Béu : Chapter 9

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..... Word building

Many béu words can be analysed as being constructed from more basic elements.

We have given the structure of the béu noun phrase already (see ??). If a phrase consisting of the head plus a genitive or the head plus an adjective occur together many times and/or their meaning starts to take on nuances which are more than the sum of the two constituant elements then the two words coalesce . When 2 words coalesce ;-

1) The genitive suffix n is dropped

2) The first syllable of the first word is dropped.

3) The remainder of the first word is affixed to the second word.

Here are some examples ;-


gxx = to raise .............................. gonai = a machine gonai gxx = "a machine of levitation" => gxxnai = a lift or an elevator
glxx = to rise tagu = a tool tagu glxx = "a rising tool" => glxxgu = a ladder
nandau = a word toili = a book toili nandau = "a book of words" => nandauli = a dictionary
limba = a tongue or language myega = a body of knowledge, myega limba = "the study of language" => limbaga = linguistics
a subject

Word or -DAU

A word = nandau

jaudu = movement ............... nandau = a word .................... nandau jaudu = "a word of movement" => jaududau = a verb
fanyo = an object, a thing(physical) nandau = a word nandau fanyo = "a word of an object" => fanyodau = a noun
sài = a colour nandau = a word nandau sài = "a word of colour" => saidau = an adjective

Actually jaududau has been shortened further and is jaudau

Also fanyodau has been shortened further and is fandau

jaudauza = a predicate (verb phrase)

fandauza = a noun phrase

jaudaunyo = a noun phrase OR a noun

fandaunyo = a verb phrase OR a simple verb

sky.sound = a vowel sky.sound.za = a diphthong or a triphthong sky.sound. nyo = a vowel OR a diphthong/triphthong

earth.sound = a consonant earth.sound.za = a consonant cluster earth.sound.nyo = a consonant OR a consonant cluster

Person or -BU

A person = glabu

ww = a country ............................................ glabu = a person .................... glabu ww = "a person of country" => wwbu = a compatriot
xx = to compete, to struggle glabu = a person glabu xx = "a person of competition" => xxbu = a capitalist
yy = to share glabu = a person glabu yy = "a person of sharing" => yybu = a socialist
zz = the same ?? glabu = a person glabu zz = "a person of the same" => zzbu = a communist

Complex -ZA

A complex = kaza

Fellow or -PEU

ampeu = a fellow, a peer, someone of the same social status as you

vv = a womb ampeu = a fellow, a mate .......... ampeu vv = "a fellow of womb" => vvpeu = a womb-mate, a twin
ww = a class ampeu = a fellow ampeu ww = "a person of class" => wwpeu = a classmate
xx = year ampeu = a fellow, a mate ampeu xx = "a year fellow" => xxpeu = somebody born in the same year as you
yy = a name ampeu = a fellow, a mate ampeu yy = "a fellow of name" => yypeu = a namesake, somebody with the same name as you
zz = aim, objective, a purpose, a cause ampeu = a fellow, a mate ampeu zz = "a person of the same objective" => zzpeu = a comrade

Subject or -GA

A field of study = myega

Book or -LI

A book = toili

Tool or -GU

A tool = tagu

Machine or -NO

Belief/theory or -GAI

Wagon or -WEU

A vehicle = wèu

Building or -DO

bundo = building

Side or -ʔA

ʔà = side

aibaʔa = a triangle

ugaʔa = a square

idaʔa = a pentagon

elaʔa = a hexagon


ò atas nambo = he/she is above the house ... however if "house" is understood, and mention of it is dropped, we must add ka to atas ... for example ...

ò atasʔa = he/she is above


dauniʔa = underneath

liʒiʔa = on the left hand side

luguʔa = on the right hand side


noldo, suldo, westa, istu niaka, muaka faceside backside etc. etc.

Area/Station or -ʔAU

daʔau = area, face

ugaʔau = a tetrahedron

elaʔau = a cube

ezaʔau = an octahedron

ajauʔau = a dodecahedron

ajauzaʔau = an icosahedron

kas = rule, power daʔau kas => kasʔau = the townhall

Volume/Room or -ʔAI

daʔai = volume, room

moʃiʔai = water room = bathrooom

= bedroom

= cookroom

= livingroom

= store room

You can name the regular shapes in 4 dimensions.

idaʔai = a 5-cell

ezaʔai = an 8-cell

ajaugaʔai = a 16-cell

uvauʔai = a 24-cell

apauʔai = 120-cell

agaivauʔai = 600-cell

A place/station or -HEU

A place = hèu

A rule/power or -KAS

londoŋkas = the UK

pariskas = france

A place/shop or -HA

A place =

Yes it means about the same as bwò.

