Songulda language
Songulda Songulda | |
Spoken in: | |
Conworld: | |
Total speakers: | |
Genealogical classification: |
|
Basic word order: | |
Morphological type: | agglutinative |
Morphosyntactic alignment: | ergative |
Writing system: | |
Created by: | |
Qwynegold |
Phonology and phonotactics
Consonants | ||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bilabial | Labiod. | Dental | Alveolar | Post-alv. | Palatal | Velar | Glottal | |||||||||
Nasals | m | n | ŋː | |||||||||||||
Plosives | p | b | t | d | k | g | ||||||||||
Fricatives | s | ʃ | ʒ | x | h | |||||||||||
Affricates | ts | tʃ | dʒ | |||||||||||||
Approximants | ʋ | j | ||||||||||||||
Trill | r | |||||||||||||||
Lateral Approximant | l |
Vowels | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Front | Near-front | Central | Near-back | Back | ||||||
High | i | y | ɨ | u | ||||||
Near-high | ||||||||||
High-mid | ||||||||||
Mid | e | ø | o | |||||||
Low-mid | ||||||||||
Near-low | ||||||||||
Low | ɑ |
All the vowels and the consonants /p t k m n s x h l/ can have phonemic length.
Vowel harmony
Songulda has progressive vowel harmony, with vowels belonging to one of the three groups front, back or neutral.
Front | Back | Neutral |
---|---|---|
y | u | i |
2̽ | o̽ | e̽ |
1 | A |
If a word root has only neutral vowels in it, then affixes belonging to the front group will be used with it.
Syllable structure
The syllable structure for non-final syllables is (O)V(ː)((C)D(ː)), and for final syllables (O)V(ː)((C)D). For both syllable types, V can be any vowel. For non-final syllables O can be any consonant except /p/ or/ŋː/, and for final syllables any consonant except /ŋː/. The C and D have certain constraints. For non-final syllables, the coda can be any of the following consonants or clusters:
m | ||||||||||||||
n | nd | ns | nʒ | nx | nh | nts | ndʒ | |||||||
p | ||||||||||||||
b | ||||||||||||||
t | ||||||||||||||
d | ||||||||||||||
k | ||||||||||||||
g | ||||||||||||||
s | st | sk | ||||||||||||
ʃ | ||||||||||||||
ʒ | ||||||||||||||
x | ||||||||||||||
h | ||||||||||||||
tʃ | ||||||||||||||
dʒ | ||||||||||||||
ʋ | ʋd | ʋs | ||||||||||||
j | jt | jd | jk | jm | jn | jr | js | jx | jts | jdʒ | jl | |||
r | rt | rd | rk | rm | rs | rx | rts | rj | ||||||
l | lt | ld | lk | lm | ls | lʒ | lx | lts | ldʒ | lj |
For final syllables, the coda can be any of the following consonants or clusters:
m | mp | mt | mts | mtʃ | |||||||||||
n | nt | nd | ns | nʒ | nts | ndʒ | |||||||||
ŋk | |||||||||||||||
b | |||||||||||||||
t | |||||||||||||||
d | |||||||||||||||
g | gt | gd | gs | ||||||||||||
s | sp | st | sk | ||||||||||||
ʒ | |||||||||||||||
x | |||||||||||||||
h | |||||||||||||||
tʃ | |||||||||||||||
dʒ | |||||||||||||||
ʋ | ʋt | ʋd | ʋs | ||||||||||||
j | jt | jd | jk | jm | jn | jr | js | jx | jts | jdʒ | jl | ||||
r | rt | rd | rk | rm | rts | rj | rx | ||||||||
l | lp | lt | ld | lk | lm | ls | lʃ | lʒ | lx | lts | ltʃ | ldʒ | lj |
A list of phonemes that can actually appear next to each other in a word, regardless of whether they are in the same syllable or not is here (long consonants are counted here as sequences of two consonants):
1st phoneme | 2nd ph. | 2nd ph. | 2nd ph. | 2nd ph. | 2nd ph. | 2nd ph. | 2nd ph. | 2nd ph. | 2nd ph. | 2nd ph. | 2nd ph. | 2nd ph. | 2nd ph. | 2nd ph. | 2nd ph. | 2nd ph. | 2nd ph. | 2nd ph. | 2nd ph. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
p | p | t | s | j | l | ||||||||||||||
b | d | n | x | dZ | j | ||||||||||||||
t | t | k | m | r | h | ts | tS | v | j | l | |||||||||
d | b | g | m | n | r | s | S | x | h | v | j | l | |||||||
k | t | k | s | j | l | ||||||||||||||
g | d | m | s | Z | x | dZ | v | j | l | ||||||||||
m | p | b | t | d | m | n | r | s | S | Z | x | h | ts | tS | dZ | j | l | ||
n | t | d | n | s | S | Z | x | h | ts | tS | dZ | v | j | ||||||
N | k | g | m | N | r | l | |||||||||||||
r | p | b | t | d | k | g | m | r | s | S | x | h | ts | tS | dZ | v | j | ||
S | p | t | k | m | v | j | l | ||||||||||||
Z | b | d | g | ||||||||||||||||
x | b | d | g | m | x | dZ | v | j | l | ||||||||||
h | p | b | t | d | k | g | m | n | r | s | x | h | ts | tS | dZ | v | j | l | |
tS | p | k | m | S | j | ||||||||||||||
dZ | b | g | n | Z | |||||||||||||||
v | d | g | r | Z | x | dZ | l | ||||||||||||
j | p | b | t | d | k | g | m | n | r | s | S | Z | x | h | ts | tS | dZ | v | l |
l | p | b | t | d | k | g | m | n | s | S | Z | x | h | ts | tS | dZ | v | j | l |
Other phonotactic rules are:
- /p/ can not be the first phoneme of a word.
