Difference between revisions of "Ancient Kartara"
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| class="r" | 2nd | | class="r" | 2nd | ||
− | | - | + | | -<strong data-swap="m f p" data-swap-nexus="main">p</strong>a |
| colspan="2" | -<strong data-swap="m f p" data-swap-nexus="main">p</strong>ara | | colspan="2" | -<strong data-swap="m f p" data-swap-nexus="main">p</strong>ara | ||
| -<strong data-swap="m f p" data-swap-nexus="main">p</strong>ala | | -<strong data-swap="m f p" data-swap-nexus="main">p</strong>ala | ||
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| class="r" | 2nd | | class="r" | 2nd | ||
− | | - | + | | -<strong data-swap-nexus="main" data-swap="t n s">s</strong>i |
| colspan="2" | -<strong data-swap-nexus="main" data-swap="t n s">s</strong>aro | | colspan="2" | -<strong data-swap-nexus="main" data-swap="t n s">s</strong>aro | ||
| -<strong data-swap-nexus="main" data-swap="t n s">s</strong>alo | | -<strong data-swap-nexus="main" data-swap="t n s">s</strong>alo | ||
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| class="r" | 2nd | | class="r" | 2nd | ||
− | | - | + | | -<strong data-swap-nexus="main" data-swap="t́ ń ś">ś</strong>u |
| colspan="2" | -<strong data-swap-nexus="main" data-swap="t́ ń ś">ś</strong>uro | | colspan="2" | -<strong data-swap-nexus="main" data-swap="t́ ń ś">ś</strong>uro | ||
| -<strong data-swap-nexus="main" data-swap="t́ ń ś">ś</strong>uĺo | | -<strong data-swap-nexus="main" data-swap="t́ ń ś">ś</strong>uĺo | ||
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| colspan="2" | -<strong data-swap-nexus="main" data-swap="k h">h</strong>ara | | colspan="2" | -<strong data-swap-nexus="main" data-swap="k h">h</strong>ara | ||
| -<strong data-swap-nexus="main" data-swap="k h">h</strong>ala | | -<strong data-swap-nexus="main" data-swap="k h">h</strong>ala |
Revision as of 03:11, 16 March 2017
Ancient Kart́ara | |
---|---|
Romanization | Ancient Kartara |
AIL Name | Ancient Kardara |
Region | Kartara |
Ancient Kartara (or, more properly, Ancient Kart́ara) is the oldest known ancestor of the human language families on the island of Kartara. It appears to have had some influence on the modern Karalome language, but does not show signs of being influenced in return. Its most direct daughter language is Eastern Kartara. Influence from the nearby Reems helped mold its other main daughter, Western Kartara.
Contents
Phonology
Consonant Grid | labial | alveolar | retroflex | velar | glottal |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
stops | p | t | t́ | k | * |
fricatives | f | s | ś | h | |
nasals | m | n | ń | ||
approximants | r | ||||
lateral approximants | l | ĺ |
Vowel Grid | front | near-front | back |
---|---|---|---|
close | i | u | |
near-close | ĭ | ||
mid | e | o | |
open | a |
Syllables can be generalized to be a vowel, optionally preceded and/or followed by a consonant. Words can only begin with a vowel, a stop, or a fricative. Only verbs may end in a consonant, and even then it must not be an approximant. All other words end in vowels, and even verbs usually end up inflected into a vowel-final form.
Typical Kartara does not use voiced stops or fricatives. However, stops in the middle of words often take on partial voicing when they are preceded by an approximant. For instance: kart́ara is has been interpreted by continentals to be "kardara".
Stops do not typically have aspiration, but when two stops occur next to each other, the first stop is usually aspirated before moving on to the second. For instance: pat́ka is pronounced [paʈʰka].
Glottal stops are not written, but they always happen between equal vowels (Ex: iipke [iʔipʰke̞]). They often occur between any two vowels if both are unstressed, and after a stressed vowel before an unstressed i.
The sound r can fall under the alveolar or retroflex category, or somewhere in between, depending on the word being used. It is written as one symbol and is thought of as one sound, similar to how English has two ways of presenting it's L sound: clear in 'lake' vs. dark (velarized) in 'cool'. Kartara speakers do not register a difference. (Incidentally, l and ĺ are always 'clear'.)
The sound h does not sound like English h. It is the same as the 'ch' in the Scottish word 'loch' or the German name 'Bach'.
Kartara f sounds similar to English f, but is made only with the lips.