Professional or -TAI

a professional (a person who's job requires book-learning) = notai

A container or -COI

A container = mencoi

Tradesman or -DA

The suffix -da indicates a person who has learnt skills through instruction and practice, practice, practice.

hand = anda


metalworker = damaida

Shop or -FU

shop/stall = kanfu

Shopkeeper or -FAU

A Seller/Shopkeeper/Merchant= kanfau

Stuff or -YO

powder = ponyo

Language or -BA

A tongue, a language = limba

Metal or -MAI

metal = damai


copper = ʔolimai

bronze = pwemai

iron/steel = gumai

tin = fujemai

lead = wobumai

aluminium = yekimai

zinc <= needle ??

gold <= sun ??

silver <= moon ??

Water or -ZE

water = moze


moze amazon = water of Apple => Apple Juice = amaze

ʔolaze = orange juice

hawan = bee

hawanze = honey

Air/gas or -ME

Air/gas = came ... jamu = wind

hydrogen = mozeme

helium = ombame

Group or -BO

mebo = group

Member or -KE

noke = member

Disease or ʔI

lisʔi = disease

Fish or -SAI

a fish = fizai

Note ... fish in general are fiʒi

cuttlefish = byozai

Trees or -PAI

a tree = ʔupai

Note ... a forest is ʔupo

Apple tree = amapai

Mango tree = byopai

Fruit/nuts or -ZO

Apple = amazo

Mango = byozo


We do not want a "unit", "boat".

⁕⁕nandauli is a good example of béu word building. toili = book, nandau = word, toili nandaun = book of words. However if two words such as these geudidau means extended word. It is also a good example of an extended word, in itself.

geuda is a verb meanbéuing to extend in one direction (usually not up). geudo is an noun meaning an extension or appendix. geudi is an adjective meaning extended.

nandau geudi = extended word ... now when a noun and a following adjective occur together a lot (and maybe take on a meaning slightly different) the concept they represent is normally upgraded to a word, by deleting all but the last CV (consonant vowel) in the first word, and sticking this CV on to the end of the second word.

Hence we get geudidau. In theory there is no limit to the combinations that can occur. However in practice (outside of technical language) there are slightly under a hundred different CV's, and the number of elements that every CV can combine with, varies from 3 or 4 up to about 40.

In English we have a number of common endings, such as "-ism", "-ology", "ist", etc. etc. In béu the end-stuck CV's can be thought of as equivalent to these English endings : the main difference is that this word building process is much more prevalent in béu.


The CV -dau (from nandau) is found in combination with a number of other elements. For example ;-


Note that in the last example, the meaning of the extended word has shifted a bit with respect to the meaning of the original words.

It is possible to extend further an extended word. For example ;-

kaza is an adjective meaning compicated and also is a noun meaning "a complicated thing" or "a complex".

kaza cwipadaun = a complex of a noun => cwipadauza = a noun phrase

..... More word building

Nominalizer to make uncountable intangible nouns -GAN

Nominalizer to make uncountable intangible nouns -VAN

Adjectivalizer to make adjectives with the meaning "attracted to" -WAN

wan is affixed to a few nouns and a few adjectives. Its has the sense of "liking", "tending towards", "accustomed to" or "addicted to".

ái white aiwan faded
lozo grey lozwan grizzled
I pawan selfish
mama mother mamwan motherbound
nambo house nambwan domesticated
toili book toilwan bookish
alka alcohol alkwan (an) alcoholic
alha flower hawan a bee

?? WE NEED ANOTHER SUFFIX FOR RED => REDDISH

Adjectiver to make adjectives with the meaning "repelled by" -YAN

yan is affixed to a few nouns and a few adjectives. Its has the sense of "disliking", "scared of", "avoiding" or "hating".

ʔazwo milk ʔazwoyan lactose intolerant
glabu person glabuyan timid, shy (of an animal)
moze water moʒyanʔi rabies
--- an electron ---wan positively charged ---yan negatively charged wanyan charge (electrical)
--- sun ---yan nocturnal
nambo house nambyan wild (as in wild animal)

Depository for béu linguistic terms

LINGUISTIC JARGON ... In the Western linguistic tradition, these markers are said to represent "person" and "number". Person is either first, second or third person (i.e. I, you, he or she). In the béu linguistic tradition they are called cenʔo-markers. (cenʔo = musterlist, people that you know, acquaintances, protagonist, list of characters in a play)

These markers represent the subject (the person that is performing the action). Whenever possible the pronoun that represents the subject is dropped, it is not needed because we have that information inside the verb with the cenʔo-markers.

