Uaru

From FrathWiki
Revision as of 12:39, 29 January 2019 by Warakemau (talk | contribs)
Jump to navigationJump to search





Leopardcivilflag.png
Uaru, Uaa
Pronounced: waru, waː
Typology
Morphological type: analytic
Basic word order: SVO
Credits
Creator: Xing at the CBB

Uaru or Uaa is a constructed language. It's a mixture between an artlang and an auxlang.


Phonology

Common consonants: p t k b d g m n ŋ <ng> l r

Marginal consonants: f s t͡ʃ (ch) ʃ (sh) v z

Vowels: i e a o u

The syllable structures is (C)V.

/u/ can be rather lax. It may be de-rounded, centralised, devoiced, or even dropped completely. It may be inserted to break up consonant clusters in loan-words.


Grammar

The basic word order is SVO. There is generally no inflection, but grammatical relations are expressed through separate words.

Gara mate time. – The cat eats the fish.

Gara mota. – The cat is sleeping.

Gara mota i langetu – The cat is sleeping on the blanket.


There is an optional past tense marker ko

Gara ko mota i langetu. – The cat was sleeping on the blanket.

Gara ko mate time. – The cat ate the fish.

Adjectives

Adjectives follow nouns:


Gara maka – a big cat, the big cat

Time miti – a small fish, the small fish

(Note that there is no distinction between definite and indefinite forms.)

Together with the copula nea (to be), adjectives can serve as predicates:

Gara nea maka. – The cat is big.

Gara ko nea maka. – The cat was big.

Comparative constructions is formed with the construction i talo.

Gara ko nea i tala time. The cat is bigger than the fish.


Prepositions

The most common prepositions are: i – in, at, on o – to, into, onto, a – from, out of, li – through, along, across me – with


Participles

The prepisition i is used to form the passive participle:

Time i mate. – The eaten fish, the fish that has been eaten

The prepisition me is used to form the active participle:

Time me mate – The cat that eats, the cat that has eaten.


Time nea me mate. – The fish has eaten; the fish eats (regularly).

Note that the active participle is not, as in English, used to form the progressive aspect.

Content Questions

Common interrogative words include kai what, which, and kaii who.

Gara ko mate kai? – What did the cat eat?

Gara ko mate kaii? – Whom did the cat eat?

Gara ko mate kai time? – Which fish did the cat eat?