Thesome

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Thesome [⁸tʰe.zɔ.mɛ] is a constructed language. It is similiar to Ancient Greek in terms of phonology and Finnish in terms of morphology. - THIS PAGE IS STILL UNDER CONSTRUCTION.

Phonology

Vowels

Phonemes

/a e i o u y/ <a e i o u y>

Allophony

All vowels have a lax counterpart: /a/ - [ɐ], /e/ - [ɛ], /i/ - [ɪ], /o/ - [ɔ], /u/ - [ʊ] and /y/ - [ʏ]. Lax vowels appear instead of the tense ones

  1. always in closed syllables; e.g. emnathon ["ɛm.nɐ.tʰɔn]
  2. in the syllable following a stressed vowel; e.g. Thesome["tʰe.zɔ.mɛ]
  3. in the last syllable of a word; e.g. deromi ["de.ɾɔ.mɪ]

Word final [ɛ] may be realised as [ə] in fast speech: Thesome /"tʰe.zɔ.mə/

When the penultimate syllable is stressed, the vowel is usually pronounced longer; contrast deromi ["de.ɾɔ.mɪ] with derthi ["dɛ:ɾ.tʰɪ]

Diphthongs

Phonemes

/aɪ eɪ ɔɪ aʊ/ <ai ei eu/oi au>

/ɔɪ/ is written <eu> in the first syllable of a word, <oi> anywhere else; probably a sound change that has occurred in an earlier stage but that has been undone.

Glide Insertion

When another vowel follows a diphthong,

  1. in formal speech diphthongs ending in /ɪ/ add a /j/-glide before the next vowel whereas after /aʊ/ a /w/ is added.
  2. in colloquial speech diphthongs become (long) monophthongs with a glide onset on the following syllable.

E.g. andromeía: 1. [ɐn.dɾo."meɪ.jɐ] 2. [ɐn.dɾo."me:.jɐ] and Sauos: 1. [saʊ.wɔs] 2. [sa:.wɔs]

Consonants

Phonemes

Plosives: /p pʰ b t tʰ d k kʰ g/ < p ph b t th d k kh g>

Fricatives: /f s x h/ <f s ch h>

Nasals: /m n/ <m n>

Liquid: /ɾ l/ <r l>

Allophony

The voiced stops /b d/ may be softened to [v ð] between vowels: eudein ["ɔɪ.ðeɪn]

/k kʰ g/ are usually pronounced [c cʰ ɟ] before the vowels /e i y/.

/s/ becomes [z] in the onset cluster sm- (pronounced [zm]) and between vowels: contrast thesomi ["tʰe.zɔ.mɪ] with thesthi ["tʰɛ:s.tʰɪ]

Nasals, if preceding plosives, assimilate to the latter's point of articulation (with the exception of compounds).

Stress

Stress usually falls on the antepenultimate syllable. If stress falls on any other syllable, it is marked with an acute accent (which is placed on the second part of a diphthong). If the penultimate syllable is stressed, it is pronounced longer than usual. E.g. mnathygata [mna."tʰy.gɐ.tɐ] mnathygataí [mna.tʰy.ga."taɪ] mnathygatánen [mna.tʰy.ga."ta:.nɛn]

Syllables

Onset

Any single consonant

Plosive + Liquid: pr-, phr-, br-, pl-, phl-, bl- etc.

/f/ or /x/ + Voiceless Plosive (except Bilabials): ft-, fth-, cht-, chth- etc.

/s/ + /m/ or Voiceless Plosive: sm-, sp-, sph-, st- etc.

/p/ or /k/ + /t/: pt-, kt-

/m/ + /n/: mn-

Nucleus

Any vowel or diphthong.

Coda

Except for the word's final syllable, any consonant except /h/ is allowed. Word finally, only /ɾ/, /l/, /n/, /s/ and /t/ are used.

Morphophonology

Vowels and Diphthongs

Also have a look at allophony of simple vowels and glide-insertion after diphthongs, which were discussed before (under section 1.1 and 1.2).