Now these markers represent what are called tense/aspect markers in the Western linguistic tradition. In the béu linguistic tradition, they are called gwomai or "modifications". (gwoma = to alter, to modify, to adjust, to change one attribute of something).

4) and finally one of the 4 teŋko-markers shown below is added.

teŋkai is a verb, meaning "to prove" or "to testify" or "to give evidence" or "to demonstrate" ... teŋko is a noun derived from the above, and means "proof" or "evidence".

By the way, the béu terms for the five aspects represented by these 5 rows are ... baga, dewe, liʒi, pomo and fene ... i.e. in the tense/aspect table.

doikoryi => He/she had not walked ... doikorya => He/she hasn't walked yet ... doikoryu => He/she will not have walked Quite often this tense is followed by the word ki.e. This emphasises the "present time" meaning (This probably would not be necessary if the -w- tense had not included the "at least once" meaning). ???

Limitations of my tense/aspect system ...

Note .... Even with 16 tense/aspect markers, not every situation can be exactly expressed.

For example suppose two old friends from secondary school meet up again. One is a lot more muscular than before. He could explain his new muscles by saying "I have been working out" (using the progressive plus the perfect aspects). The "have" is appropriate because we are focusing on "state" rather than "action". The "am working out" is appropriate because it takes many instances of "working out" (or working out over some period of time) to build up muscles. béu has no tense/aspect marker so appropriate.

Every language has a limited range of ways to give nuances to an action, and language "A" might have to resort to a phrase to get a subtle idea across while language "B" has an obligatory little affix on the verb to economically express the exact same idea. You could swamp a language with affixes to exactly meet every little nuance you can think of.

By the way, for the above example, in béu, the muscular schoolmate would use the r form of the verb plus the béu equivalent of "now" ki, to explain his present condition ... good enough.

AND I EXPLAIN WHAT THE PERFECT IS ...

While the perfect tense, logically this doesn't have that much difference from the past tense it is emphasising a state rather than an action. It represents the state at the time of speaking as the outcome of past events. We have this tense/aspect in English and it is realized as "have xxxxen". For example if you wanted to talk to John and you went to his office, his secretary might say "he has gone to lunch" (as opposed to "he went for lunch"), which emphasises the absence of John. And think about the difference in meaning between "she has fallen in love" and "she fell in love" ... the first one means "she is in love" while the second one just talks about some of her history.

MORE ABOUT THE "ALREADY" & THE "NOT YET" TENSE

I read the book on geometry .... this doesn't specify whether you read it all or whether you read just a bit of it. .... (the past tense)

So ... I have read the book on geometry ... is more specific ... I have read it all the way thro'. .... (the perfect)

And by default, the perfect implies current relevance, it describes what kind of person I am NOW .... a person with some knowledge of geometry.

Now in the example above the "time window" is not important (assuming you don't forget things easily). If you read the book five years ago or last week ... you are still a person with some knowledge of geometry.

I will talk about "wide time" and "narrow time". "narrow time" comprises only the recent past but "wide time" comprises the recent past plus time periods further back.

But take this example .... a man saying to his daughter ... "Have you cooked chilli con carne" (OK ... assume the man is speaking a language with no definite article. In English "Have you cooked the chilli con carne" is "narrow time", "have you cooked chilli con carne" is "wide time".

Does he mean ... "have you finished tonights meal" or is he saying "do you possess the ability to cook chilli con carne" .... "narrow time" versus "wide time"

To make himself explicit he will perhaps add "already" to help specify "narrow time". Or he may add "ever" or "before" to help specify "wide time".

IS THIS ONE OF THE REASONS THAT SOME LANGUAGES HAVE 4 PAST TENSES ... TO GIVE THIS "narrow time", "wide time" distinction ???

So people find it necessary to define the 2 situations (one regular one a once-off) in a different way tense-wise.

YīnYáng

liʒi and lugu can be considered the béu equivalents of Yin and Yang.


According to the Taoist tradition ...

Yin is characterized as slow, soft, yielding, diffuse, cold, wet, and passive; and is associated with water, earth, the moon, femininity and nighttime.

Yang, by contrast, is fast, hard, solid, focused, hot, dry, and aggressive; and is associated with fire, sky, the sun, masculinity and daytime.


Unfortunately the béu tradition is not so delightfully colourful. It is more workaday.

It is basically the association in morphology of the sound i to the negative, and of u to the positive.

Also there is a weaker association of i to the left and the past, and of u to the right and to the future.


TW 121.png


wa or -ua or to a lesser extent u- are associated with positiveness.

