an a posteriori Germanic conlang. It is written in two main alphabets: a "Standard Literary Alphabet" and a more simplified "Reform Alphabet." There is also an obsolete "Eastheadish" alphabet, and an archaic runeset. It was created by BenJamin P. Johnson between 2000 and 2010. Belonging to the unattested "South Germanic" family, it shares many areal features with other branches of Germanic, but is not part of West, North, or East Germanic. Some of these features include:
- Verschärfung, shared with North and East Germanic, though with different reflexes.
- I-Umlaut, shared with West and North Germanic.
- Lack of A-Umalut, shared with East Germanic.
- Elimination of reduplication in class VII strong verbs, shared with West and North Germanic.
- Passive voice formed by suffixation of reflexive, shared with North Germanic; and many others.
Spelling & Orthography
The Standard Literary Alphabet
- The Standard Literary Alphabet contains forty-three letters, three of which (I, O, and Œ) are not used because of particular vowel shifts that rendered them obsolete (though their long equivalents are still used extensively). Long vowels are marked with a macron, and alphabetically they count as separate letters from their short-vowel counterparts. There are also five syllabic sonorants which are alphabetically differentiated from their non-syllabic liquids and nasals. Finally, there are also three labiovelar letters with fairly complicated rules surrounding them which shall be further explained below.
The Letters
Upper Lower IPA Notes A a a, ə (See rules below.) Ā ā aː Long vowels in the Reform alphabet take an acute accent instead of a macron. Æ æ ɛ This is phonetically equivalent to <e>, but is used only for the i-umlaut of <a>. In the Reform alphabet, this is merged with <e>. Ǣ ǣ eː In the Reform alphabet, this is merged with <ē>. Long vowels in the Reform alphabet also take an acute accent instead of a macron. B b b C c k In the Reform alphabet, this is replaced by <k>. Q q (u)k(w) <Q, q> is used in romanization, but this character is actually a little more like a qu-ligature. (See rules below.) In the Reform alphabet, this letter is replaced by only its extant phonetic components; i.e. either k, kw, wkw, or wk. D d d Ð ð ð E e ɛ Ē ē eː Long vowels in the Reform alphabet take an acute accent instead of a macron. F f f This should really be more of a lowered "insular" "f", almost like a digamma. G g g Ӡ ᵹ (u)g(w) The uppercase letter should really be more of an "insular" "g". (See rules below.) In the Reform alphabet, this letter is replaced by only its extant phonetic components; i.e. either g, gw, wgw, or wg. H h h, ç, x (See rules below.) Ƕ ƕ ɧ (u)x(w) Written as <ɧ> only when final. (See rules below.) In the Reform alphabet, this letter is replaced by only its extant phonetic components; i.e. either h, hw, whw, or wh. I ı ɪ The short vowel <ı> is no longer used. Due to the final "Expansion of First Umlaut" Rule, all instances of [ɪ] became [ɛ]. Ī ī iː Long vowels in the Reform alphabet take an acute accent instead of a macron, though the diacritic is optional with since there is no short equivalent. İ i j In the Reform alphabet, <j> is used. L l l Λ ʌ ɫ̩ In the Reform alphabet, <al> is used. M m m M ᴍ m̩ In the Reform alphabet, <am> is used. N n n N ɴ n̩ In the Reform alphabet, <an> is used. Ŋ ŋ ŋ In the Reform alphabet, this is replaced by <ng> except before <k> or , where <g> is omitted.
Ӿ ӿ ŋ̩ Often written as <X,x> for the sake of simplicity. (This is a reflex of the Germanic "ingwaz" rune.) In the Reform alphabet, <ang> is used. O o ɔ The short vowel <o> is no longer used. Ō ō oː Long vowels in the Reform alphabet take an acute accent instead of a macron, though the diacritic is optional with <o> because there is no short equivalent. Œ œ œ The short vowel <œ> is no longer used. Œ̄ œ̄ øː In the reform alphabet, this is represented by the character <ø>. An acute accent above it is optional because there is no short equivalent. P p p R r ɾ R ʀ ɾ̩ In the Reform alphabet, <ar> is used. S s s, z (See rules below.) In the reform alphabet, <z> is used when the letter is voiced. T t t The lowercase version of this letter was originally <τ>, but for simplicity's sake here we'll use <t>. Þ þ θ U u ʊ Ū ū uː Long vowels in the Reform alphabet take an acute accent instead of a macron. Y ᵫ ʏ <Y> is used here for the uppercase version of this vowel, since there is not an appropriate Unicode equivalent for uppercase ue-ligature. In the Reform alphabet, <y> is used throughout. Ȳ ȳ yː As above, <Ȳ> is used here for the uppercase, and for the time being, <ȳ> for the lowercase because of a problem with the spacing of the combining diacritics. <ý> is used in the Reform alphabet. V v v W w w The lowercase version of this letter was originally <ω>, but for simplicity's sake here we'll use <w>.