The diphthong /eɪ/ changes in formal speech commonly if preceeded or followed by a syllable with the same nucleus /eI/ (except when there are no consonant between the two nuclei). Whether the first or second diphthong changes, depends on the stress:

  • When the second diphthong is not stressed, its /eɪ/ changes /i/.
  • When the second diphthong is stressed, the preceding diphthong changes to /e/.

These changes aren't usually written.

2nd /ei/ unstressed stressed
Thesome smeidein smeideí
Pronunciation zmeɪdɪn zmedeɪ
Meaning I fear he fears


Consonants

Especially /tʰ/ is prone to many changes.

/tʰ/ > [s] / C_ (C=voiceless stop), e.g. hekthi > heksi

/ntʰ/, /mtʰ/ > [s], e.g. famthi > fasi, helenthi > helesi

/tʰ/ > ø / CC_, e.g. lapsthi > lapsi

/tʰ/ > [s] / _#, e.g. eude:thi > eudeith > eudeis

/m/ > [n] / _#, e.g. eude:mi > eudeim > eudein

F > ø / _s (F=fricative/sonorant), e.g. lalsme > lasme, thessme > thesme, kerofsme > kerosme

/h/ > [ɪ] / e_V, e.g. ehelenthe:mi > eieleseín, ehekthe:thi > eiekseís

/l/ > ø / r_, e.g. farlje > fairle > faire

ø > o / C_m (unless the previous syllable contains /o/, e.g. lalmi > lalomi, but kerofmi > kerofmi

Morphology

Verbal Morphology

Personal Endings

With verbs, Thesome distinguishes four persons, three tenses, four numbers and two genera verbi.

Persons

  • 1st person: the speaker(s): I, we
  • 2nd person: the adressee(s): you
  • 3rd person: other(s): he, she, they
  • NC (Noun Compound): used when the subject is a noun

Tenses

  • Present: reports things that happen now
  • Past: reports things that happened in the past
  • Future: reports things that will happen in the future

Numbers

  • Singular: denoting singularity
  • Paucal: denoting only a part of a previous mentioned group
  • Dual: denoting duality
  • Plural: denoting many or all

Genera Verbi

  • Active
  • Passive


There are two sets of endings in the active (very similar to each other and in fact only differing greatly in 1&2SG):

Vocalic Endings Singular Paucal Dual Plural Consonant Endings Singular Paucal Dual Plural
1st -ein -esme -esmet -emen 1st -mi -sme -smet -men
2nd -eis -esthe -esthet -ethen 2nd -thi -sthe -sthet -then
3rd -eí -eseí -eset -eíen 3rd -eí -seí -set -eíen
NC -én NC -én


The Passive endings:

Vocalic Endings Singular Paucal Dual Plural Consonant Endings Singular Paucal Dual Plural
1st -emai -efme -emne -emnai 1st -? -? -? -?
2nd -ethai -efthe -etne -etnai 2nd -? -? -? -?
3rd -eíai -efeí -eneí -enaí 3rd -? -? -? -?
NC -aí NC -aí

Present Tense

Vocalic Endings

Vocalic Endings are simply attached to the verb's stem, e.g. eud- see:

Active Singular Paucal Dual Plural
1st eudein I see eudesme some of us see eudesmet we two see eudemen we see
2nd eudeis you see eudesthe some of you see eudesthet you two see eudethen you see
3rd eud he sees eudeseí some of them see eudeset they two see eudeíen they see
NC eudén X see(s)
Passive Singular Paucal Dual Plural
1st eudemai I am seen eudefme some of us are seen eudemne we two are seen eudemnai we are seen
2nd eudethai you are seen eudefthe some of you are seen eudetne you two are seen eudetnai you are seen
3rd eudeíai he is seen eudefeí some of them are seen eudeneí they two are seen eudenaí they are seen
NC eud X is/are seen
Consonant Endings

Consonant Endings are attached to the verb's stem; they trigger, however, modifications, depending on the last sound of the verbal stem.

Liquid Stems

Liquid Stems are stems ending in -l, -r, and -s, e.g. lal- speak, der- stay and thes- lie.

