User:Masako/Kalo
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introduction
- Kalo (taken from caló) is intended to be a minimalist artlang, not an auxlang. It draws primarily on vocabulary from the five most spoken languages in the world; Mandarin, Spanish, English, and Arabic (Hindi is used sparingly although it is spoken by more speakers than Arabic). The grammar is mostly isolating with very few elements of inflection, mostly to show plurality or possession. The goal is to have around 1000 words.
- Notable features:
- Subject-Verb-Object
- highly analytical grammar
- invariance between word types
- only 14 (base) sounds, 9 consonants, and 5 vowels
- simple phonotactics, or syllable structure (C)V(N)
- only ~1000 core words
- easy-to-follow word compounding
phonology
Kalo has nine consonants (/p, t, k, s, m, n, l, j, w/) and five vowels (/a, e, i, o, u/). Stress is mostly word final.
consonants
Labial | Coronal | Dorsal | |
---|---|---|---|
Nasal | m | n | |
Plosive | p | t | k |
Fricative | s | ||
Approximant | w | l | j (y) |
vowels
Front | Back | |
---|---|---|
Close | i | u |
Mid | e | o |
Open | a |
diphthongs
There are two diphthongs [ai̯] ai, and [au̯] au. These are rare and typically only occur word-finally.
syllable structure
All syllables are of the form (C)V(N), that is, optional consonant + vowel + optional final nasal, or V, CV, VN, CVN.
syntax
- Classical Arabic is primarily VSO, but MSA (Modern Standard Arabic) tends to be SVO, favoring full agreement over partial.
- Chinese is classified as an SVO language. Transitive verbs precede their objects in typical simple clauses, while the subject precedes the verb.
- Spanish unmarked word order for affirmative declarative sentences is SVO; however, as in other Romance languages, in practice, word order is mostly variable.
- English word order is almost exclusively SVO.
- Hindi is primarily an SOV language.
Based on the above information about the main source languages for Kalo, it is primarily an SVO (subject-verb-object) language. Modifiers generally follow what they modify, as do prepositional phrases and subordinate clauses.
- wa toma - 1S consume - I eat. (SV)
- wa amo ko - 1S love 3S - I love her. (SVO)
- o pan toma - DO food consume - The bread is eaten. (OV)
nouns
gender
possession
- Possession is shown with the particle te - of; from, or with the suffix -yo - have; possess
- Plurality is marked with the suffix -lo - a pile
- kasalo te ko
- house-PL of 3sg
- His homes
- kasa te walo
- house of 1sg-PL
- Our home
- ipin wayo
- child 1sg.POSS
- my child
number
Kalo | number | English | Kalo | number | English |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
nulu | 0 | zero | na | 7 | seven |
wa | 1 | one | pa | 8 | eight |
li | 2 | two | nun | 9 | nine |
san | 3 | three | ye | 10 | ten |
si | 4 | four | aku / -ku | 100 | (one) hundred |
pen | 5 | five | mila | 1000 | (one) thousand |
we | 6 | six |
When numbers one through ten occur independently, the number marker "ke" precedes the number.
- ko yo le kasa ke li
- 3s have PST house NUM two
- She had two houses.
- wa wite apa ke si
- 1s see man NUM four
- I see four men.
higher numbers
- yewa - 11; eleven
- yeli - 12; twelve
- liye - 20; twenty
- liyesi - 24; twenty-four
- kuyeli - 112; one-hundred-twelve
- sankuweyepen (sanwepen) - 365; three-hundred-sixty-five
verbs
tense
common verbs
- n - existence
- part - yes; thus
- yo - have; possess - (ZHO) 有
thematic lexicon
particles
- ke - number marker (ZHO 個)
- le - past tense marker [PST] (ZHO 了)
- o - direct object marker [DO] (JPN を)
- sa - future tense marker [FUT] (ARA سَـ)
determiners
fixes
- "sunya" > nulu - zero; empty; nothing
- lavar#Spanish > lawa - wash; clean
- water > wata - water; be wet; liquid
- 爸 / ʔabw- / ph₂tḗr
- 媽 / ʔimm- / méh₂tēr
- se - reflexive se#Spanish
- sai - color; shade; hue 色
- linya - order; sequence; line; border linea#Spanish
phrases
- wikitravel.org/en/Category:Phrasebooks
- Hello - salama (formal)
- ola (informal)
- How are you? - moto ni ma?
- Please (used to make a polite request) - po tipa ("for good")
- Thank you (very much) - tanka (ta)
- Yes - kan(a) (it is)
- No - ne
- Maybe - kisa