Spelling Rules & Orthography
- The letter <a> doubles as a short open vowel [a] when stressed, and a schwa [ə] when unstressed. It is also a schwa in unstressed words, such as "þa" [θə] ('the').
- The letters <æ> and <e> are both pronounced as [ɛ]; however, <æ> only occurs as a result of the i-umlaut of earlier /a/.
- Similarly, <ǣ> and <ē> are both pronounced as [e:] (or [ɛj]), but <ǣ> only occurs as the i-umlaut of earlier /ā/, or as the product of the Proto-Germanic diphthong /ai/.
- The characters
, <ᵹ>, and <ƕ> have several possible pronunciations depending on their placement. The letter <ᵹ> in particular is the characterization of verschärfung, which comes from Proto-Germanic combinations such as /gg/, /gw/, /ww/, and /gwj/. The rules for these three letter, though many, are the same:
- [k, g, x] Just the consonants are pronounced after a consonant at the end of a word, or between two consonants.
- [kʊ, gʊ, xʊ] The consonants and a following ʊ are pronounced after a consonant and before a syllabic.
- [kw, gw, xw] The consonants and a following glide are pronounced before a vowel when initial or following a consonant or syllabic. <ᵹ> only occurs initially in borrowed words, such as ᵹava ('guava').
- [ukʊ, ugʊ, uxʊ] After a vowel and before a syllabic. The value of the syllabic’s inherent schwa changes to [ʊ].
- [ukw, ugw, uxw] Intervocalic.
- [uk, ug, ux] After a vowel, before a consonant or when word-final.
- When any of these letters occur before <v>, the value of /v/ changes to [w] (though the spelling does not change).
- The pronunciation of <h> is:
- [h] when initial, except before a sonorant.
- hūs [hu:s] ('house')
- hǣm [he:m] ('home')
- [x] when initial before a sonorant (<hl>, <hn>, or <hr>).
- hryg [xrʏg] ('back')
- hnuta [xnʊtə] ('nut')
- [x] after a back vowel.
- þrūh [θru:x] ('through')
- hlah [xlax] ('laugh')
- [ç] after a front vowel.
- tehn [tɛçn̩] ('ten')
- līht [līçt] ('easy')
- [h] when initial, except before a sonorant.
- The letter <s> is:
- Unvoiced [s] when initial, final, or adjacent to an unvoiced consonant.
- seᵹlas [sɛugləs] ('sun’s')
- bæst [bɛst] ('best')
- Voiced [z] when intervocalic or after a vowel and before a syllabic.
- lœ̄sɴ [lø:zn̩] ('to loosen')
- rīsa [ri:zə] ('I arise')
- Unvoiced [s] when initial, final, or adjacent to an unvoiced consonant.
- Final Obstruent Devoicing: Final voiced continuant obstruents (namely, <v> and <ð>) which become unvoiced due to the Final Obstruent Devoicing Rule retain their voiced consonants which are followed by their unvoiced counterparts.
- Final [f] is written <vf>.
- Final [θ] is written <ðþ>.
- Final [s] is unchanged.
- This rule is mandatory after a vowel or a sonorant, but not after a syllabic letter.
The Reform Alphabet
The Reform alphabet was an early attempt to bring the language into closer compliance with more common Unicode characters without losing some of the richness of the orthographic structure of the language. This was not necessarily successful, but it did make the language more efficient. One letter was added and several were merged or removed.
The Letters
Upper Lower IPA Notes A a a,ə Á á aː B b b D d d Ð ð ð E e ɛ É é eː F f f G g g H h h Í í iː The acute diacritic is optional, since there is no short version. J j j K k k L l l,ɫ M m m N n n Ó ó oː The acute diacritic is optional, since there is no short version. Ø ø øː The acute diacritic is optional, since there is no short version, and it is very rarely used, since it is not part of the basic Latin subset of Unicode. P p p R r ɾ S s s T t t Þ þ θ U u ʊ Ú ú uː V v v W w w Y y ʏ Ý ý yː Z z z
Spelling Rules & Orthography
The orthography of Northeadish using the Reform spelling is very "wysiwyh," that is, "what you see is what you hear." The one instance in which the Reform Orthography becomes more precise than the Standard Literary Orthography is in the case of the syllabic characters, which encode more vowel information than the traditional spelling. In particular:
- Most syllabic letters are written as a combination of <a> and their associated non-syllabic counterparts, with the exception of:
- Words with /j/ in their Proto-Germanic ending, in which case <e> is used, or
- Syllabics occurring after a labiovelar letter (
, <ᵹ>, or <ƕ>) in which case the vowel is <u>.