Consonant Endings Singular Paucal Dual Plural
1st lalomi I speak lasme some of us speak lasmet we two speak lalomen we speak
2nd lalthi you speak lasthe some of you speak lasthet you two speak lalthen you speak
3rd lal he speaks laseí some of them speak laset they two speak laleíen they speak
NC lalén X speak(s)

Modifications:

  1. They insert a vowel -o- in 1SG and 1PL. (lal-o-mi, der-o-mi, thes-o-mi)
  2. They lose their final consonant when appended with the Paucal- and Dual-endings. (la-sme, de-sme, the-sme).

Stop Stems

Stop Stems are stems ending in -p, -t, and -k, e.g. hek- strike.

Consonant Endings Singular Paucal Dual Plural
1st hekomi I strike hekosme some of us strike hekosmet we two strike hekomen we strike
2nd heksi you strike hekosthe some of you strike hekosthet you two strike heksen you strike
3rd hek he strikes hekseí some of them strike hekset they two strike hekeíen they strike
NC hekén X strike(s)

Modifications:

  1. They insert a vowel -o- in all first persons and in 2PC/DU. (hek-o-mi, hek-o-sme, hek-o-men, hek-o-sthe)
  2. The aspirated voiceless stop /tʰ/ in 2SG and 2PL becomes /s/. (hek-si)


Nasal Stems

Nasal Stems are stems ending in -m and -n, e.g. fam- say and helen- sing.

Consonant Endings Singular Paucal Dual Plural
1st fami I say fasme some of us say fasmet we two say famen we say
2nd fasi you say fasthe some of you say fasthet you two say fathen you say
3rd fam he says faseí some of them say faset they two say fameíen they say
NC famén X say(s)

Modifications:

  1. The final consonant is lost in all forms except 3SG, 3PL and NC.
  2. The aspirated voiceless stop /tʰ/ in 2SG becomes /s/ (but not in 2PL). (fa-si vs. fa-then)


Stop-S Stems

Stop-S Stems are stems ending in an unvoiced stop followed by an /s/, e.g. laps- sleep and kleits- to be captive.

Consonant Endings Singular Paucal Dual Plural
1st laposmi I sleep laposme some of us sleep laposmet we two sleep laposmen we sleep
2nd lapsi you sleep laposthe some of you sleep laposthet you two sleep lapsen you sleep
3rd laps he sleeps laposeí some of them sleep laposet they two sleep lapseíen they sleep
NC lapsén X sleep(s)

Modifications:

  1. In 1SG and 1PL, an <o> intrudes between the stop and the /s/ of the stem. (laposmi I sleep).
  2. In all Paucal and Dual forms, the /s/ of the stem is lost and replaced by an <o>. (laposthe some of you sleep)
  3. In 2SG and 2PL, the /tʰ/ of the personal ending is lost. (lapsi you sleep)


Irregular

Ei- be is an irregular verb.

Consonant Endings Singular Paucal Dual Plural
1st eimi I am esme some of us are esmet we two are eimen we are
2nd eis you are esthe some of you are esthet you two are eithen you are
3rd ei he is eseí some of them are eset they two are eíen they are
NC en X is

Past Tense

The Past Stem

The Past Stem is formed via a circumfix consisting of an augment and a dental suffix, which will be dealt with seperately in this section.

The Augment is - like in Ancient Greek - a vowel, e- which is prefixed to the stem. This leads to no difficulties with verbal stems beginning with a consonant (except h-) and verbal stems beginning with the vowel i- (thus forming the diphthong ei-).

  • der- > eder-
  • lal- > elal-
  • thes- > ethes-
  • ir- > eir-

When the stem begins with the vowels a-, e- and o-, the augment becomes an infix i- (thus forming the diphthongs ai-, ei- and eu-).

  • ar- > air-
  • echt- > eicht-
  • op- > eup-

Verbal stems beginning with eu- replace the diphthong with y-, those beginning with h- replace the consonant with ei-.

  • eumath- > ymath-
  • helen- > eielen-

Verbal stems beginning with any other diphthong than eu- (ai-, ei- or au-) and those beginning with the vowels u- or y- do not use the augment.

  • eib- > eib-
  • uk- > uk-

The Dental Suffix is with the verbal stems that use the vocalic endings in present tense always -eth.

