Kelsiut
Kelsiut | |
---|---|
Pronounced: | [kɛɬ.si.'ut] |
Timeline and Universe: | theoretically this universe, future |
Species: | Humanoid |
Spoken: | Measceineafh |
Total speakers: | ~3,000 |
Writing system: | None, the culture is illiterate |
Genealogy: | Proto-Rajo-Faraneit Proto-Kelsiut |
Typology | |
Morphological type: | isolating |
Morphosyntactic alignment: | Nominative-Accusative |
Basic word order: | SVO |
Credits | |
Creator: | Humancadaver101 aka Schwhatever aka Buckfush530 |
Created: | July 2007 |
Kelsiut is a relative of Forong and Faraneit, among other members of the Proto-Rajo-Faraneit. As it lacks an writing system of its own, the only word transcribed into Roman Orthography is the name, for ease with researching it on the internet.
Phonology
Kelsiut distinguishes the following stop phonemes:
- /p b t d k g/
Fricatives:
- /f v θ ð s z x ɣ/
Approximants:
- /l ɹ ɺ/
Nasals:
- /m n ŋ/
Vowels:
- /i e ɛ a ɔ o u/
Phonotactics:
- (C)V(C)
Distribution:
- /ð z ɣ/ only contrast with their voiced counterparts medially (voicless otherwise)
- /ŋ n/ only contrast medially (/n/ otherwise)
- /ɹ ɺ/ only contrast when not in a cluster (/ɹ/ then)
Allophony
- Stress-related allophony:
- Stops are aspirated when the onset of a stressed syllable
- Unstressed /i u/ become [j w] when they proceed or follow another vowel
- Unstressed /i u/ in other environments become [ɪ ʊ]
- Other vowels when unstressed slightly centralize
- Other allophony:
- /si zi xi ɣi/ > [ʃi ʒi çi ɟi]
- /ni/ > [ɲi]
- /θ ð/ after a rounded vowel > [f v]
Dialectical Variants
A few dialects merge /s z/ with /θ ð/ in all positions, however, this is a minority realization.
Culture
Kelsiut is spoken by a few small settlements in southern Measceineafh. The vast majority of the population lives on small islets within estuary-like floodplains. Typically, the plains are replete with water during the rainy season (winter and spring) due to rainfall as well as the majority of the dry season (summer) due to snowmelt from the eastern mountain range. During the fall, the water level recedes exposing the Kelsiut-speaking communities to Forong and other local raiders as well as Faraneit caravans, which are reputed for their unpredictable behavior towards non-Faraneih within the Measceineafh.
The majority of the Kelsiut subsist on a dangerous borderline between foragers and farmers. They are semi-nomadic, shifting camps when the water levels first become easily crossed, resorting to hunting game and gathering from wild food sources. Towards the end of summer, however, they return to their ancestral islets and wait for the rains to refill their natural moats. During the rainy season, they gather food from a few sources on their islet until most sources have dimenished greatly. Then they practice slash and burn agriculture along the opposite banks, rowing across their moats to briefly plant a few vegetables. On the islets, they harvest root-fruits from the puzil trees that grow around their houses and fish intermittantly before their crops are ripe. After harvest, the water recedes and they leave for more fertile pastures temporarily, allowing the islets to recharge with harvestable plants and game.
Their culture can easily be divided into the structure used on the islet and those used in the bush. During the dry season, while out in the open land, they follow a more militant paradigm. The groups splinter into smaller bands. Within the bands, women rarely leave the camps. They carry the sleeping mats and watch the children while travelling, but once camp is laid, they remain stationary and forage only within shouting distance. Children (generally defined as pre-pubescents) are permitted even less freedom, remaining within sight of the women in the camp. Men, when not travelling between camps, generally split into different foraging groups, which then disperse in the general area. During the distant foraging operations, the men also scout ahead in case of danger from other ethnic groups.
Other bands of Kelsiut-speakers are viewed as both potential trading partners as well as competitors. Usually bands of Kelsiut-speakers which meet in the open country are peaceful to one another and trade news of any Faraneit caravans or other intruders to the area as well as young girls as potential wives. The constant inter-islet interchange of wives has not only permitted the ethnic group to maintain genetic diversity within islets but also maintain some linguistic continuity. During rare periods of extreme famine, contacts between Kelsiut-speakers, particularly of different islets, can only be described as guerrilla warfare.
Once returned to the islet, the Kelsiut-speakers' culture dramatically changes methods. Instead of militant and male-dominated, the different summer bands on and islet function similarly to clans in Iroquois society. Agreements about land use or other large issues are discussed by all adults on the island, of both genders, until concensus is reached. Gender roles are much less sharpely defined, as both men and women, unless pregnant, clear the shore's brush to make it suitable for horticulture, as well as gather food and cook it. Men generally fish and women generally harvest the puzil roots, but it is not unheard of for individuals to violate this tendency. Men almost exclusively harvest the shore's crops, however, as it is viewed as potentially dangerous for women to work along the shore during the dry season.
Their religion can only be described as animistic, but with some polytheistic aspects.