Inflection
Articles, Numerals, Demonstratives, & Possessives
The Definite Article
Nom. Gen. Dat. Acc. Msc. þa, þɴ þas þм þɴ Fem. þa, þɴ þer þer þa, þɴ Neu. þet þas þм þet Plu. þa, þɴ þer þм þa, þɴ
- When þa is used before a vowel, it becomes þɴ (much like the difference between “a” and “an” in english). This applies to the masculine, feminine, and plural forms in the nominative case, and the feminine and plural of the accusative. The masculine accusative form is always þɴ.
The Indefinite Article
Nom. Gen. Dat. Acc. Msc. ǣn ǣnas ǣnм ǣnɴ Fem. ǣna ǣnʀ ǣnʀ ǣna Neu. ænt ǣnas ǣnм ænt
The Dual and Trial Articles
The numbers two and three are not truly articles, but declinable numerals, as is the indefinite article. They decline as adjectives, though their declension is highly irregular. Those declensions followed by -(r) in the paradigm take a final -r before a vowel. Other numerals are not declinable.
Dual Numeral
Nom. Gen. Dat. Acc. Msc. tvǣ(r) tvǣg tvǣm tvan Fem. twō(r) tvǣg tvǣm twō(r) Neu. twō(r) tvǣg tvǣm twō(r)
Dual Distributive
Nom. Gen. Dat. Acc. Msc. bǣðþ bǣg bǣðм bǣðɴ Fem. bōðþ bǣg bǣðм bōðþ Neu. bōðþ bǣg bǣðм bōðþ
Trial Numeral
Nom. Gen. Dat. Acc. Msc. þrī(r) þrǣg þrem þren Fem. þrī(r) þrǣg þrem þren Neu. þrī(r) þrǣg þrem þrī(r)
Trial Distributive
Nom. Gen. Dat. Acc. Msc. þrǣðþ þrǣg þrem or þrǣðм þrǣðɴ Fem. þrǣðþ þrǣg þrem or þrǣðм þrǣðþ Neu. þrǣðþ þrǣg þrem or þrǣðм þrǣðþ
Numerals
Cardinal Numerals
1 ǣn 13 þrītehɴ 30 þrītag 2 tvō 14 fewrtehɴ 40 fewrtag 3 þrī 15 femtehɴ 50 femtag 4 fewr 16 secstehɴ 60 secstag 5 fem 17 sevɴtehɴ 70 sevɴtag 6 secs 18 ah(ta)tehɴ 80 ah(ta)tag 7 sevɴ 19 neᵹɴtehɴ 90 neᵹɴtag 8 ahta 20 tvæntag 100 hunðþ, tehɴtag 9 neᵹɴ 21 tvæntagǣn 110 hunðþtehɴ, æleftag 10 tehɴ 22 tvæntagtvō 120 hunðþtvæntag, tvæleftag 11 ælevf 23 tvæntagþrī 200 tvōhunðþ 12 tvælevf 24 tvæntagfewr 1000 þūshunðþ
- When counting, the neuter forms of declinable numbers are used except for one, which takes the masculine form. This does not merely apply to the numbers 1-3, but also 21-23, 31-33, 101-103, &c.
- The numbers 100, 110, and 120 may also be referred to as tehɴtag (tenty), æleftag (eleventy), and tvæleftag (twelfty), harkening back to a partial duodecimal numbering system.