  • met- > emeteth-
  • eud- > ydeth-

With the verbal stems using the consonantal endings in the present tense, the dental suffix usually corresponds to the ending of the 2SG without the final vowel -i.

  • lal- > elalth- (2SG: lalthi)
  • thes- > ethesth- (2SG: thesthi)
  • hek- > eieks- (2SG: heksi)
  • helen- > eieles- (2SG: helesi)
  • laps- > elaps- (2SG: lapsi)
  • eib- > eib- (2SG: eibi)

One additional change in the past stem of verbal stems that occurs quite frequently (however, not always) is the change of an a to an e if in the syllable before the past tense dental suffix and followed by s (which may be part of the verbal stem or the past tense dental suffix itself).

  • gelas- > egelesth-
  • fam- > efes-


Some interesting tidbits that arise from these rules:

  • Thes- lie and thas- hear share the same past stem ethesth-.
  • Eibeí (from eib- stand) means both he stands and he stood.
  • Ukseí (from uk- free) means both some of them free and he freed.
Endings in the Past Tense

The Endings in the Past Tense are the Vocalic Endings of the Present Tense with the exception of the NC-ending, which - in Past Tense - is -és rather than Present Tense -én. Also note, that in Singular Number, it is always the Ending that is stressed.

Two Example Conjugations: ydeth- (from eud- see) and elalth- (from lal- speak).

Vocalic Endings Singular Paucal Dual Plural
1st ydetheín I saw ydethesme some of us saw ydethesmet we two saw ydethemen we saw
2nd ydetheís you saw ydethesthe some of you saw ydethesthet you two saw ydethethen you saw
3rd ydeth he saw ydetheseí some of them saw ydetheset they two saw ydetheíen they saw
NC ydethés X saw
Vocalic Endings Singular Paucal Dual Plural
1st elaltheín I spoke elalthesme some of us spoke elalthesmet we two spoke elalthemen we spoke
2nd elaltheís you spoke elalthesthe some of you spoke elalthesthet you two spoke elalthethen you spoke
3rd elalth he spoke elaltheseí some of them spoke elaltheset they two spoke elaltheíen they spoke
NC elalthés X spoke

Future Tense

Participles

Participle Present Active: Formed with the Suffix -ein, declined like masculine or feminine -is nouns from the stem -en-

e.g: eud- see => eudein seeing, lal- speak => lalein speaking eudein seeing => eudenes of the seeing (one), lalein speaking => lalenes of the speaking (one)

Nominal Morphology

With nouns, Thesome distinguishes three (biological) sexes, five numbers and eight cases.

Sexes

  • Masculine: Used for male persons and male animals (when the latter's sex is being stressed), e.g. yleíon man, mesos boy and eutlephon stallion.
  • Feminine: Used for female persons and female animals (when the latter's sex is being stressed), e.g. androme woman, meitle girl and aitlephis mare.
  • Neuter: Used for animals (when their sex is unstressed), plants and objects (both concrete and abstract), e.g. tlephon horse.

Numbers

  • Singular: denoting singularity
  • Paucal: denoting only a part of a previous mentioned group
  • Dual: denoting duality
  • Plural: denoting many
  • Collective: denoting all

Cases

  • Nominative: citation form; used for predicats, appositions and direct adress
  • Subjective: used as the subject of a verb
  • Accusative: used for direct objects
  • Genitive: used as posessors
  • Benefactive: used for the noun that gains profit from the action
  • Instrumental: used for instruments
  • Allative: used to express motion towards the noun
  • Ablative: used to express motion away from the noun

The Stem that receives the case-affixes usually corresponds to the Accusative Singluar without the ending -en.

Masculine Declension

Masculine Nouns commonly end in the Nominative in a consonant (far king, stem far-; mol male slave, stem mol-), in -on (yleíon man, stem yleí-) or -os (mesos boy, stem mes-).

Here follows the declension of far king. The affixes are used here with a hyphen in order to let them be seen easier; in ordinary texts, no hyphen is used.

