User:Wattmann/Sandie
Western Mountains Qåuls is a language spoken along the ridges of the Western Mountains. It is bordered on the north by Inland Qåuls (or, more commonly, Qóll), on the west by Seashore Wargish and on the south by Swamp Wargish.
Western Mountains Qåuls is a language with a very low morpheme-to-word ratio, as there are never more than two morphemes per word. The morphemes are very specialized and fusional, and there are some consonant mutations and ablauts, together grouped under stem alternations.
Phonology
/pʰ ʰp t tʰ ʰt k kʰ ʰk q qʰ ʰq/ < p' 'p t t' 't k k' 'k q q' 'q>
/s sʰ ʂ ʂʰ/ < s s' š š' >
/ɬ ɬʰ/ < ł ł' >
/t͡s t͡sʰ ʰt͡s t͡ɬ t͡ɬʰ ʰt͡ɬ/ < c c' 'c č č' 'č >
/m mʱ n nʱ/ < m mh n nh >
/ʋ r l j ɰ/ < v r l j w >
/a e ø ɨ ʉ ɒ u (ɵ ɜ)/ < a e ø i y å u (o ë) >
/a̤ e̤ ɒ̤ ṳ/ < ah eh åh uh >
/ɒ͡a e͡ɨ ɒ͡ɨ/ < åa ei åi >
Stem Alternations and "Bleeding"
In WMQ, there are some regular alternation sets.
The most important is aspiration reversal and bleeding. When aspiration reversal happens, post-aspirated obstruent become pre-aspirated and vice versa. Bleeding happens if the obstruents follow another obstruent that's not post-aspirated and they switch from post-aspiration to pre-aspiration. In such cases, the first consonant acquires post-aspiration and the second one loses its newly acquired pre-aspiration.
The ablaut of /a → e → ɨ → ɒ → a/ can cause a lenition of consonants in that syllable. Lenition happens this way: post-aspirates lose aspiration, unaspirates gain pre-aspiration, modal nasals become breathy. Breathy nasals trigger breathiness in vowels as an assimilation.
When followed by a nasal, breathy vowels can diphthongize during nasal syncope.
Syncope happens when a syllable is both followed and preceeded by vowels and is unstressed.
Syncopated nasals reflect themselves as length on the previous vowel which then undergoes diphthongization in the following manner: /ṳ → ɒ͡a; e̤ → e͡ɨ; ɒ̤ → ɒ͡a; a̤ → ɒ͡ɨ/. Vowels left behind in syllables after syncope, if not diphthongised or diphthonɡs already, become semivowels in the following manner: /{a ɒ ɜ} → ɰ; {e ø ɨ ɵ} → j; {u ʉ} → ʋ/.
Breathy vowels that are not phonemic can occur phonetically nonetheless.
The ablaut of /ɒ → ø → e → ɒ/ causes fortification of consonants in that syllable invariably. Fortification happens this way: all obstruents become post-aspirates, breathy nasals become modal.
Geminate lenition is a different process. Geminates can lenite in two ways: /C: → ʰC/ and /C: → Cs/. These two lenitions are seperate and occur only morphologically without any other preconditions.
Coronal nasals can fortify under the right circumstances. The fortification is always: /n → t; nʱ → st/. /nʱ/ always passes on its breathiness to the vowel.
Fortification of /ɒ̤S/ and /a̤S/ where S = {s sʰ ʂ ʂʰ} results in /eks/.
Fortification of /e̤ → jɨ/ also causes deletion of the previous consonant.
The three levels of aspiration, pre-, post- and an-aspiration, are co-dependent and they invariably mix. Besides the phonemic variations, there also exist phonetic extensions. When two pre-aspirated consonants cluster together, such that they may be represented abstractly as /ʰCʰC/, pre-aspiration of the second consonant becomes post-aspiration of the first consonant, and the second consonant becomes technically "bare", such that the formula may thusly be represented abstractly: /ʰC-ʰC → ʰCʰ-C/. The reverse doesn't work, so that two consecutive post-aspirates are only post-aspirates.
Phonotactics
WMQ has a very specific syllable structure: it can either have onsets or codas, but not both. The maximum consonant cluster in WMQ is "CCC", that is, three consecutive consonants. Consonants must agree in suprasegmentality (presence of either aspiration or breathiness). As pre-aspiration blends with post-aspiration, pre-aspirates cannot occur cluster-finally but can occur on their own and non-finally.
There can be only two consecutive vowels.
Morpholosyntax
Western Mountains Qåuls is a fusional language. Its morphosyntactic alignment is transitive, with ergativity in pronouns. Verbs are always initial, and heads are free. Word order is generally free.
Noun
Nouns in WMQ are most commonly bisyllabic, although both longer and shorter nouns exist. Nouns can take either one suffix or one prefix, but not both. The prefix encodes topicality conflated with focus, while the suffix encodes case, number, class and animacy conflated into one slot.
