Angos

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Angos (/'aŋ.gos/) is a constructed international auxiliary language created by Benjamin Wood in 2011. It is designed to be phonetically regular with a strict Subject-Verb-Object sentence structure, a reduced phonemic inventory, and small vocabulary base. The main linguistic influences of Angos are English, Mandarin Chinese, Finnish, and Spanish, from which grammar, syntax, and phonotactics are derived. The language's vocabulary is mostly a posteriori, being borrowed from many different languages, including rarer languages such as Basque, Navajo, and Irish Gaelic.[1] The Angos dictionary has been translated into English, Hungarian, and French.

A notable feature of Angos is the absence of verb and adjective roots, instead being represented with part-of-speech markers (like those used in Esperanto). In other words: verbs, adjectives, and most adverbs are derived from nouns. An additional feature is a morphological distinction between natural and man-made nouns. The word angos translates to "man-made language".

As of 2012, there are at least 4 speakers in Hungary, Finland, and the United States. Angos has been listed on Risto Kupsala's list of worldlangs as an 'Active' language.[2]

Phonology and Orthography

Angos is written using the Latin alphabet; the 21 letters are identical to their IPA equivalents unless specified otherwise in parenthesis.

Vowels

Front Back
Close i u
Mid e/ɛ* o/ɔ*
Open a

Diphthongs

Vowel Pair IPA
au (final)*, aw
eu (final), ew ɛʊ
ou (final), ow
ai (final), ay
ei (final), ey ɛɪ
oi (final), oy

* occurs at the end of the word

Consonants

Bilabial Labio-
dental
Alveolar Post-
alveolar
Palatal Velar Glottal
Nasal m n ŋ*
[Plosive p b t d k ɡ
Affricate tʃ (c)
Fricative f v Template:IPAlink h
Approximant w l j (y)

* allophone of /n/; occurs before velar plosives

Morphology

Parts of Speech

Like Esperanto, Ido, and other Esperantidos, Angos uses a system of letter classifiers to designate a word's part of speech. Root classifiers (o, a, i, and u) can be further inflected with -s to denote a man-made quality.

Classifier Part of Speech Example Translation Man-Made Example Translation
-o natural noun nesumo mouse -os nesumos computer mouse (man-made mouse)
-a noun action (verb) ota burn -as otas burn (by man-made means)
-i noun quality (adjective) lavi small -is lavis small (by man-made means)
-u noun action quality (adverb) hilosu quickly -us hilosus quickly (by man-made means)
-e particle (prepositions, conjunctions, correlatives, and other adverbs) de to, at
-n number ayn one

Nouns

Nouns in Angos are static; they do not change for definitiveness, number, or case.

leisos - a/the house
le leisos - houses (the particle le signals plurality)
de leisos - to a/the house (where de signals direction towards something)

Articles (a/an, the) are not present in Angos. Instead, determiners from the correlative table are used to indicate definitiveness.

Pronouns

Following the use of the noun ending -o and the plural particle le, pronouns have the following configuration:

Angos English
wo I, me
to you
lo he/she/it, him/her/it
le wo we, us
le to you all
le lo they, them

Verbs

Verbs in Angos are ambitransitive; they can act transitively or intransitively depending on the presence of an object or prepositional phrase. Verbs do not conjugate for person, number, tense, aspect, or mood.

Wo ala. - I eat / I am eating.
Wo ala tofao. - I eat an apple.
Wo sona. - I sleep.
Wo sona lo. - I cause him/her to fall asleep

Reflexivity can be expressed or emphasized with the adverb idu

Wo idu sona. - I cause myself to fall asleep (I fall asleep).

Because there are no inherent verb roots in Angos, the meaning of a word with the verb ending is dependent on the context of the noun root used. For example, ota, from the root ot- meaning "fire", does not inherently mean "burn". It is instead any action related to the use of "fire" in context.

Vao ota. - The tree is burning.
Wo ota momos. - I light the candle. (in this sense, applying fire to something)

A more common verb ba, from b- "grasp", is more fluid-

Wo ba lo.
"I grasp it." (physically)
"I take it."
"I get it." (physically and mentally)
"I understand it."
"I know it."

Grammar and Syntax

Word Order

Angos uses Subject-Verb-Object word order, with direct modifiers preceding what they modify.

Mao ala nesumo.
[The] cat eats [the] mouse.

Thus a sentence with modifiers would follow the pattern [subject adjective]-Subject-[adverb]-Verb-[object adjective]-Object.

Bali mao hilosu ala lavi nesumo.
[The] big cat quickly eats [the] small mouse.

For modal verbs such as bisaa "can" or desa "want", the secondary verb (if there is one), is placed after the modal.

Lo bisaa aksala.
He/She can write.

Descriptors will still precede each of the verbs.

Lo bisaa hilosu aksala
He/She can write quickly.

The passive voice in Angos is formed with the particle te, placed immediately in front of the verb.

Kalimo te aksala dave ipos
[The] word is written on [the] paper.
Vindawgos me te tayla ve wo
[The] window was broken by me.

Prepositional Phrases

Prepositional phrases are formed with a preposition, modifiers of the object, then the object(s) of the preposition.

Los ine leisos
It [is] in [the] house
Mao ala nesumo ine leisos.
The cat eats the mouse in the house. (describes the position of the action)

For the purposes of literature, prepositional phrases may begin the sentence.

Particles

"Particles" is a catch-all category that includes prepositions, conjunctions, determiners, some adverbs, and other non-classifiable words. All these words end in -e and, if applicable, precede whatever they modify.

The following are selected particles with English translations, showing the variety of parts-of-speech the category encompasses.