Singular Paucal Dual Plural Collective
Nominative far te-far far-oi far-ir il-far-mai
Subjective far-un te-far-un far-y far-eirun il-far-mai
Accusative far-en ten-far far-yn far-irmen il-far-main
Genitive far-es tes-far-es far-ys far-irthes il-far-mais
Benefactive far-é te-far-é far-ý far-eiré il-far-main
Instrumental far-énen ten-far-énen far-ýnen far-eirén il-far-mánen
Allative far-emna ten-far-en far-yna far-irman il-far-main
Ablative far-eksa tes-far-es far-ysa far-irkan il-far-mais
Singular

The SUBJ.SG. has two allomorphs: -un and -us; -us is only used in two cases:

  1. with nouns ending in -on in NOM.SG., e.g. yleíon > yleíus
  2. with nouns ending in -l in NOM.SG., e.g. mol > molus
Paucal

Nouns beginning with e- contract tee- to tei-, thus: emnathon > NOM.PC. teimnas (< te-emnath), SUBJ.PC. teimnathus, ACC.PC. tenemnas.

Nouns beginning with any other vowel use tei- as prefix, thus: yleíon > NOM.PC teiyleí (< te-yleí), ACC.PC. tenyleí

As can be seen above, the -on/-os ending of the NOM.SG. is lost, too, leading the the change of final -th > -s (teimnas from teimnath).

Feminine Declension

Feminine Nouns commonly end in the Nominative in -e (meitle girl), -a (mnathygata mother) or -is (ptosis wife). Each of these three types has a slightly different declension in the singular, but they share endings in all other numbers.

Singular (-e) Singular (-is) Singular (-a) Paucal Dual Plural Collective
Nominative meitle ptosis mnathygata meitl-et meitl-eía il-meitl-ai
Subjective meitl-é ptos-un mnathygat- meitl-et meitl-eíai il-meitl-ai
Accusative meitl-en ptos-en mnathygat-an meitl-etse meitl-echna il-meitl-ain
Genitive meitl-es ptos-es mnathygat-as meitl-eptós meitl-echtha il-meitl-ais
Benefactive meitl- ptos-é mnathygat- meitl-epté meitl-eíen il-meitl-ain
Instrumental meitl-énen ptos-énen mnathygat-ánen meitl-epténen meitl-eíena il-meitl-ánen
Allative meitl-emna ptos-emna mnathygat-amna meitl-etna meitl-enai il-meitl-ain
Ablative meitl-eksa ptos-eksa mnathygat-aksa meitl-etsa meitl-esai il-meitl-ais

Neuter Declension

Neuter Nouns commonly end in the Nominative in -on (keron stone), -os (taknos lesson) or -is (ktesis hand), thus uniting both typically masculine endings (-on and -os) with typically feminine (-is).

Here follows the declension of pheresis school. The affixes are used here with a hyphen in order to let them be seen easier; in ordinary texts, no hyphen is used.

Singular Paucal Dual Plural Collective
Nominative pheres-is a-pheres-a pheres-ia il-pheres-iai
Subjective pheres-is a-pheres-a pheres-ia il-pheres-iai
Accusative pheres-en a-pheres-an pheres-ias il-pheres-iain
Genitive pheres-es a-pheres-as pheres-iatos il-pheres-iais
Benefactive pheres-é a-pheres- il-pheres-iain
Instrumental pheres-énen a-pheres-iánen il-pheres-iánen
Allative pheres-emna a-pheres-iana il-pheres-iain
Ablative pheres-eksa a-pheres-iasa il-pheres-iais

Adjectives

There are three big classes of adjectives: those ending in -is, those ending in -ys and the rest (consonant adjectives).

-is adjectives

Here belong adjectives ending in -is, e.g. ftelmis red or hyklis little.

-ys adjectives

Here belong adjectives ending in -ys in the unmarked form, e.g. ektys black.

Consonant adjectives

Here belong adjectives ending a consonant, but not in one of the combinations mentioned above, e.g. glas beautiful or nen yellow

When used as predicates, the adjectives take endings according to the sex of the subject.

