ʾAšdu Yat-Vṛḵaž
Vrkhazhian (YŠDD YT-VṚḴẔKM, Yašdod Yat-Vṛḵaẕīkam) is a Northern Hašakaṃ language that is spoken in the region known as Vṛḵaẕ. The earliest form of this language, known as Ancient Vrkhazhi, was spoken around 10 000 years ago.
History
Dialects
Vrkhazhian has at least two major dialects and at least ten other minor dialects. The table below lists two of the major dialects
Dialect | Location |
---|---|
ʾŪbyahīkam | Centered around the city of ʾŪbya |
ʾAlšardīkam | To the south of the city of Ḵadač |
ʾŪbyahīkam is recognized as the standard dialect of writing and communication.
Writing System
ʾAlḵavaht Yat-Vṛḵaẕīkam [ˈʔalxaβaʰt ˈjat-βɹ̩ˈxaʑikam] is the official writing script of Vṛḵaẕīkam [βɹ̩'xaʑikam]. The script consists of 30 letters, their names being asssigned by actual words in the language through acrophony. The writing direction of the script is boustrephedon, and can start in any horizontal direction preferred, though the most common starting direction is Right-to-Left.
History
The script has been around for at least 7,500 years, with few changes and alterations to the letter forms since it's inception. The true origins of the writing system is unknown, however, it is based partially off of the logographic script of a sister language known as Ḫadīṯča [χaˈdiθt͡ʃa].
Letter names
Phonetics and phonology
Consonants
Bilabial | Alveolar | (Alveolo)-
Palatal |
Velar | Uvular | Glottal | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nasal | Light | hn [ʰn~n̥] | |||||
Plain | m [m] | n [n] | ṉ [ɴ] | ||||
Stop | Light | hp [ʰp] | ht [ʰt] | hk [ʰk] | hq [ʰq] | ||
Plain | p [p] b [b] | t [t] d [d] | k [k] g [g] | q [q] | ʾ [ʔ] | ||
Dark | ṗ [pʶ~pˤ] ḅ [bʶ~bˤ] | ṭ [tʶ~tˤ] ḍ [dʶ~dˤ] | |||||
Affricate | ḏ [ʦ] | č [ʧ~ʨ] j [ʤ~ʥ] | |||||
Fricative | Plain | f [ɸ] v [β] | s [s] z [z] | š [ʃ~ɕ] ẕ [ʒ~ʑ] | ḵ [x] ğ [ɣ] | ḫ [χ~ħ] | h [h] |
Dark | ṣ [sʶ~sˤ] ẓ [zʶ~zˤ] | ||||||
Approximant | Light | hr [ʰɹ~ʰɾ~ɹ̥̥] | |||||
Plain | r [ɹ~ɾ] | y [j] | w [w] | ||||
Trill | rr [r] | ṟ [ʀ] | |||||
Lateral Approximant | Light | hl [ʰl~l̥] | |||||
Plain | l [l] | ||||||
Dark | ḷ [lʶ~lˤ] | ||||||
Lateral Fricative | ḻ [ɬ~ɬʲ] |
Vowels
Front | Central | Back | |
---|---|---|---|
Close | ī [i] | i [ɨ] | ū [u] |
Close-mid | ē [e] | ō [o] | |
Mid | u [ə] | ||
Open-mid | e [ɛ] | o [ɔ] | |
Open | a [a] |
IPA | Letter | Example |
---|---|---|
Dipthongs | ||
ae̯ | aẏ | like eye |
oe̯ | oẏ | like boy |
ao̯ | aẇ | like cow |
Stress
Stress in Vrkhazhian is generally placed on the last or second-to-last syllable.
Grammar
Morphology
Overview
Vrkhazhian is a highly inflecting triconsonantal root language. Most roots consist of three consonants (triliteral), though there are many words that consist of two letter (biliteral) roots. Vrkhazhian does not recognize four- and five-letter roots. Between and around these roots various infixes, suffixes, and prefixes are used to carry grammatical functions or derived words.
The consonants <y>/j/ and <w>/w/ are considered weak roots, and roots containng these consonants caue irregular verb forms to appear.
Nominal morphology
Vrkhazhian has three grammatical genders, masculine, feminine and neuter. Grammatical gender in Vrkhazhian is strictly semantic, thus most nouns, such as inanimate objects, fall into the category of neuter.
Vrkhazhian has two numbers (singular and plural)and five cases (nominative, accusative, genitive, lative, and ablative). The table below shows the nouns haz (man), ṉaj (woman) and šīm (house) in the various cases.
Noun (masc.) | Noun (fem.) | Noun (neut.) | |
---|---|---|---|
Nominative/Accusative singular | hazī | ṉajē | šīm |
Genitive singular | hazī | ṉaja | šīmūn |
Lative singular | hazab | ṉajab | šīmab |
Ablative singular | hazad | ṉajad | šīmad |
Nominative/Accusative plural | hazīl | ṉajot | šīmal |
Genitive plural | hazīḵ | ṉajaḵ | šīmīr |
Lative plural | hazībīl | ṉajībot | šīmībal |
Ablative plural | hazīdīl | ṉajīdot | šīmīdal |
Construct state
Nouns in verkhazhi can also be placed in the construct state, which is used for genitive constructions and denotes that the noun is the possessed object.