Syrenian

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Syreni
žr zã̞
Spoken in: the planet Syren
Conworld: imaginary future
Total speakers: ~ one million
Genealogical classification: Exolang
Inuit?!
(Subbranch)
Syreni
Basic word order: SVO
Morphological type: polysynthetic
Morphosyntactic alignment: Unique
Writing system:
Created by:
Robert Marshall Murphy 2013 A.D.

The Syreni language may be extremely difficult, but it is learnable by homo sapiens. It shares features with the Athabaskan and Inuit-Aleut languages of North America, the Semitic languages of the Middle East, and even some artificial languages intentionally created! It is remarkable different, however, owing to its unique situation. It is spoken on the planet Syren but an artificially created species of humanoid. They have many characteristics in common with the mermaids of Earthlore and they lead absolutely nomadic lives. In order to attempt to learn the language, it is important that you learn some things about the planet Syren, the sounds of Syreni, the parts of each word that are conjugated, and the parts that are suffixed.

  1. Phonology
  2. "Sides"
  3. Prepositions
  4. States
  5. Modes
  6. Suffixes
  7. Texts
    1. The North Wind and the Sun
    2. The Donkey Beater Story

Syren

The planet itself is remarkably different from Earth. There are no terrestrial formations at all. That is, the entire planet is ocean, apart from the uninhabitable, frozen, polar regions. Syren, however, does not lack “land”. Vast numbers of mobile “islands” exist - undulating platforms, ranging in size from a few square meters to dozens of square kilometers. Trees and other large flora grow there, though they are far more flexible than their Terran counterparts. A bewildering array of fauna exist too, a sizable majority of which is amphibious to sea and sky. “Dragons” or “dinosaurs” exist, though none has ever been observed larger than a Big Cat. Aquatic fauna also do not exist beyond a certain size, comparable to the killer whales of Earth. The entire planet is quite shallow, never deeper than a few kilometers at any point.

A continual cloud cover envelopes the planet, at about the height of Earth’s cirrus clouds. This ubiquitous fog is the color of gold or copper. The sun, moon and stars are completely unknown to the Syreni. The planet’s weak magnetic field (and the lack of ferrous tools) mean North and South are only distinguished by the remote presence of ice. Without sunrises and sunsets, East and West can only be referenced as “with the current” or against it (but of course, that current reverses across the equatorial line.)

The oceans of Syren have a mere fraction of the salinity Earth oceans. The average ocean depth is a tenth of Earths’. The number of ecosystems is very small, despite the planet being very comparable to Earth in size, gravity, sidereal day and atmosphere. Because from the Coriolis effect, anything carried by the ocean current is capable of being swept anywhere within its hemisphere, even - by luck - the whole planet. Hence, while Syren teems with life on a scale unimaginable on Earth, there is very little specialization of species.

The environment of Syren has had a vast impact on the Syreni language. On Earth, a great majority of time is spent without an apparent changes taking place. On Syren, change is constant. The land “waves”, the trees bend, the wind blows and nothing is ever still. There is no sun in the sky, just an ever shifting high fog. Without careful planning, an individual would drift between islands (and hence the entire world) and never retain any friends or family. The largest island observed might hold a few hundred people, but no crowd of more than 20 has ever been known to exist.

On Earth, there have been a few languages that failed to distinguished between nouns and verbs. Even these human languages are difficult to grasp for English speakers. English is a verb noun-centric language (e.g. adjectives are assumed to be substantive nouns when presented alone). In Mohawk, for example, "a deer" is "that which is deering", and so on. Everything on Syren is in process: everything is always doing something, if only undulating with the sea. There are no 'things'. Try not to ask "what" but rather "what is it doing" and you will get along a lot more quickly!

The Syreni

The Syreni are very particular about the disposal of their dead, so we have has limited access to studying their physiology. They are general human in appearance, with syndactyl hands and feet, but with enormous webspace. The bit of DNA we have been able to sample and sequence shows striking evidence of a complete human origin that has been blatantly engineered. In short, they are animal-human chimeras. The animal aspect of their origin is either totally artificial or of non-Terrestrial origin. Our current computer modeling suggests that their frontal lobes develop as separate organs, which would explain the Syreni's typically protruding forehead.

The Syreni all express a sense of "calling", that is, none of them wonder why they exist or what their place is in their world. Each and every one of them knows that they exist to cultivate the world and "train" other lifeforms as much as is possible. They nurture their young, but expect them to be self-sufficient and "on-task" by approximately seven years old. The onset of teething marks the transition away from the mother.