Ilbiyoni

From FrathWiki
Jump to navigationJump to search



Ilbiyoni
Ιlbiyonĭm
Timeline and Universe: Lorech
Spoken: National language in: Ilbiyon
A community language in: Small areas of Western Jinyero (Esfoth) and South-Eastern Elitho
Total speakers: 1,610,740
Typology
Morphological type: Fusional
Morphosyntactic alignment: Ergative-absolutive
Basic word order: Generally VOS
Credits
Creator: A. Ayres
Created: 2011-

Ilbiyoni or Ilbiyonĭm - pronounced /ˈyˑlbyˌjoˑnəm/ (Eastern) or /ˈɨ̞lβʲo̞nɨ̞m/ (Western) - is a language isolate spoken in the Ilbiyon archipelago, a string of islands located in the Great Lake Lyric, which divides the nations of Elitho from Western Jinyero/Esfoth. Despite contact with both cultures dating back hundreds of years, Ilbiyon has retained its independence, and its language is relatively uninfluenced by Celinese and Jinyera - indeed, some claim that Ilbiyoni predates both languages.

As well as being spoken by 900,000 speakers in the independent Principality of Ilbiyon, it is also spoken in the Lake Lyric islands that are under Elithoan and Jinyer administration, and in small areas of mainland Elitho and Jinyero proper. There is also a robust community of non-Ilbiyoni researchers and explorers who have learnt the language in order to understand the myriad tomes of the Ĕlsinor Ilbiyonĕs - the Ilbiyon Palace of Books, the most expansive library in the world.

Nomenclature

Ilbiyoni's native name, Ilbiyonĭm, is a compound noun, composed of the words ilbĭ (lake) and yonim (language). Some believe that 'Lake Ilbiyoni' was one of several dialects, some of which were spoken on the mainland. Modern Ilbiyoni itself has a number of varieties, with the speech of each island being characterised by its own idiosyncracies; whilst these are usually classified as 'dialects' or 'regional varieties', an ongoing debate about whether Western and Eastern variety groups should be classified as competing standards of a single pluricentric language, or as languages in their own right.

Phonology

Pronunciation varies greatly from island to island, but two broad varieties - Eastern Ilbiyoni, spoken in the isles closer to Jinyero, and Western Ilbiyoni, in the islands closer to Elitho. Whilst there is no agreed standard dialect, it is an Eastern islands dialect - that of Sĕroği, usually - which tends to be taught to second language learners.

Eastern Ilbiyoni

The following phonology is based on the Ilbiyoni dialect spoken in Sĕroği, the most populous island in the peninsula and thus often considered to be the archetypal Eastern dialect. Most islands of Ilbiyon on the Jinyer side of Lake Lyric are more similar to the below than to the phonology of the average Western Ilbiyoni dialect, but the Săroği dialect does have idiosyncracies unshared by most Eastern dialects, such as the pronunciation of <v> as /b̪͡v/.

Consonants

Consonants
Bilabial Labiod. Dental Alveolar Retroflex Palatal Velar
Nasal m n ŋ
Plosive p b t d k g
Affricates b̪͡v t͡s ʈ͡ʂ ɖ͡ʐ
Approximants j
Tap ɾ
Lateral Approximant l

Vowels

Vowels
Front Near-front Central Near-back Back
High y u
Near-close ʏ ʊ
Close-mid e o
Close-mid ə
Open-mid ɛ ɔ
Open a ɒ

Western Ilbiyoni

The archetypal Western Ilbiyoni phonology, described here, is that of the dialect of the isle of Erĕvir. The most notable divergence from Eastern Ilbiyoni is the spirantisation of medial and final plosives, such as /p/ to /ɸ/ and /t/ to /θ/.

Consonants

Consonants
Bilabial Labiod. Dental Alveolar Retroflex Palatal Velar Uvular
Nasal m n ŋ
Plosive (p) (b) (t) (d) (k) (g)
Fricative ɸ β θ ð s ç ʝ
Approximants j
Trill r
Lateral Approximant l

Vowels

Vowels
Front Near-front Central Near-back Back
High y ɨ
Mid ɘ
Near-open ɶ̝
Open ä ɒ

Stress and length

In most words, primary stress falls on the first syllable, with secondary stress falling on every subsequently odd-numbered syllable: aĭniyadĕs - the teacher's - pronounced ['aʏnyˌjaˑdɛs] in the East and ['äɨnɨˌjäðɘs]in the West is a good example of regular stress. Primary stress can fall on breve-accented vowels - such as ĕlosimto ['ɛˑlo't͡syˑmto] (dawn) - but secondary stress cannot - c̆elorĕ (music) is pronounced ['ʈ͡ʂeˑlorɛ], not *['ʈ͡ʂeˑloˌrɛˑ]. Some speakers also do not place secondary stress on grammatical endings - so telbunen, from the child, where the -nen marks the the ablative case is often pronounced ['teˑlbunen] rather than ['teˑlbuˌneˑn].

