Difference between revisions of "Taðýric"

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Revision as of 16:22, 3 January 2015

Taðýric is my ongoing effort - one that's been scrapped and reworked a good number of times - to create the most beautiful language possible to my sensibilities. I have developed a keyboard layout for typing the characters used in the written language.

Phonology

Consonants

Labial Labiodental Dental Alveodental Palatal Velar Uvular
Plosive p ‹p› t̪ ‹t› k ‹c›
Nasal m ‹m› n̪ ‹n›
Fricative f ‹f› θ ‹ð› s̪ ‹s› (x) ‹c›
Lateral l̪ ‹l›
Approximant ʋ ‹v› (r) ‹r› j ‹j› ʁ ‹r›*
  • /r/ has many possible realizations, including a trill (in a complex onset), rhoticization of the previous vowel (in coda position), or a uvular approximant (in onset position).

Vowels

Front Back
Unround Round
High i y u
Mid e ø ɔ
Low a
  • All vowels can be lax and tense (RTR and non-RTR) apart from /ɔ/ (written ‹o›). Long vowels are realized as the vowel with a schwa offglide (ie /iː/ > [iə]). Short vowels are lax versions of long vowels (RTR).
  • Length and tenseness is represented by an acute accent over the vowel.

Diphthongs

Diphthongs are frequently formed in agglutination. The language has a large and relatively unrestricted vowel inventory for a highly agglutinating language, and diphthong formation is complex:

Second Vowel
First Vowel i u e o a
i í ju je jo ja
y ý ju je jo ja
u vi ú ve vo va
e é é é eo ea
ø øj ǿ ǿ ǿ ǿ
o oi ó ó ó oa
a ai au á au á

These patterns can be explained through optimality: Gliding of intial vowel > Rising diphthong (ai, au, oi, øj) > Disyllabic falling vowel progression (eo, ea, oa) > Long vowel (by initial vowel)

Phonotactics

Possible consonantal onset structures include:

  • [null]
  • any consonant
  • any consonant followed by an approximant

Possible coda structures include:

  • [null]
  • a fricative
  • a nasal
  • a rhotic (Where /r/ is realized as a rhoticization of the previous vowel.)
  • a geminate (disyllabic) plosive


  • ‹t› > ‹ts› ([ts]) before accented high vowels.
  • /s/ > [ɕ] before accented high vowels, and with /j/.
  • /k/ is lenited to a fricative [x] in coda position.
  • a high vowel between two other vowels will strengthen to an approximant (‹j› or ‹v›).
  • Nasals in contact with another nasal or plosive regressively assimilate place.

Morphology

Nouns

Possessor STEM Plural Possessor Case/Number

Nouns are declined according to two numbers (singular and plural), two genders (animate and inanimate), five or seven cases (a total of eight), and three possessive persons (as well as singular and plural for each possessor).

Many adjectives may also be attached to nouns in a clitic form, as a prefix closest to the root.

Animate Paradigm

Singular Plural
Nominative e
Accusative i is
Possessive s sis
Dative ta tor
Associative je jor
Comparative pi pjar
Vocative* ðau ðau
  • The vocative is a postposed particle.

Inanimate Paradigm

Singular Plural
Nominative a
Accusative u us
Dative ða ðor
Instrumental my mjar
Locative su svar
Ablative si sjar
Comparative fi fjar

Person

Singular possessive markers are prefixes. Plural markers are suffixes paired with the appropriate singular marker.

Singular Plural
1 si i
2 ci i
21 a i
3.an ðis u
3>3.an ðin u

Inanimate nouns cannot take direct possession. Instead, root compounding is used (ie "the tree's branch" = tíðorcrác)

Verbs

Person Negative Intensifier STEM Plural Subject Tense Aspect Mood Object

Verbs take different roots depending on the animacy of their object. Crucially, this means that verbs must be used appropriately for their paradigm: for instance, the root for throwing an inanimate noun such as a ball is cílo, while throwing an animate object (whether actually alive or not) is arowé.

Verbs are obligatorily inflected for person and number. Transitive verbs are obligatorily inflected for the person and number of the object (in a single suffix). They may also be inflected for tense, aspect, and voice as individual agglutinations.

The verb to be does not exist; a noun may be derived as a verb with the suffix ov immediately following the stem.  In a similar fashion, to possess takes the form of the suffix et.

Person

Subject prefix is always furthest from the root. The plural suffix is paired with the singular prefix, before the object suffix.

Singular Plural
1 si i
2 ci i
21 a i
3.an ðyn u
3.in ðos u

Object

Object suffixes are always furthest from the root.

Singular Plural
1 is itsir
2 ic iccir
21 mér
3.an oðer
3.in on oner

The object suffix placement is also that of the passive suffix -toc.