Nouns in WMQ can be either topics or comments. Topics are the head nouns of phrases, and comments function as nominal adjectives or genitives. Topics are the only noun type that can be arguments to the verb, while comments function as modifiers to the noun. They are glossed (TOP) and (COM) respectively.
Focus in WMQ is most often used in comment phrases to indicate the head of the comment phrase, while it can also be used in noun compounds to indicate the head of the compound. They are glossed (+F) and (-F) respectively.
This is the inventory of prefixes:
Topicality | |||
---|---|---|---|
Topic | Comment* | ||
Focus Presence |
Present* | čså- | šip'- |
Absent | en- | q'unh- |
*Focus presence triggers the first ablaut in the first syllable, and the second in the second if possible. Comments fortify /nʱ/ in the first syllable.
There are three numbers in WMQ, that is, the singular, the dual and the plural. The singular is used when there is one instance, the dual for two, and plural for more than two instances. The dual is also a collective. The three are glossed (SG) (DU) and (PL) respectively.
There are six cases in WMQ, that is, the transitive, intransitive, postpositional, genitive, dative and malefactive. The five are glossed (TRN) (ITR) (PPS) (GEN) and (DAT) respectively.
- - The transitive and intransitive cases show whether the marked noun is a transitive or intransitive argument of the verb. The intransitive also serves as a commitative in transitive sentences, as does the transitive in intransitive sentences. The intransitive also marks the beneficiary recepient in transitive sentences.
- - The postpositional case marks the noun as postposition-taking. There's a wide set of postpositions, and they all act as clitics.
- - The genitive case primarily marks composition, habitatory and lative origin, possessorship, consequence of an unknown action and a state of being alienably possessed. It can become an argument of the transitive verb by way of material of production (example: logs with which the house is made - the logs build the house) or produce of an action (example: trunks cut for processing - the man produces tree trunks [by cutting down trees] ). It also marks the beneficiary recepient in intransitive sentences and donor in both transitive and intransitive sentences.
- - The dative case primarily marks the theme of sentences.
- - The malefactive case marks the maleficiary of sentences. It also has a rare usage of a vialis.
There are two noun classes in WMQ, them being mundane and divine. The mundane represents things easily understandable and commonplace, those which are not part of the world of the supernatural, while the divie represents mysterious and supernatural things. They are glossed (MUN) and (DIV) respectively.
There are two animacies in WMQ, them being the animate and inanimate. Animacy is inherent and lexical, but suffixes have to agree with it nonetheless. The animate/inanimate split is conditioned by the ability to perform complex actions. They are glossed (ANI) and (INA) respectively.
This is the inventory of suffixes in WMQ:
Transitive (TRN) | Intransitive (ITR) | Postpositional (PPS) | Genitive (GEN) | Dative (DAT) | Malefactive (MAL) | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
(ANI) | (INA) | (ANI) | (INA) | (ANI) | (INA) | (ANI) | (INA) | (ANI) | (INA) | (ANI) | (INA) | ||
Singular (SG) | (MUN) | -Ø | -i[1] | -sšo | -mhi[1] | -'qp'u[2] | -s'i[1] | -un | -łi[1] | -jsø | -jsø | -jne | -i |
(DIV) | -vore | -vore | -vurå | -vårå | -we | -we | -'qs'y[2] | -nuqu | -če[2] | -nå[2] | -we[2] | -we | |
Dual (DU) | (MUN) | -e | -'kø | -tø | -'tø | -tø[1] | -ał'js[2] | -tå | -emen | -aspp | -øjl | -ykkø | -økk |
(DIV) | -a | -'kå | -tå | -'tå | -tå[1] | -uł'js[2] | -tå | -mnåa | -åp | -nku | -rsu | -nkå | |
Plural (PL) | (MUN) | ||||||||||||
(DIV) |
[1] These trigger the second ablaut in the first syllable and breathy vowel fortification whenever possible.
[2] These trigger the first ablaut in the first syllable and the second gemination lenition whenever possible.
Translation
The Bee and the Wolfmother
A Bee of Nåamhq'ač, the Wall of Stone, the queen of the hive, ventured forth into the Swamps of Creation; to face the Wolfmother, she brought an offering of honey. The Wolfmother, enjoying the sacrifice of honey, promised to make so whatever the Bee ask. The Bee thus replied, "Give me, I pray you, Mother Below, a sting, that if any warg or man shall approach to take my honey, I may steal his soul." The Wolfmother was of fury, for hers was greater the love for warg and man than for bee, but her words were spun of truth and of silver worth. Thus the Wolfmother replied, "Your wish is grant, yet thou shall rejoice naught; for when thou stingst man or warg, thy sting shall remain behind, and it is so that thou must die and return to the Swamps of Night."