User:Kalathei95/sandbox/CGAW/Test-List-Countries/Cixo-Noxorean/Standard Asso-Thrystian
Asso-Thrystian Languages
[edit]Phonology
[edit]Consonants
[edit]Bilabial | Coronal | Dorsal | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Plain | Palat. | Plain | Palat. | Plain | Palat. | ||
Nasal | m | mʲ | n | nʲ | (ŋ) | (ŋʲ) | |
Stop | Unaspirated | p | pʲ | t | tʲ | k | kʲ |
Aspirated | pʰ | pʰʲ | tʰ | tʰʲ | kʰ | kʰʲ | |
Voiced | b | bʲ | d | dʲ | ɡ | ɡʲ | |
Affricate | Unaspirated | t͡s ~ t͡ʃ | t͡sʲ ~ t͡ʃʲ | ||||
Aspirated | t͡sʰ ~ t͡ʃʰ | t͡sʰʲ ~ t͡ʃʰʲ | |||||
Voiced | d͡z ~ d͡ʒ | d͡zʲ ~ d͡ʒʲ | |||||
Fricatives | Sibilant | s ~ ʃ | sʲ ~ ʃʲ | x | (xʲ) | ||
Approximant | j | w | (wʲ) | ||||
Lateral | l | lʲ | |||||
Rhotic | r | (rʲ) |
- /ŋ/ and /ŋʲ/ are not found natively in Asso-Thrystian, but occur in loanwords mostly from neighbouring Noxorean languages.
- /ɣ/ is an allophone of /x/ and always occurs intervocalically in unstressed syllables.
- /rʲ/ while phonemic, only occurs in a few obsolete or archaic words and moribund dialects. It is no longer productive in modern day speech and rarely taught in formal education.
- Asso-Thrystian forms a dialect continuum from north to south, with northern speakers pronouncing affricates as alveolars and southern ones as dentals.
- /wʲ/ is not phonemic, but occurs orthographically in older writings and loanwords.
Vowels
[edit]Front | Central | Back | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Short | Long | Short | Long | ||
Close | i | iː | u | uː | |
Mid | e | eː | (ə) | o | oː |
Open | a | aː |
- /ə/ typically occurs in short unstressed syllables without tone, falling or trembling tone.
- /e/ is sometimes pronounced [ɛ] by some speakers, and /o/ as [ɔ]. In northern dialects, /u/ is fronted to [ɯ] after palatalised consonants or /j/.
Diphthongs
[edit]Diphthong | IPA |
---|---|
/ai/ | /ai/ |
/ua/ | /ua/ |
/oi/ | /oi/ |
Tones
[edit]Tone | Tone | IPA |
---|---|---|
1 | High | ˥ |
2 | Low | ˩ |
3 | Rising | ˩˥ |
4 | Falling | ˥˩ |
5 | Rising-falling/Creaky | ˩˥˩ or ◌̰ |
6 | Neutral | None |
Morphology
[edit]Asso-Thrystian is a predominantly head-marking, polysynthetic language with a high degree of polypersonal agreement, clusivity, evidentiality, animacy, split ergativity and grammatical case. Asso-Thrystian has generally flexible word order, though subject-object-verb is the most common. Honorifics and class is encoded in most lexical classes, primarily in nouns, pronouns, adjectives and verbs. Syntactically, Asso-Thrystian does not exhibit sex-based grammatical gender, but depending on the region, male and female may be classified as one of several different levels on the animacy hierarchy.
Asso-Thrystian is a split ergative language, in which the subject of a transitive sentence is marked in the ergative case if the object's animacy is lower that the object or patient.
Nouns
[edit]Most nouns in Modern Asso-Thrystian consist of a noun root of which it may take on additional affixes to convey case, number and animacy. Noun roots can be compounded together with other nouns or suffixes to create derivational words or noun phrases. Likewise, verbs can be turned into nouns by various nominalisation suffixes, or converbs marked in the applicative voice.
Classical Asso-Thrystian once had a separate suffix for the dual number, but this has since been replaced by the plural marker.
Cases
[edit]Asso-Thrystian features 10 or 11 cases. These are the nominative, absolutive, accusative, ergative, genitive, dative, instrumental, comitative, associative, locative/agentive and vocative. The first five core cases (nominative, accusative, ergative, genitive and dative) describe the syntactic relationship between the nouns, while the remaining five cases (the instrumental, comitative, associative, locative/agentive and vocative) describe nouns and noun phrases as adjuncts.