- Whenever a word has a voiced stop, no unvoiced stops can follow after it in the whole word, unless it is the last phoneme in a coda cluster, and there is no voiced version of the cluster.
- A syllable with a cluster or affricate in coda position can not have a long vowel, unless there is no onset.
- There are no diphtongs.
Writing
The romanized version of Songulda, which will be used from here on, is as follows:
Romanization and pronunciation
A a, B b, C c, D d, E e, F f, G g, H h, I i, Ĭ ĭ, J j, K k, L l, M m, N n, O o, Ö ö, P p, R r, S s, T t, U u, Ü ü, V v, Y y
Letter | Pronunciation | |
---|---|---|
A a | ɑ | |
B b | b | |
CH ch | tʃ | |
D d | d | |
DZ dz | dʒ | |
E e | e̽ | |
F f | f | |
G g | g | |
H h | h | |
I i | i | |
Ĭ ĭ | ɨ | |
J j | ʒ | |
K k | k | |
KH kh | x | |
L l | l | |
M m | m | |
N n | n | |
NG ng | ŋː | |
O o | o̽ | |
Ö ö | ø̽ | |
P p | p | |
R r | r | |
S s | s | |
SH sh | ʃ | |
T t | t | |
TS ts | ts | |
U u | u | |
Ü ü | y | |
V v | ʋ | |
Y y | j |
Grammars
Songulda is an ergative, agglutinative language.
Verbs
Stems of all verbs in Songulda end with either -ü, -ba, -da, -ga or -khu. Verbs agree with nouns in person/number and case. The order in which affixes are tacked on is: (conditional)+(causative)+stem+(past tense)+(state)+(perfect)+(continuous)+person/number+(passive)+(conditional). Person and number is fusioned in the suffixes, which are as follow:
Person/number | Affix | Examples |
---|---|---|
1st person singular | -m (if word ends with vowel), -um/-üm (if word ends with consonant) | |
1st person plural | -o/-ö (if word ends with s), -zo (if word ends with d (making the affricate <dz>), -so/-sö (in other cases) | |
2nd person singular | -t (if word ends with l, s, d or vowel; long vowels in last syllable are shortened, last d is deleted), -tĭ (if word ends with t) | |
2nd person plural | -to/-tö (final d is deleted) | |
3rd person singular | -ta (if word ends with back vowel), -t (if word ends with üü), -üt (if word ends with ü or üs), -üsüt (if word ends with üüs; the üüs is deleted), -ülüt (if word ends with ült; the ült is deleted), -ata (in other cases) | |
3rd person plural | -to (if word ends with back vowel), -tö (if word has ü in it), -ato (in other cases) |
Voice
Songulda has four voices: active, passive, impersonal passive and causative.
Voice | Affix | Examples |
---|---|---|
Active | No marking | |
Passive | -nu/-nü (if word ends with consonant), -nnu/-nnü (if word ends with vowel) | |
Causative | ban-/bĭn- |
The impersonal passive is made the same way as the passive, except that the person/number suffix, which usually is oblique, is dropped.
Tense
Tense | Affix | Examples |
---|---|---|
Past | -lt (if word ends with ü), -l (if word ends with a), -ld (if word ends with u) | |
Present | No marking |
Songulda has no future tense, instead the present tense is used. It is understood from context which tense is actually meant. For example, if someone says "I go to the store", but doesn't move at all from the spot, it is understood to have been meaning "in the future". Using words like "then", "later" and "after" in a sentence also indicate that something will take place in the future.
Aspect
Aspect | Affix | Examples |
---|---|---|
Conditional | Circumfixing i- (if word begins with a consonant) or in- (if word begins with a vowel) and -ki/-gi. | |
Continuous | -üs (if word ends with ü or ült), -as (if word ends with a), -us (if word ends with u or khuld), lengthening of the last vowel (if the word ends with al) | |
Perfect | -ü (if word ends with ü or ült), -ga (if word ends with ba or dal), -ba (if word ends with da or bal), -da (if word ends with ga or gal), -hukhu (if the word ends with khu; the first khu is deleted), -a (if the word ends with khuld) | |
State | -ga (if the word ends with khu), -iga (if the word ends with a, l or khuld; the previous a is deleted), -yü (if the word ends with ü or ült) |
The "state aspect" is used to indicate a change of state. The word for marry for example, would mean that someone is married if used with this aspect. Without the state aspect, the word would mean that someone is at the wedding ceremony right now.
Vocabulary
Pronouns
1st person | 2nd person | 3rd person | Interrogative | No one | Everyone | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Singular | um | tĭ | ata | kabu | ya kim | |
Plural | uso | to | ato | kabu | kim |
Numerals
1. | yom |
---|---|
2. | mul |
3. | den |
4. | sam |
5. | loovi |
6. | sok |
7. | shingk |
8. | langk |
9. | vihil |
10. | sham |
100. | chen |
1000. | tsun |
Larger numbers are formed in the same way as in English, i.e. 27 for example is mul (two) × sham (ten) + shingk (seven) = mulshamshingk (twenty seven). All the numerals have been borrowed from Xǔngpìng so there are quite a few irregular ones.
11. | mil |
---|---|
13. | shek |
17. | chun |
19. | gog |
23. | mulshek |
29. | mulgog |
31. | demmil |
37. | denchun |
41. | sammil |
43. | samshek |
47. | samchun |
53. | vilooshek |
59. | viloogog |
61. | sokmil |
67. | sokchun |
71. | shingkmil |
73. | shingkshek |
79. | shinggog |
83. | langkshek |
97. | vihilchun |