Particle English
se yes
sevame let's (do sth), ought
hiante before (temporal)
tave there is, there are
oe or
ke general future particle
oke OK, alright

Angos uses a correlative table to construct determiners, treated morphologically as particles. Correlatives are placed where their morphological counterparts would be. For example, "What do you want" would be written as "You want what".

What This That Some Any Few Many Every No
X

kove

what, which

fove

this, this thing

dove

that, that thing

move

some, something

yove

any, anything

fetove

few

valove

many

osove

each, everything

nove

no, nothing

Time

kue

when

fue

now

due

later

mue

sometime

yue

anytime

fetue

seldom

value

many times

osue

always

nue

never

Place

koye

where

foye

here

doye

there

moye

somewhere

yoye

anywhere

fetoye

few places

valoye

many places

osoye

everywhere

noye

nowhere

Verb

kewe

do what

fewe

do this

dewe

do that

mewe

do something

yewe

do anything

fetewe

do a few things

valewe

do many things

osewe

do everything

newe

do nothing

Association

koce

whose

foce

this one's

doce

that one's

moce

someone's

yoce

anyone's

fetoce

few people's

valoce

many people's

osoce

everyone's

noce

no one's

The X and Association act as noun modifiers.

Wo desa ba fove dalo
I want to get this gift.
Ce fove moce mafteos?
Is this someone's key?

The Time and Place correlatives act as action modifiers and precede the verb.

Wo osue selenu hod-hayas
I always drive carefully.
Wo foye me gia
I walked here.

The Verb correlatives are undisclosed or general actions and act like normal verbs.

To kewe?
What are you doing?
Nae dewe
Don't do that.

Relative Clauses

Unlike some languages, Angos does not use any interrogative correlatives to form a relative clause. Instead, the particle lae is used.

Na-omo lae wo me via - The man who I saw
Oyo lae me cea - The place where it happened
Leisos lae (lis) vindawgos tayli - The house whose (its) windows are broken

Compounding

Angos employs heavy use of endocentric compounding, in which the head of the compound modifies the following root. Compounds are formed by root junction, with a dash (-) separating each root. The root at the end of the compound is the focus, and is the one that inflects for part-of-speech.

Compound words may have as many roots necessary to form the idea, though the majority of compounds are between 2 and 3 roots in length.

Examples:

tesem-leisos
dog house

With the root tesem (dog) + leis (shelter) + artificial noun ending os. House is the focus of the compound, and dog describes the purpose or quality of the following root. In this context, it is a man-made shelter for a dog.

yel-hay-oyos
airport

yel (sky) + hay (vessel) + oy place + os. Air describes vessel (airplane), and air vessel describes the place.

If two compounded roots break a phonological rule, an unmarked reduced vowel sound /ɛ/ may be placed between the roots. Thus yel-hay (airplane) in the previous example would be rendered phonetically as /'jɛl(ɛ)'haj/, as the consonant l must be succeeded by a vowel or semivowel.

Vocabulary

The vocabulary base of Angos draws from many different languages across many language families. The chosen roots reflect linguistic constraints (such as tones) and current linguistic dominance. There are approximately 1,200 roots that, when inflected, allow for up to 9,600 semantically independent words. This is not including the tens of thousands of possible compound words or the semantically flexible nature of the language.

Indo-European (45%)

Altaic (13%)

Finno-Ugric (12%)

Semitic (9%)

Austronesian (5%)

Native American Languages (4%)

Sino-Tibetan (4%)

Bantu (4%)

Other (4%)

Sample

Has-ku-bavelo ye Yango (The North Wind and the Sun)

Angos

Has-ku-bavelo me aolaa, lo sefe makti. Yango me sukoba, tave makto mwe kulameo.
"Le wo ke hadaya", te ansa ve Yango.
Wase le lo, na-omo safala davale ofidi hodos. Lo me ba ays-seson-volos.
"Kwe makt-hadayo", te ansa ve Yango, "Le wo sevame atempa wesa volos ve dove na-omo".
"Wo ke vakalu dewe, isoma le wesa li le volos," te ansa ve Bavelo. Bavelo sefe isomu me bavela.
Le cilo da le vao, ye ealo te mena mwe hauco ye ipo. Mice, samino lae lo isomu bavela de hodos, na-omo he sele isomu me ba li volos.
Yango due me wesa ve mego. Lo me tepula ealo ye aysi nehaso.
Na-omo dave hodos wes-botaa li le volos.Yango sipotu sele otu lusa.
Na-omo due me sensa tepulo ye wesa li le volos ye idu esa yase vao.
"To me dewe mwe kove?", te simuna ve Bavelo.
"Wo me vakalu dewe," te ansa ve Yango, "Wo me lusa hio. Wo me liana mwe kulameo."

English

The North Wind boasted of great strength. The Sun argued that there was great power in gentleness.
"We shall have a contest," said the Sun.
Far below, a man traveled a winding road. He was wearing a warm winter coat.
"As a test of strength," said the Sun, "Let us see which of us can take the coat off of that man."
"It will be quite simple for me to force him to remove his coat," bragged the Wind. The Wind blew so hard,
The birds clung to the trees. The world was filled with dust and leaves. But the harder the wind blew down the road, the tighter the shivering man clung to his coat.
Then, the Sun came out from behind a cloud. Sun warmed the air and the frosty ground.
The man on the road unbuttoned his coat. The sun grew slowly brighter and brighter.
Soon the man felt so hot, he took off his coat and sat down in a shady spot.
"How did you do that?" said the Wind.
"It was easy," said the Sun, "I lit the day. Through gentleness I got my way."