Cases show fairly consistent declension patterns, though there are a few irregular words. Declensions often result in frequent alternation in syllable codas. For example, pyat (river) in the accusative plural is affixed with ⟨-lan⟩ creating pyaalan instead of pyatlan. Generally, nouns are fixed to their noun class and do not change; any promotion or demotion of a noun along the animacy hierarchy must be affixed with inverse markers to indicate this change.
Noun class | Exalted/High class | Low class | Inanimate class | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
pyat (river) | xinãẽt (illness) | ŏrthya (stone) | ||||
Declension | Singular | Dual/Plural | Singular | Dual/Plural | Singular | Dual/Plural |
Nominative | pyat | pyato | xinãẽt | xinãẽtu | ŏrthya | ŏrthyau |
Absolutive | wepyat | wepyato | ||||
Accusative | pyaamé | pyaalan | ginãẽt | ginãẽtu | gŏrthya | gŏrthyau |
Ergative | xiyaamé | xiyaalan | xinãẽtù | xinãẽtwu | ŏrthyajù | ŏrthyakyu |
Genitive | pyacee | pyadee | xinãẽddŏy | xinãẽtwey | ŏrthyadŏy | ŏrthyawey |
Dative | pyacêê | pyatwa | xinãẽddyì | xinãẽddyusy | ||
Instrumental | pyatkõrá | pyatcé | xinãẽtkõrò | xinãẽtõru | ŏrthyagyè | ŏrthyagyo |
Comitative | xinãẽndichya | xinãẽndichyo | ŏrthyajiya | ŏrthyajiyo | ||
Associative | pyatbej | pyatboj | xinãẽcij | xinãẽciji | ŏrthyasij | ŏrthyasiji |
Locative/Agentive | pyandíõ | xinãẽdun | xinãẽdunyí | ŏrthyanà | ŏrthyanàò | |
Vocative | pyatááxu | pyatááxo | xinãẽtííl | xinãẽtííwo |
Morphosyntactic alignment
[edit]Sentences in Asso-Thrystian are in the nominative-accusative alignment if the subject of an transitive verb is equal to or higher in the animacy hierarchy to the object. In the example below, the subject, Gyekyóón (Gyacon) is in class II (high class) and takes the unmarked nominative, while the object nóyẽ (fish) is in class III and takes the accusative marker.
"Gyacon always enjoys eating fish."
If the subject of the transitive sentence is a lower class than the object, the ergative-absolutive alignment is used.
Taria-Ø
Taria-ABS
"Gyacon saw Taria in his dream."
The antipassive is used when a normally inanimate subject acts upon an animate subject.
"The roof collapsed on top of him, but was told he survived."
Locative/Agentive case
[edit]The locative and agentive case are a point of contention amongst modern Asso-Thrystian grammarians as to whether they constitute two distinct cases, or a unified one. In Classical Azollynean, the locative formally encoded a large variety of postpositional affixes, and the agentive was typically used as a topic marker. By the time Classical Azollynean evolved into Central Plains Asso-Thrystian, the agentive replaced the inanimate locative suffix, while sounds changes caused the animate locative case to be reanalysed as an agentive. By the modern age, the suffixes -niõ, -nu, -nuyí, nà and nàò, function as locative and agentive cases depending on the semantic quality of the noun that is being declined.
As a locative case
[edit]A noun that semantically describes a place, location or a spatial relation is understood to be in the locative case when suffixed with the locative/agentive.
As an agentive case
[edit]The noun rôkhyŏnydyabárurk (environmental damage) is marked with the agentive case which promotes the noun to the subject.
Wããkanyarâw-cê
coral_reef-DAT
ja-nà
time-LOC
"The coral reefs tell a story of environmental damage overtime."
Verbs
[edit]Verbs in Asso-Thrystian are agglutinative, allowing for highly complex, polysynthetic constructions. Verbs conjugate for voice, tense, aspect, voice, evidentiality, number, class and definiteness. Verbs can also take on adjective and nominal markers to turn the verb in verbal nouns which are declinable.
The phonotactic coda of a given verb stem triggers consonant mutation as verbs are conjugated within the verb paradigm. The differences between each category is small, but modern dialects have seen significant phonological change which have diversified and evolved into new verb categories, resulting in 12 verbal conjugations in modern Standard Asso-Thrystian.
- Class 1a (plain stop endings)
- Class 1b (palatalised endings)
- Class 3a (-r)
- Class 3b (-ry)
- Class 4a (neutral vowels)
- Class 4b (low, and falling tone vowels)
- Class 4c (high, and rising tone vowels)
- Class 5a (-s, -x)
- Class 5b (-sy)
- Class 6a (liquids)
- Class 6b (palatalised liquids)
- Irregular (irregular verbs)
Archaic:
- Class 2 (uvulars, now obsolete)
Class 1a (plain stop endings)
[edit]Verbs with unpalatalised coda consonants are grouped into class 1a verbs. These include words such as id (flip, rotate), phêêlk (starve) and õób (accelerate).
