Shitullian
File:Flag-Kheng.png | |
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Shitu / Khengese Śituul | |
Pronounced: | Native: /ʃi.'tɯːɭ/ Anglicized: /'ʃi.tu/ |
Timeline and Universe: | Alternate Earth |
Species: | Human |
Spoken: | Island of Kheng |
Writing system: | Caamśůn (Abugida-esque) |
Genealogy: | Śituul is a language isolate |
Typology | |
Morphological type: | Somewhat Isolating |
Morphosyntactic alignment: | Ergative-Absolutive |
Basic word order: | Typically VSO |
Credits | |
Creator: | D. Matthew Mikalowsky |
Created: | January 2014 |
Background
Śituul is a language isolate spoken by the Khengaali people on the Island of Kheng (an island that exists on an Earth in the distant future that is composed of land that was a part of present day Brazil). The name of the language is a compound word meaning "speaking tongue" (śi- being the verbal root for "to speak" and tuul meaning "tongue").
The language is mostly isolating, except for the usage of noun incorporation to express the morphosyntactic alignment (absolutive arguments are incorporated), and in the process of verb serialization in which verb stems can sometime merge.
Phonology
Śituul has 19 consonants, six pure vowels (three short, three long), one reduced vowel, and one diphthong (if you don't count the other vowel combinations with /j/).
Consonants
Plosives and certain approximants in Śituul are classified as either plain or strong. In most cases, strong consonants are aspirated, with the exception of w in which case the distinction is one of voicing.
Whenever a strong consonant is followed by /j/ the consonant and /j/ merge to form a different phoneme, in most cases this is an affricate that assimilates to the POA of the strong consonant. With /ʍ/, [ç] is formed instead, and in the case of /s/ (which isn't considered strong), it palatizes to [ʃ]. In all cases this change surfaces in the Romanization's orthography, but not in the language's native script (which will be described more fully below).
Labial | Coronal | Dorsal | ||
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Nasal | m [m] | n [n] | -n [ŋ] | |
Plosive | Plain | p [p] | t [t] | k [k] |
Strong | ṗ [pʰ] | ṭ [tʰ] | ḳ [kʰ] | |
Fricative | f [f] | s [s] and ś [ʃ] | h [ç~x] | |
Affricate | ß [p͜f] | c [t͜ʃ] | x [k͜x] | |
Approximant | -l [l~ɭ] and r [ɹ~ɻ] | j [j] |
Approximant | Plain | w [w] |
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Strong | ẉ [ʍ] |
Vowels
Front | Central | Back | |
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High | i [i] ii [iː] |
u [ɯ] uu [ɯː] | |
Middle | ů [ə] | ||
Low | a [ɑ] aa [ɑː] |
Diphthong | y [ɑɪ̯] |
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Allophony and Alternations
Perhaps the most interesting case of allophony or alternation in Śituul comes in the form of the merger of /j/ with any strong consonant, and its influence over a few other select consonants, and its pronunciation in certain environments. The below list should explain quite fully what changes take place around /j/.
- /pʰj/ → [p͜f]
- /tʰj/ → [t͜ʃ]
- /kʰj/ → [k͜x]
- /ʍj/ → [ç]
- /sj/ → [ʃ]
As you can see, most often in these changes, an affricate results, with the exception of /s/ and /ʍ/.
One may have noticed the convention above of noting [ŋ] with -n, this is due to the fact that [n] can only occur as an initial in a syllable and whenever it would appear as a final, it is realized instead as a velar nasal.
Another place allophony surfaces in the consonant system is in the case of /ɻ/. While /ɻ/ is considered the base phoneme, it freely alternates with [ɹ] in initial position, and is realized as [l~ɭ] when appearing as a final consonant in a syllable. While the retroflex pronunciation is the more common pronunciation, [ɹ] and [l] are heard often as well.
Despite the smallish size of the vowel system, a surprisingly small amount of allophony presents here. One place it is universal, is in the case of a checked syllable. Any short vowel that appears in a checked syllable is reduced to [ə]. This is due to a gradual merger of the various vowel qualities that existed as reduced forms of each of the "pure" vowels in the past. Additionally, the diphthong /ɑɪ̯/ is treated as a long vowel.
Owing to the fact that /ɯ/ is unrounded, it does round to [u] when following a bilabial consonant.
Script
The native script is called Caamśůn (interpreted as "speaking paper" or "written speach"). Caamśůn is similar to an abugida, except that a letters orientation can impact the status of its inherent vowel, and separate glyphs exist to represent the vowels in isolation as well as to write a long vowel.
The script for Śituul is written in three horizontal rows, with the middle row consisting of glyphs that are automatically interpreted as the consonant they represent plus an inherent a, unless a diacritic is added to shift that vowel to i, u or y. Consonant glyphs that appear above or below that middle baseline do no carry an inherent vowel, and are instead interpreted as a final consonant to the previous syllable. In the example below, we also see that a bar extending from the top row into the middle row is used to indicate that the previous syllable has a j that appears between the vowel and consonant (giving us a CjV shaped syllable). Additionally, there is a shorter bar that appears in the middle row that makes the consonant from the previous syllable strong (forming a ĊV syllable), and finally, though not pictured in the below example, there as another variety of bar that extends from the middle row into the bottom row. This final mark indicates that the previous syllable has both a strong consonant and a j preceding the vowel (forming a ĊjV syllable).
File:SHI-bar.png | File:SHI-bar.png | |||||||||||
File:SHI-w.png | File:SHI-stroke.png | File:SHI-j.png | ||||||||||
File:SHI-grave.png | ||||||||||||
Śiẉajaam śituul. | ||||||||||||
I speak Śituul. |
Creator Comments
I have worked on many different conlangs in the past, and all have died a slow painful death. This one was meant to be one I could focus on for the long haul and finally move from being a "scrapper" (i.e. someone who creates the skeleton of a language and then immediately stops working on it in favor of a new language) into being more of a "completist." I have had some success, but my attention has wandered still.
What I aim to do here, is create a mostly naturalistic language that integrates features from some of my scrapped languages over the years, as well as develop a language that is pleasing to me. This page will likely be slow to update, but rest assured that the script, at the very least, will be described fully here! (Scripts tend to be the feature of languages that I work on the hardest and enjoy creating the most.)