Ordinal Numerals
1st fᵫrst 13th þrītehɴþ 30th þrītagaðþ 2nd anðʀ 14th fewrtehɴþ 40th fewrtagaðþ 3rd þrīðþ 15th femtehɴþ 50th femtagaðþ 4th fewrðþ 16th secstehɴþ 60th secstagaðþ 5th femðþ 17th sevɴtehɴþ 70th sevɴtagaðþ 6th secsþ 18th ah(ta)tehɴþ 80th ahtagaðþ 7th sevɴþ 19th neᵹɴtehɴþ 90th neᵹɴtagaðþ 8th ahtaðþ 20th tvæntagaðþ 100th hunðaðþ, tehɴtagaðþ 9th neᵹɴþ 21st tvæntagfᵫrst 110th hunðþtehɴþ, æleftagaðþ 10th tehɴþ 22nd tvæntaganðʀ 120th hunðþtvæntagaðþ, tvæleftagaðþ 11th ælefþ 23rd tvæntagþrīðþ 200th tvōhunðaðþ 12th tvælefþ 24th tvæntagfewrðþ 1000th þūshunðaðþ
- The ordinal numbers follow the same irregular pattern for all numbers ending in -1 (fᵫrst) or -2 (anðʀ) with the exception of -11 and -12. The rest of the ordinal numbers are formed by adding -(ð)þ to the end of the number.
- Ordinal numbers are always declined as regular weak adjectives.
Possessives & Demonstratives
Nom. Gen. Dat. Acc. Msc. mīn mīnas mīnм mīnɴ Fem. mīna mīnðʀ mīnðʀ mīna Neu. ment mīnas mīnм ment Plu. mīna mīnðʀ mīnм mīna
- The following possessives and demonstratives are declines in this manner: hat, her, hes, hīr, ƕat, ƕālec, ƕeras, ƕes, ƕīs, iǣnðʀ iȳŋcʀ, iȳr, mīn, nat, nes, nǣn, ɴsʀ, ӿcʀ, sīn, sīr, þat, þæs, þīn.
- The long vowels in þīn, hīr, ƕīs, iȳr, mīn, nǣn, sīn, and sīr are shortened in the neuter nominative and accusative declensions, like the indefinite article.
- The possessives ending in -n get an insertive -ð- before -ʀ (i.e. in the feminine genitive and dative and the plural genitive).
Correlatives
The Northeadish system of correlatives is similar to those in most other Germanic languages, though by analogy, it has become much more extensive than the others. The correlatives based on H, Þ, and Ƕ are easily recognizible in Germanic, being descended fairly directly from Indo-European K, T, and Kʷ, indicating a proximal, a medial, and an interrogative form. İ is also somewhat recognizable, though this distal form is not as widespread in Germanic languages as the others. N for negative is also fairly common, though normally not in these particular forms. Finally, the somewhat more elusive Q form for the relative is likely derived from the fortition of Ƕ in relative cluases.
H | Þ | İ | Ƕ | Q | N | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
proximal | medial | distal | interrogative | relative | negative | |
Place | har here | þar there | iar yonder | ƕar where | qar where | nar nowhere |
Goal | haðra hither | þaðra thither | iaðra yonder | ƕaðra whither | qaðra whither | naðra to nowhere |
Source | harɴ hence | þarɴ thence | iarɴ from yonder | ƕarɴ whence | qarɴ whence | narɴ from nowhere |
Time | han now | þan then | ian then (a long time) | ƕan when | qan when | nan never |
Thing | hat this | þat that | iat yon | ƕat what | qat what | nat nothing |
Reason | hī herefore | þī therefore | iī yonderfore | ƕī why | qī why | nī for no reason |
Manner | hū like this | þū - | iū some other way | ƕū how | qū how | nū no way |
Abstraction | het it | þet that | iet yet | ƕet - | qet - | net not |
- þū has the meaning of the second person singular pronoun and is not used in this manner.
- There are also a collection of personal pronouns which do not strictly adhere to this system, but make up the basis of "who" in the various cases.
Abbreviations & Contractions
(Coming soon...)
Family Units & Organization
Immediate Family: Frīnðʀ
Great-grandparents: Fōrævʀ
There is no distinction between mother’s/father’s maternal and paternal grandparents; e.g. father’s father’s father and father’s mother’s father are both fōravf. The prefix “great-” is “fōr,” and can be repeated indefinitely in the same manner. Familial generations use the same prefixes as time-related words, such as fōr-, naɧ-, and naɧᵫvʀ-; although gestʀ- is not used for family members, as the adjective implies that they are dead.
- Mother’s Great-grandmother: Fōrana
- Mother’s Great-grandfather: Fōran
- Father’s Great-grandmother: Fōrama
- Father’s Great-grandfather: Fōravf
Grandparents: Ævʀ
It is perhaps worth noting here that the collective term for grandparents is ævʀ, though the maternal grandparents are distinctly known as ænʀ.