Tense | Mood | Class | id (flip, rotate) | phyêêlk (starve) | õób (accelerate) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Present | Experiential | Exalted | idelálo | phyêêlkelálo | õóbelálo |
High | ide | phyêêlke | õóbe | ||
Low | idŭŭye | phyêêlkŭŭye | õóbŭŭye | ||
Visual | idnẽy | phyêêlknẽy | õóbnẽy | ||
Hearsay | |||||
Inferential | Exalted, High | id | phyêêlk | õób | |
Low, Inanimate | |||||
Optative | Exalted, High | idlă | phyêêlklă | õóblă | |
Low, Inanimate | idbíŭ | phyêêlgbíŭ | õóbbíŭ | ||
Potential | Exalted, High | idálgwi | phyêêlkálgwi | õóbálgwi | |
Low, Inanimate | |||||
Imperative | Exalted, High | — | — | — | |
Cohortative | All Class | idi | phyêêlki | õóbi |
Class 1b (palatalised stop endings)
[edit]Verbs that end with palatalised stop consonants are placed in class 1b. It is conjugated very similarly to class 1a verbs, differentiated in pronunciation by certain dialects.
Tense | Mood | Class | uy (sing, call) | anóskey (present) | xiécy (cry, mourn) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Present | Experiential | Exalted | uyeláwŭrèè | anóskeyeláwŭrèè | xiécyeláwŭrèè |
High | uyoád | anóskeyoád | xiécyoád | ||
Low | uyŭŭnaly | anóskeyŭŭnaly | xiécyŭŭnaly | ||
Visual | uynáŭsô | anóskeynáŭsô | xiécynáŭsô | ||
Hearsay | uylĕbèc | anóskeylĕbèc | xiécylĕbèc | ||
Inferential | Exalted, High | uya | anóskeya | xiécya | |
Low, Inanimate | uyèy | anóskeyèy | xiécyèy | ||
Optative | Exalted, High | uylăd | anóskeylăd | xiécylăd | |
Low, Inanimate | uybíŭd | anóskeybíŭd | xiécybíŭd | ||
Potential | Exalted, High | uyálgod | anóskeyálgod | xiécyálgod | |
Low, Inanimate | uyálgôs | anóskeyálgôs | xiécyálgôs | ||
Imperative | Exalted, High | uyawodá | anóskeyawodá | xiécyawodá | |
Cohortative | All Class | uyiôsè | anóskeyiôsè | xiécyiôsè |
Class 3a
[edit]Verbs that end in -r are placed in class 3a. The -r suffix is also a verbaliser marker, turning nouns into verbs, thus is colloquially referred as the "verbaliser class" (gyapilas ikùrn), though this is inaccurate.
Tense | Mood | Class | lar (go) | syunkyur (present) | ijír (send) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Present | Experiential | Exalted | larekhwŭrèèye | syunkyuturekhwŭrèèye | ijírekhwŭrèèye |
High | larînyády | syunkyuturînyády | ijírînyády | ||
Low | larŭnynaly | syunkyuturŭnynaly | ijírŭnynaly | ||
Visual | laròkhgôsy | syunkyuturòkhgôsy | ijíròkhgôsy | ||
Hearsay | larlyŭncoray | syunkyuturlyŭncoray | ijírlyŭncoray | ||
Inferential | Exalted, High | larîád | syunkyuturîád | ijírîád | |
Low, Inanimate | larînay | syunkyuturînay | ijírînay | ||
Optative | Exalted, High | larlikysád | syunkyuturlikysád | ijírlikysád | |
Low, Inanimate | larbòkhasády | syunkyuturbòkhasády | ijírbòkhasády | ||
Potential | Exalted, High | larkhènsádey | syunkyuturkhènsádey | ijírkhènsádey | |
Low, Inanimate | larkhyánalyáy | syunkyuturkhyánalyáy | ijírkhyánalyáy | ||
Imperative | Exalted, High | laryadeyá | syunkyuturyadeyá | ijíryadeyá | |
Cohortative | All Class | lariwanalyè | syunkyuturiwanalyè | ijíriwanalyè |
Class 3b
[edit]Class 3b verbs are verbs that end in -ry. Class 3b verbs have become increasingly rare as it merges with class 3a verbs in both informal writing and speech. It is still used in formal writing.
