Solaric

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Solaric
Slayegbyegn
Spoken in: North America c. AD 4000
Timeline/Universe: TaylorS's Eridanian Universe
Total speakers: Approx. 200 million
Genealogical classification: Indo-European
Germanic
West Germanic
Anglic
American
Solaric
Basic word order: SVO
Morphological type: Agglutinating, Polysynthetic
Morphosyntactic alignment: Nominative-Accusative
Created by:
Taylor Selseth 2010-

Solaric is an Anglic Language spoken predominantly in North America, centered along the middle and upper Mississippi River valley, the Ohio and Missouri River valleys, the American High Plains, the central Rockies, Pittsburgh, and the central Atlantic coast from Washington to New York. Solaric dialects are also spoken in many orbital colonies and on Luna.

Phonology

Syllable structure is (F)(C)(C)(F|L|N|w|y)V(C)(C)

Every word is mildly stressed and pitch-accented on the ultimate, penultimate, or antepenultimate syllable, whichever is heaviest because of vowel length and coda consonants.

Consonants

Labial Labio-Dental Alveolar Palatal Velar Glottal
Plosives, lenis p b t d ʧ j k g
Plosives, fortis p t ʧʰ c k
Nasals, voiced m m n n
Nasals, unvoiced mh nh
Fricatives, unvoiced f f s s ʃ sh h h
Fricatives, voiced v v z z ʒ zh ɣ r
Laterals ɫ l ɬˠ lh
Trills r rr
Semivowels w w j y

Among plosives, only lenis plosives occur in the syllable coda. /r/ is realized as a flap intervocalically. /n/ assimilates to the point of articulation of a following consonant. /ɣ/ devoices when following a fortis stop.

Vowels

Oral Short

Front Front Rounded Central Back Diphthongs
High i i y ü u u
Mid-High e e ø ö o o
Mid-Low ɛ è ɔ ò ɛu eu ɔi oi
Low a a

Oral Long

Front Front Rounded Central Back
High ii üü uːː uu
Mid ee oo
Low aa

Nasal

Front Front Rounded Central Back Diphthongs
Mid-High e eng ø öng o ong
Mid-Low ɛ èng ɔ òng ɛu eung ɔi oing
Low a ang

Morphology

Noun Phrase Morphology

Adjectives agree with their nouns in case and number. Case stacking occurs so that nouns in a non-core case modifying another noun agrees with that noun. Prepositions are also inflected for number and case agreement.

Basic Noun Phrase structure

QUANTIFIER NEG-CASE-NUMBER.DEFINITENESS-NOUN NUMBER-CASE-COMPARISON-ADJ

Case Prefixes

Common: Ø-

Genitive: ee-(Consonant Root)/èv-(Vowel Root)

Marks possession, participation, composition, origin, reference, and description.


Dative: ta-(Consonant Root)/t-(Vowel Root)

Marks the indirect object.


Benifactive: fwo-(Consonant Root)/for-(Vowel Root)

Marks the beneficiary of an action.


Locative: 'n-

Marks location


Number & Definiteness

Singular Unmarked: -Ø-
Singular Definite: -ad-(Consonant Stem)/j-(Vowel Stem)
Singular Indefinite: -sm-
Dual Unmarked: -tü-
Dual Definite: -adü-
Dual Indefinite: -snü-
Plural Unmarked: -mye-
Plural Definite: -anye-
Plural Indefinite: -smye-

Mass nouns are always marked as Singular Indefinite

Adjective Morphology

Comparative: -moo-(Consonant Root)/-mor-(Vowel Root)
Superlative: -mös-

Verb Morphology

Finite Verbs

Preceding the Verb

Free Adverb

Slot 1: Subject Agreement

1SG: aa-
2SG: yü-
3SG: hi- (Animate)/-ye- (Inanimate)
1PL: wi-
2PL: yoo-
3PL: dè-


Slot 2: Interrogation

Animate Interrogative: -hü-
Inanimate Interrogative: -wè'-


Slot 3: Tense and Evidentiality

Present and Past tenses distinguish in evidentiality between visual, non-visual, inferential, and unstated.
Present Unstated: -Ø-
Present Visual: -si-
Present Non-Visual: -hye-
Present Inferential: -dyeg-
Past Unstated: -dye-
Past Visual: -sò-
Past Non-Visual: -hod-
Past Inferential: -doo-
Future: -nè-


Slot 4: Mood

Indicative: -Ø-
Used for factual statements


Subjunctive: -shu-
Used for probability, possibility, or uncertainty.


Conditional: -ke-
Used for hypotheticals.


Obligative: -goi-
Used for demands and statements of obligations.


Optative: -woi-
Used for statements of wishing, wanting, or desiring something to happen.


Slot 5: Primary Aspect

Verbs are either inherently active (are an action) or stative (are a state of being). Only active verbs can have habitual aspect.
Active Habitual: -Ø-
Active Imperfect: -bi
Active Perfect: -ven-
Stative Imperfect: -Ø-
Stative Perfect: -v-
The Habitual is used when the verb occurs on a regular basis. The Imperfect is used for unfolding actions while the Perfect is used for denoting completion.


Slot 6: Voice

Active Voice: -Ø-
Passive Voice: -gee
The passive voice demotes the Agent and makes the Patient the subject. the special case marker boi- is only used with the passive voice Agent.


Slot 7: Verbal Negation

Negative: -n


Slot 8: Secondary Aspect


Causative: -mayi-
Inchoative: -ssaa-
Resumptive: -kepn-


Slot 9:Adverbal prefix


Slot 10: Derivational Prefixes

<br

Slot 11: Verb Root


Slot 12: Non-productive derivational suffixes derived from prepositions and adverbs used in English Phrasal Verbs.


Slot 13: Incorporated Direct Object

Only inanimates can be incorporated.


Slot 14: Indirect Object Agreement

1SG: -mi
2SG: -yü
3SG: -em- (Animate)/-Ø- (Inanimate)
1PL: -us
2PL: -yoo
3PL: -em


Slot 15: Direct Object Agreement

1SG: -mi
2SG: -yü
3SG: -em- (Animate)/-ye- (Inanimate)
1PL: -us
2PL: -yoo
3PL: -em

Non-finite verbs

Active Particle: -n-
Stative Participle: -d-/-ad-()
The active participle is also used as a gerund and plays the role of an infinitive. They are inflected like nouns when used as a noun and like adjectives when they are used like adjectives.

Syntax

The basic unmarked word order is:

S-V-DO-IO-X

Where S is the Object, V is the Verb, DO is the Direct Object, IO is the Direct Object, and X is a complement.

The order of prepositional phrases follows the Place, Time, Manner pattern.