Front vowels are unrounded, while back vowels are rounded. The vowel sound ĭ is used to form dipthongs, which gives Kartara the following nine vowels: a, e, i, o, u, aĭ, eĭ, oĭ, and uĭ. In IPA, therefore, the vowels are represented as [a], [e̞], [i], [o], [u], [aɪ̆], [e̞ɪ̆], [oɪ̆], and [uɪ̆]. Each vowel has its own separate glyph.
For non-verbs, the next-to-last syllable of the root word receives stress. If the root word has only one syllable, then the stress falls on it. Verbs are stressed on the final syllable of their root. A secondary stress may be added to any important affix to denote importance.
Morphology
Pronoun Table | singular | dual | paucal | plural |
---|---|---|---|---|
1st (inclusive) | aĭkuasta | aĭkusata | aĭkuańa | |
1st (exclusive) | husa | husasta | husata | huańa |
2nd | pepa | pipina | pika | pińa |
2nd (formal) | emsua | esasta | esia | hińa |
3rd | tahi | tasita | takaśi | taśuńi |
3rd (formal) | empi | emori | emiri | erońi |
3rd (inanimate) | kafa | kafaki1 | kafaru1 | kańa |
1 These forms are made with the standard suffixes. Therefore, stress always falls on the syllable ka.
Kartara has four classes of grammatical number. Singular refers to one and dual refers to two. Paucal is relative, generally denoting 3-10, while plural denotes a quantity greater than that.
Part/Whole Distinction
The paucal/plural marking can also be used to denote distinctions between parts of a whole. The plural is used to describe the entirety, while the paucal is used to denote a division of it, even if the division is more than ten or fewer than three. This generally happens when using uncountable nouns (sand, wind, etc) or large groups of people or flocks of animals.
For example, one may spill water (plural), and note that some water (paucal) got on the floor, some (paucal) on the drapes, and some (paucal) remained in the cup. Or, one may refer to the two Senators from Ohio (paucal) as opposed to all Senators in DC (plural).
This latter usage can be seen as more poetic, fanciful, or flamboyant if used for trivial distinctions, if not used to compare and contrast, or when it's just plain overused. Comparison: Sarcasm and irony in the English language.
Verb Morphology
Verbs are grouped into three or four categories based on their final sounds.
- Group 1 consists of verbs ending with the labial consonants p, m and f.
- Group 2 consists of the dental and retroflex consonants, but is split into two series.
- Series 2a contains s, t and n.
- Series 2b contains ś, t́ and ń.
- Group 3 consists of the velar consonants h and k.
G1 | singular | dual | paucal | plural |
---|---|---|---|---|
1st (inclusive) | -peo | -peĭ | -paĭ | |
1st (exclusive) | -pe | -puo | -pae | -pou |
2nd | -pa | -para | -pala | |
2nd (formal) | -pape | -pareĭ | -paleĭ | |
3rd (animate) | -pi | -piro | -pilo | |
3rd (inanimate) | -popo | -poro | -polo | |
G2a | ||||
1st (inclusive) | -sio | -susu | -soĭ | |
1st (exclusive) | -se | -su | -saĭ | -suaĭ |
2nd | -si | -saro | -salo | |
2nd (formal) | -siseĭ | -sareĭ | -saleĭ | |
3rd (animate) | -so | -sore | -sole | |
3rd (inanimate) | -saa | -sara | -sala | |
G2b | ||||
1st (inclusive) | -śua | -śaśa | -śeĭ | |
1st (exclusive) | -śe | -śu | -śoĭ | -śuoĭ |
2nd | -śu | -śuro | -śuĺo | |
2nd (formal) | -śuśeĭ | -śureĭ | -śuĺeĭ | |
3rd (animate) | -śo | -śore | -śoĺe | |
3rd (inanimate) | -śaa | -śara | -śaĺa | |
G3 | ||||
1st (inclusive) | -hee | -haĭ | -huu | |
1st (exclusive) | -he | -heo | -hoe | -hoe |
2nd | -ha | -hara | -hala | |
2nd (formal) | -hate | -hareĭ | -haleĭ | |
3rd (animate) | -ha | -haro | -halo | |
3rd (inanimate) | -hiki | -hiri | -hili |
Bolded letters indicate the final consonants of the verb. P, s, ś and h are used as examples for their respective groups, and the bolded consonant should be replaced with the actual final letter of the verb. For example, the verb okan ends in n, which is group 2a. Therefore, the 2nd person singular informal form of okan would be okanini.
Dual and paucal forms merge in the 2nd and 3rd persons. Formal/informal distinctions merge in the 3rd person; formality can be noted on the noun.
Groups 2a and 2b merge together in other tenses, and almost completely merge in the 3rd person above.
See the Verbs subpage for more tenses.