Also ya or -ia or to a lesser extent i- are associated with negativity.

kludi and kludu might be expected to be swopped over ...

-i is suffixed to indicate an action already done on an object and hence there IS NOT any action pending. ( IS NOT = negative )

-u is suffixed to indicate an action IS pending. ( IS = positive )

Also i is associated with past time and u is associated with future time (refer to the tense/aspect markers).

In the béu mathematical tradition the primary axis is always horizontal. The origin is called the lalapoint.

Negativity is to the left of this point and positiveness to the right. ( OK not so much difference from the way we do things in the West )

In calculus there is a strong preference to vary other dimensions with respect to time.

Units

We have alread discussed numbers quite extensively.

Now it is time to discuss béu units (jada).

The unit of distance is the cwài (3.68 km) ... this is actually the radius of the earth divided by 100012.... cwì = "distance"

The unit of height is the (2.13 m) ... this is actually the divided by 100012.

The unit of weight is the (5.6 kg) ... this is actually (the weight of water in a cube with every side one long) divided by 100012.

The unit of area is the náu (7,839 m2) ... this is actually (the area of a square with every side one long) multiplied by by 100012.

The unit of temperature is the mái (87 degrees Kelvin). This makes the temperature of the human body equal to 3 1/2 units.

Also 3.0 mái is -12 degrees celsius and 4.0 mái is 75 degrees celsius. As the temperature of the air is nearly always between these two limits, when people discuss the weather, they normally drop the "3".

The unit of time is the (24 hours).

The unit of angle is the ombada (360 degrees).

The unit of speed is the són (0.15333 km/hour)

The above units are not normally written out in full. But they have special symbols as given below.


TW 98.png


Now we must lay down how the unit word interacts with the number and with the 7 number "placeholders". This must be defined for both speech and notation.

Well first of, if the number is such that it is next to omba (the decimal point), then omba is replaced with the units being used (in both recitation and in notation). For example is the unit used to measure height (it equals 2.237 mtr). My height (1.8 mtrs) would be pronounced hú apaijauza. A height of 4.037 mtrs would be pronounced as aja hú apaijauza. (see the chart above to see how this would be written down).

Now if the number doesn't occur next to omba but on one side of a placeholder, then the unit is placed on the opposite side from the placeholder.


TW 99.png


If the number occurs on both sides of a placeholder, then the unit is place at the very front.


TW 100.png


Notice that in the notation the numbers must be contiguous with the placeholders. If there is a gap, then the sign for "h" must be inserted into the gap. Exactly as we insert zero's. But one different between our system and the béu system, is, in our system, zero's must be inserted to make the number contiguous with the decimal point (assuming we are using non-scientific notation), in the béu system "h"'s must be inserted to make the number contiguous with any placeholders that are used.

The béu system may at first appear more complicated then the systems currently used. However it is all a matter of familiarity. It is just due to exposure to it for most of our lives that, for example, using hours, minutes and seconds seems so easy. With all equal amount of exposure, the béu system would be even easier.

In our SI system, magnitude words are prefixed to the unit of measurement (for example "kilo" in kilometre). béu also has magnitude words (the placeholders) but they are inserted into the number itself (the béu system is better than the SI system because you get a different magnitude word every time your dynamic range passes 1728). Notationwise, it is a bit similar to the way we use comma's to separate a long number string into groups of three digits.

This is rubbish

The plovaza (adjective phrase) is a clause that sets the scene for the main action.

1) "waiting on tables six nights a week", Kirsty had come to know all the regular customers // "their mains flowing", they ran across the field and down to the river.

2) "his leg broken", he slowly crawled up the sand dune and ...

3) "having to pack all the stereos before lunch", he did not stop for a tea-break.


In English grammar this is called a nominative absolute construction. It is a free-standing (absolute) part of a sentence that describes or modifies the main subject and verb. It is usually at the beginning or end of the sentence, although it can also appear in the middle. Its parallel is the ablative absolute in Latin, or the genitive absolute in Greek.


Index

  1. Introduction to Béu
  2. Béu : Chapter 1 : The Sounds
  3. Béu : Chapter 2 : The Noun
  4. Béu : Chapter 3 : The Verb
  5. Béu : Chapter 4 : Adjective
  6. Béu : Chapter 5 : Questions
  7. Béu : Chapter 6 : Derivations
  8. Béu : Chapter 7 : Way of Life 1
  9. Béu : Chapter 8 : Way of life 2
  10. Béu : Chapter 9 : Word Building
  11. Béu : Chapter 10 : Gerund Phrase
  12. Béu : Discarded Stuff
  13. A statistical explanation for the counter-factual/past-tense conflation in conditional sentences