In Western Ilbiyoni varieties, stress does not ever change vowel length. In most Eastern Ilbiyoni varients, when primary or secondary stress falls upon a monophthong vowel, it is pronounced half-long. Diphthongs are unchanged by stress.

Orthography

Ilbiyoni dialects are united through the use of a shared orthography. Eastern Jinyero has more accented consonants to reflect its somewhat larger number of phonemes.

Vowels

Orthography Eastern Ilbiyoni Western Ilbiyoni
A /a/ /ä/
Ă /ɒ/ "
E /e/ /e̞/
Ĕ /ɛ/ /ɘ/
I /y/ /ɨ/
Ĭ /ʏ/ /ɶ̝/
O /o/ /o̞/
Ŏ /ɔ/ Not used
U /u/ /y/
Ŭ /ʊ/ Not used
Y /ə/ Not used


Consonants and semi-vowels

Orthography Eastern Ilbiyoni Western Ilbiyoni
b /b/ /b/ at the beginning of words, and /β/ elsewhere.
c /k/ /k/ word-initial, and /ç/ elsewhere.
/ʈ͡ʂ/ Not used
d /d/ /d/ word-initial, /ð/ elsewhere
g /g/ /g/ word-initial, /ʝ/ elsewhere.
ğ /ɖ͡ʐ/ Not used
l /l/ /l/
m /m/ /m/
n /n/ /n/
nc /ŋ/ /ŋ/
p /p/ /p/ initial, /ɸ/ elsewhere
r /ɾ/ /r/
s /t͡s/ /s/
t /t/ /t/ initial, /θ/ elsewhere
v /b̪͡v/ /w/
y /tj/ /j/

Grammar

Nouns

Case Final consonant Final vowel (not i, u) Final vowel (i, u)
Ergative Ĕlsinor Dolina Ilbi
Absolutive Ĕlsinorem Dolinam Ilbiem
Dative Ĕlsinorar Dolinar Ilbi(a)r
Ablative Ĕlsinorain Dolinain Ilbiain
Genitive Ĕlsinorĕs Dolinĕs Ilbiĕs

Modern Ilbiyoni retains a case system that it had several hundreds of years ago, which makes it unusual amongst languages of Greater Tygenoc - Celinese losts the last vestiges of the case system some two hundred years ago, and Jinyera is believed to have never had cases. Whilst there are some irregularly declined nouns, most words follow a pattern determined by how they end - with one pattern covering most words with final consonants, another for words ending in vowels other than i or u, and a third for ending in i or u.

The first cases that the learner becomes acquainted with are the ergative and absolutive cases. The ergative is an unmarked case, used for the subject of transitive verbs, whereas the absolutive is used not only to mark the direct object of a transitive verb, but the subject of intransitive verbs. Compare lonibu telbum (the child is reading) with lonibur liyorem telbu (the child is reading a book.) In the first sentence, the absolutive suffix is added to the word for child: telbum, because reading is being used as an intransitive verb. When a direct object is added, the absolutive suffix moves to the word for book - liyorem - and the child is now in the ergative case.

The dative case is used for indirect objects - sedir ĕlsinorar liyorem eldi means 'I gave a/the book to a/the book palace.' Book palace is in the dative, as an indirect object. The ablative is used not only to designate movement away or out of the marked object - e.g. Ğiniyŏrain (from Jinyero) - but to show causation - elğu piyŏrain (to leave due to fear). The genitive marks possession, and is placed on the possessor - c̆eră Sarĕs (Sara's dog). The possessed noun can be put into different cases, e.g. liyor Ĕlsinorain Ilbiyonĕs (a book from the Book Palace of Ilbiyon).

Adjectives

One unusual aspect of the Ilbiyoni lexicon is the relative paucity of dedicated adjectives. Most of the time, nouns in the genitive case are used in much the same way as adjectives are. An honourable person would be translated as noriyĕs misor (a person of honour.) This is not completely alien to English - consider the English constructions 'a woman of influence', 'a city of chaos', 'a song of sorrow;' semantically, these are not dissimilar to 'an influential woman', 'a chaotic city', 'a sorrowful song.' Ilbiyoni nearly always only has constructions similar to the former list.

To avoid confusion between the adjectival and possessive uses of the genitive, the former is always marked by putting the adjectival genitive before the noun that it is modifying, whereas the possessive nearly always follows the noun. Thus telbuĕs c̆eră (a young dog) differs from c̆eră telbuĕs (the child's dog).