Neuter Male Feminine
-is ftelmis ftelmis ftelmis
-ys ektys ektyon ektis
CONS glas glason glasis

Numerals

Cardinalia Ordinalia Multiplicative Partitive
Arabic Thesome English Thesome English Thesome English Thesome English
1 urun one eute first uruseít once ??? whole
2 at two aitse second atseít twice ??? half
3 tair three tairthe third tartheít thrice ??? third
4 leir four leirthe fourth lertheít four times ??? quarter
5 peben five pebeise fifth pebeseít five times ??? fifth part
6 laian six laiaise sixth laiaseít six times ??? sixth part
7 meil seven meilthe seventh meltheít seven times ??? seventh part
8 hebat eight hebaitse eighth hebatseít eight times ??? eighth part
9 nefteír nine nefteírthe ninth neftertheít nine times ??? ninth part
10 theichte ten theichtite tenth ??? ten times ??? tenth part

Syntax

Subject and Predicate

Every sentence normally consists of a Subject and a Predicate.

The Subject may be

  • a noun, usually in Subjective case: Meitlé helenén. The girl sings.
  • a personal ending on the verb: Heleneí. She sings.

The Predicate may be

  • a verb: Mesun helenén. The boy sings.
  • a noun, usually in Nominative case: Alafnon mesun. The boy is Alafnon.
  • an adjective: Glason mesun. The boy is handsome.

Agreement

One feature is the absence of agreement between a noun used as subject and verbal predicates: the noun stands in subjective case and the verb in the noun-compound form.

Meitlé helenén. The girl sings. Mesun helenén. The boy sings.
Meitlet helenén. The two girls sing. Mesy helenén. The two boys sing.
Ilmeitlai helenén. All girls sing. Ilmesmai helenén. All boys sing.

When the predicate is an adjective, however, it agrees with the subject in number and sex.

Glasis meitlé. The girl is beautiful. Glason mesun. The boy is handsome. Glas leison. The house is beautiful.
Glaset meitlet. The two girls are beautiful. Glasoi mesy. The two boys are handsome.
Glaseía meitleíai. The girls are beautiful Glasia leisia. The houses are beautiful.
Ilglasai ilmeitlai. All girls are beautiful. Ilglasmai ilmesmai. All boys are handsome. Ilglasia illeisia. All houses are beautiful.

Cases

Nominative

The Nominative is used as predicate in "to be" sentences: Mesos Alafnus. Alafnon is a boy.

It is used for direct adress (Vocative): Mesos! Boy!

It may be used in Passive sentences as Agent, when the Agent does not gain profit from the action: Mesos eudemai. I am seen by the boy.

Subjective

The Subjective is used as Subject in "to be" sentences: Mesos Alafnus. Alafnon is a boy.

It is used as Subject in combination with the NC-verbal form: Alafnus Helenen eudén. Alafnon sees Helena.

It is used for the Patient in Passive sentences: Alafnon Helené eudaí. Helena is seen by Alafnon.

Accusative

Genitive

Benefactive

Instrumental

Allative

Ablative

Numbers

Singular

The Singular is used for single entities that are usually specified (and thus correspond roughly to Singular nouns with the English definite article the).

Mesen eudein. I see one/the boy. Leisemna parthomi. I go into one/the house.

Paucal

The Paucal is usually used to indicate a rather small group, although this is, of course, a very rough guideline; it somewhat corresponds to the English indefinite marker some.

Aleisan eudein. I see some houses. vs. Leisias eudein. I see many houses.

The Paucal is also used to indicate only a part of the previously mentioned group:

Teknias ydetheín meus ateknan ehkylastheín. I saw (many) lessons but I only learned some (of them).

It is also used in the Nominative Case as Predicate to indicate unspecifiedness or the belonging to a larger group or class.

Contrast: Aleisa pheresis. The school is a building. vs. Leison pheresis. The school is the building.

Dual

The Dual is usually used to denote two entities. Mesyn eudein. I see two boys. Meitletse eudein. I see two girls.

The Nominative Dual is used as Predicative when two Singular Subjectives are present: Mesoi Alafnus Hektorunta. Alafnon and Hektor are (two) boys.

When two people of a previous mentioned bigger group are to be expressed, usually the paucal and the numeral at two are used. Ilmesmain eudein meus tenmes at kalosmi. I see all the boys but I know (only) two of the boys.

Plural

Collective