Tense

Gloss Mésylþo
Past en
Nonpast+singular subject+intransitive a

Aspect

Gloss Mésylþo
Inchoative ro
Cessative pi
Habitual ia

Mood

Gloss Mésylþo
Desiderative vél

Other Affixes

Gloss Mésylþo
Intensifier lǿc
Negative mal

Example:

"We did not really want to stop loving them."
simallǿcelsarínjacpyvéloðer
si-mal-lǿc-elsarín-i-ac-py-vél-oðer
1-neg-int-LOVE-1p-pst-ces-des-3p.an

Lexicon

Demonstratives

Demonstratives precede the noun.

an.s an.pl in.s in.pl
This by me óma ómes ómar ómsis
That by you ána ánes ánar ánsis
That over there amóv amóves amór amóris

Particles

English Mésylþo
Question marker
Yes
No
Greeting sjurá
But rum
And ic
From vi
Or el
Of
As, Which son

Numbers

Base-12 system. Numbers are prefixes or particles (cardinal). Ordinals are prefixes immediately before the stem.

Arabic Clitic Cardinal
1 néto netósa
2 níðo niðóca
3 jóci jocís
4 jíso jisós
5 síðo siðóm
6 son sónom
7 rupís rupísi
8 román románi
9 vári varíð
10 vis visíð
11 névo nevoi
12 súvo suvoi
13 súvo néto súvo netósa
24 nysuvo nysuvoi
36 jocšuvo jocšuvoi
48 jysuvo jysuvoi
60 sysuvo sysuvoi
72 sonsuvo sonsuvoi
84 rupsuvo rupsuvoi
96 rumsuvo romsuvoi
108 vásuvo vasuvoi
120 výsuvo vysuvoi
132 nǿsuvo nǿsuvoi
144 hánja hánjai

Open Class

English Mésylþo
Ability (n.in) risúr
All (c) vai
(An)other (c) ánte
Begin, Start (AI) (n.in) síce
Big (c) omac
Black (c.in) sícsi
Brick (n.in) copimín
Build (TI) monác
Bone (n.in) jórryð
Burn (TI) póver
Child (n.an) voijin
City (n.in) ðáfolas
Come (AI) nammó
Confuse (TA) musmúr
Disperse (TA) poréðer
Do (AI) jǿra
Drown (AI) lacná
Earth, World (n.in) pórra
East (n.in) súni
Face (n.in) ném
Father (n.an) misýr
Field (n.in) lácni
Find (TI) óllo
Girl (n.an) ánja
How, Why (adv) sjúr
Live (AI) essís
Look, See (TI, TA) ðíta
Love (n.in) sjára
Love (TA) elsalín
Man (n.an) tápi
Many (clit)
Mother (n.an) miðám
Move (AI) rópa
Name (n.in) acál
Nothing (n.in) málin
Only (clit) usy
Person (n.an) máni
Place (n.in) appél
be Possible (II) icánþo
be the Same (II) sénra
Sea (n) apás
Self (n.an) nin
Sex (TA) raðúnc
Sing, Song (AI) valáli
Skin (n.in) fleoš
Sky (n.in) éli
Small (c) pyrim
Speak, Speech (n.an) (AI) taðýr
Spirit (n.an) ámisðai
Spit (n.in,AI) cipúð
Stone (n.in) sucéna
Sun (n.an) natós
Thing (n.in) cíp
Throw (TA) arǿve
Throw (TI) rǿve
Time (n.in) ðís
Top end (n.in) nípu
Tower (n.in) møcéli
Understand (AI) vacár
What (n.in)
Whisper (AI) fissivá
When (n.in[dat]) siðít
Where (n.in[loc]) sipél
White (c.in) caucsi
Who (n.an) simáni
Woman (n.an) ǿm

The Tower of Babel (Genesis 11: 1-9)

  1. Now the whole earth had one language and the same words.
    Ómðíssu, vaipórrá ðonnétotaðýreten ic taðýrað ðossénraven.
  2. And as people migrated from the east, they found a plain in the land of Shinar and settled there.
    Ic ðíssu, mánjeð ðosrópaven súnisjar, ðynólloven lácnju Sinarmy ic ðynessísjen amappélsu.
  3. And they said to one another, "Come, let us make bricks, and burn them thoroughly." And they had brick for stone, and bitumen for mortar.
    Ic ðyntaðýrjen: “Nammót! Sijǿrajoner copimínus, ic silǿcpóverjoner.” Ic ðyncopimíneten sucénaðar ic ðynpitumeneten mortarðar.
  4. Then they said, "Come, let us build ourselves a city and a tower with its top in the heavens, and let us make a name for ourselves, lest we be dispersed over the face of the whole earth."
    Ic ðyntaðýrjen: “Nammót! Simonácjon ðáfolasu ic møcélju, ic niðuðar élisu, ic sijǿrajon acálu iníntor, el iporéðertoc pórranémðar.
  5. And the Lord came down to see the city and the tower, which the children of man had built.
    Ic Omacámisðaje ðynnammón ðáfolasu ðynðíta ic møcélju son monácentoc ðinvoijinvað tápisis.
  6. And the Lord said, "Behold, they are one people, and they have all one language, and this is only the beginning of what they will do. And nothing that they propose to do will now be impossible for them.
  7. Come, let us go down and there confuse their language, so that they may not understand one another's speech.
  8. So the Lord dispersed them from there over the face of all the earth, and they left off building the city.
  9. Therefore its name was called Babel, because there the Lord confused the language of all the earth. And from there the Lord dispersed them over the face of all the earth.