Sarim
Sarim (Sarim: Sarim bār) is a language spoken by most of the population of Sarimis, as well as several its satellite nations. It is a largely isolating, accusative, head-final language of the Kambaic language family.
Phonology
Consonants
-Plosives /p t d c k g kʷ/ <p t d ch c g cu>
-Nasals /m n ŋʷ/ <m n ŋ ŋu>
-Fricatives /β θ s sʷ ç xʷ h/ <v th s su hy hu h>
-Rhotic/Approximants: /r l j w/ <r l y u>
Vowels
/i e a o i: e: a: o:/ <i e a o ī ē ā ō>
Syllable Structure
The basic syllable structure in Sarim is (C)V(C), with the caveat that only /m n ŋ t th s h r l i u/ may occur word-finally.
Morphophonological processes
A number of word-internal clusters do not occur, having been lost in earlier sound changes. Note that the processes described here apply to roots aswell:
- |n| assimilates to the point of articulation of a following consonant, and sequences of */nr nl/ become /rr ll/: */np/ > /mp/, */nr/ > /rr/.
- |k| becomes /ŋ/ before /ŋ ŋʷ/. Similarly, |p| becomes /m/ before another /m/.
- |t d| are lost before a second stop, with the lengthening of the previous vowel (if short), except before nasals and /r l/, where they act like |n| : */tk/ > /:k/, */tŋ/ > /ŋŋ/, */dl/ > /ll/
- |h| is lost following a second consonant: */mh/ > /mm/
- Clusters of one of /p t k kʷ/ + /s/ become /s/ + /p t k kʷ/: */ks/ > /sk/.
- Consonants following word-final labio-velars are lost: */kʷr/ > /kʷ/.
- Only /m n ŋ ŋʷ r l s/ can be geminated. With other consonants, no gemination occurs, e.g */dd/ > /d/.
- |j| is lost immediately following /c ç/. Sequences of |tj/kj dj/gj sj/θj/hj| become /c j ç/, respectively.
- Two adjacent short vowels of the same quality become a single long vowel. If a long vowel is adjacent to a short vowel of the same quality, an epenthetic /j/ is insterted between the two vowels: */a.a/ > /a:/ */e:.e/ > /e:je/
Allophony
-/r/ is realised as a tap [ɾ] before a vowel but [ɻ] before a consonant or word-finally.
-/c/ is realised as either palatal affricates [cç] or[ʨ], or even the postalveolar affricate [ʧ] especially among younger speakers.
-Before /s/, nasals tend to be realised as a sequence nasal+voiceless stop, e.g. /ms/ = [mps].
-/o/ is realised as [ʊ]or [u] word finally ,and /o:/ is often realised [u:], especially amongst younger speakers.
-/a a:/ are realised [ɐ ɐ:] in unstressed syllables.
Stress
Stress in Sarim is non-phonemic ,always falling on the penultimate syllable of a word, unless a vowel penultimate syllable is short andin an adjacent syllable is long, in which case the stress shifts to the long vowel. If both adjacent vowels are long then the leftmost long vowel receives tress. Monosyllabic lexical words are stressed, but grammatical particles are not.
Nominal Morphology
Being largely isolating, Sarim has very little grammatical nominal morphology (it does, however, have quite a productive derivational morphology).
Plural
The plural morpheme, which is not compulsory, is -ū. If the noun stem ends in a short vowel, this is lost, then -ū suffixed. Dipthongs and long vowels add -yū:
Dun man, dunū 'men'
Kanda land, country, kandū lands, countries
Talgū tree talgūyū trees