Tense | Mood | Class | õthũũry (fall, sink) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1st person | 2nd person incl. | 2nd person excl. | 3rd person incl. | 3rd person excl. | |||
Past | Experiential | Exalted | õthũũryeláíkãã | õthũũryeláátásŭ | õthũũryelárikuy | õthũũryeláátásŭt | õthũũryelárikìì |
High | õthũũryoke | õthũũryogũn | õthũũryiluy | õthũũryogũna | õthũũryoiwoy | ||
Low | õthũũryŭŭkõl | ||||||
Visual | õthũũrynáŭwin | õthũũrynáŭwingye | õthũũrynáŭwinkiya | ||||
Hearsay | õthũũrylĕwin | õthũũrylĕwingye | õthũũrylĕwinkiya | ||||
Inferential | Exalted, High | õthũũrye | õthũũryigũn | õthũũryilûy | õthũũryoigũna | õthũũryiwoy | |
Low, Inanimate | |||||||
Optative | Exalted, High | õthũũrylă | õthũũrylăigũn | õthũũrylăxiluy | õthũũrylăigũna | õthũũrylăiwoy | |
Low, Inanimate | õthũũrybíŭ | ||||||
Potential | Exalted, High | õthũũryálgwin | õthũũryálgigũn | õthũũryálgxiluy | õthũũryálgigũna | õthũũryálgiwoy | |
Low, Inanimate | |||||||
Cohortative | All Class | õthũũryisy | õthũũryigũn | õthũũryiiluyèsy | õthũũryayigũnèsy | õthũũryaiwoyèsy |
Class 4a, 4b, 4c (vowel endings)
[edit]Tense | Mood | Class | 4a | 4b | 4c |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
egsa (wipe) | tóósè (scold) | tanagyû (accompany) | |||
Present | Experiential | Exalted | egsalálo | tóósèlálo | tanagyûlálo |
High | egsaxe | tóósèxe | tanagyûxe | ||
Low | egsaxŭŭye | tóósèxŭŭye | tanagyûxŭŭye | ||
Visual | egsanáẽy | tóósènáẽy | tanagyûnáẽy | ||
Hearsay | |||||
Inferential | Exalted, High | egsa | tóósè | tanagyû | |
Low, Inanimate | |||||
Optative | Exalted, High | egsală | tóósèlă | tanagyûlă | |
Low, Inanimate | egsabíŭ | tóósèbíŭ | tanagyûbíŭ | ||
Potential | Exalted, High | egsaxálgwi | tóósălgwi | tanagyûtálgwi | |
Low, Inanimate | |||||
Imperative | Exalted, High | — | — | — | |
Cohortative | All Class | egsayi | tóósèyi | tanagyûyi |
Class 5 (-s and -x endings)
[edit]Tense | Mood | Class | õrkás (conquer) | úíthyìx (input) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Present | Experiential | Exalted | õrkásanlo | úíthyìxelálo |
High | õrkásane | úíthyìxe | ||
Low | õrkásŭnye | úíthyìxŭŭye | ||
Visual | õrkásowẽy | úíthyìxnẽy | ||
Hearsay | ||||
Inferential | Exalted, High | õrkásĕ | úíthyìx | |
Low, Inanimate | ||||
Optative | Exalted, High | õrkáslăny | úíthyìxlă | |
Low, Inanimate | õrkásbíw | úíthyìxbíŭ | ||
Potential | Exalted, High | õrkásanywi | úíthyìxálgwi | |
Low, Inanimate | ||||
Imperative | Exalted, High | — | — | |
Cohortative | All Class | õrkásiwa | úíthyìxi |
Voice
[edit]Asso-Thrystian verbs are by default in the active voice. Various valency changing suffixes include the antipassive, applicative and causative. Due to naming taboos, these valency changing suffixes differ between noun classes during the evolution of Asso-Thrystian.
Class | byẽòse (I shout) | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Antipassive | Active | Applicative | Causative | |
Exalted | byẽòsèdy | byẽòse | byẽòsegen | byẽòsenyeb |
High | byẽòseun | |||
Low | byẽòsèô | byẽòsebi | byẽòsetòl | |
Inanimate | byẽòsejé |
Definiteness
[edit]Definite and indefinite particles may be suffixed to verbs to indicate a noun's definiteness (or lack thereof). Note the exalted class do not take on definite articles, but may use demonstratives to describe the definiteness of an exalted noun.
Exalted | High | Low | Inanimate | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Definite | -Ø | -sa | ||
Indefinite | -Ø | -bén | -ùy |