- Maternal Grandmother: Ana
- Maternal Grandfather: An
- Paternal Grandmother: Ama
- Paternal Grandfather: Avf
Parents: Ælðra
- Mother: Mōðʀ
- Father: Faðʀ
Siblings: Gabrœ̄ðra
- Sister: Svestʀ
- Brother: Brōðʀ
Children: Cᵫnðʀ
- Daughter: Duhtʀ
- Son: Sun
Grandchildren: Ænӿclʀ, Ænӿcʌcᵫnðʀ
There is no distinction between son’s children and daughter’s children.
- Granddaughter: Ænӿclena, Ænӿcʌduhtʀ
- Grandson: Ænӿcʌ, Ænӿcʌsun
Great-grandchildren: Naɧænӿclʀ, Naɧænӿcʌcᵫnðʀ
After great-grandchildren, the prefix ᵫvʀ is applied, after which naɧ is repeated indefinitely; e.g. great-great-great granddaughter is naɧᵫvʀnaɧænӿclena.
- Great-granddaughter: Naɧænӿclena, Naɧænӿcʌduhtʀ
- Great-grandson: Naɧænӿcʌ, Naɧænӿcʌsun
Spouses & In-laws: Brūðþgumʀ & Svegrӿʀ
Parents-in-law: Svegrӿʀ
- Mothers-in-law: Svecstrar
- Wife’s Mother: Svecstra, Brūðþmōðʀ
- Husband’s Mother: Svecstra, Gummōðʀ
- Fathers-in-law: Svegra
- Wife’s Father: Svegʀ, Brūðþfaðʀ
- Husband’s Father: Svegʀ, Gumfaðʀ
Spouses: Brūðþgumʀ
- Wife: Vīvf, Brūðþ
- Husband: Gum, Ver
Spouses’ Siblings: Brūðþguma Gabrōðra
- Sister-in-law (Wife’s Sister): Brūðþsvestʀ
- Sister-in-law (Husband’s Sister): Gumsvestʀ
- Brother-in-law (Wife’s Brother): Brūðþbrōðʀ
- Brother-in-law (Husband’s Brother): Gumbrōðʀ
Siblings’ Spouses: Gabrōðra Brūðþgumʀ
- Brother-in-law (Sister’s Husband): Svestʀgum
- Sister-in-law (Brother’s Wife): Brōðʀbrūðþ
Children’s Spouses: Cenðbrūðþgumʀ
- Son-in-law (Daughter’s Husband): Ǣðм
- Daughter-in-law (Son’s Wife): Snur
Grandchildren’s Spouses: Ænӿcʌbrūðþgumʀ
- Grandson-in-law: Ǣðмænӿcʌ, Ænӿclenagum
- Granddaughter-in-law: Snurænӿcʌ, Ænӿcʌbrūðþ
Extended Family: Ūtfrīnðʀ
Grandparents’ Siblings: Ævrӿʀ
- Maternal Great-aunt: Fōrmūstʀ
- Maternal Great-aunt’s Husband: Fōrmūstʀgum
- Maternal Great-uncle: Fōrœ̄hǣm
- Maternal Great-uncle’s Wife: Fōrōhǣmbrūðþ
- Paternal Great-aunt: Fōrfastʀ
- Paternal Great-aunt’s Husband: Fōrfastʀgum
- Paternal Great-uncle: Fōrfæðravf
- Paternal Great-uncle’s Wife: Fōrfæðravfbrūðþ
Parents’ Siblings: Ælðrӿʀ
- Maternal Aunt: Mūstʀ
- Maternal Aunt’s Husband: Mūstʀgum
- Maternal Uncle: Ōhǣm
- Maternal Uncle’s Wife: Ōhǣmbrūðþ
- Paternal Aunt: Fastʀ
- Paternal Aunt’s Husband: Fastʀgum
- Paternal Uncle: Fæðravf
- Paternal Uncle’s Wife: Fæðravfbrūðþ
Cousins: Brœ̄ðrӿʀ
- Maternal Female Cousin: Svestrӿena
- Maternal Male Cousin: Svestrӿ
- Paternal Female Cousin: Brœ̄ðrӿena
- Paternal Male Cousin: Brœ̄ðrӿ
Siblings’ Children: Nevӿʀ
- Niece (Sister’s Daughter): Neftena
- Nephew (Sister’s Son): Nevɴ
- Niece (Brother’s Daughter): Nevna
- Nephew (Brother’s Son): Nevf
Measurement of Time
(Coming soon...)
Derivational Rules
(Coming soon...)