Red Laqi language: Difference between revisions
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The '''{{PAGENAME}}''' (RL. ''Plyžlaqebze'') is the variety of Laqi speech most closely associated with the [[ | The '''{{PAGENAME}}''' (RL. ''Plyžlaqebze'') is the variety of Laqi speech most closely associated with the [[Laqs|Red Laqs]]. Red Laqs originate from the Laqi Homeland in the highlands of Brookshire, but split off to migrate west as [[Ashkenatza]] fell to ruin. | ||
==Phonology== | ==Phonology== | ||
''Main Article: [[{{PAGENAME}}/Phonology|Phonology]]'' | |||
| | |||
{| class="wikitable" | {| class="wikitable" | ||
Line 399: | Line 159: | ||
| ''rezeġen'' "to become content" | | ''rezeġen'' "to become content" | ||
|- | |- | ||
! rowspan= | ! rowspan=7 | S | ||
! S s | ! S s | ||
| /s/ | | /s/ | ||
Line 407: | Line 167: | ||
| /ʃ/ | | /ʃ/ | ||
| ''śy'' "horse, brother" | | ''śy'' "horse, brother" | ||
|- | |||
! Ś' ś' | |||
| /ʃ'/ | |||
| ''ś'yn'' "to do" | |||
|- | |- | ||
! Ś° ś° | ! Ś° ś° | ||
| /ʃʷ/ | | /ʃʷ/ | ||
| ''ś°y-'' "you all (imperative plural marker)" | | ''ś°y-'' "you all (imperative plural marker)" | ||
|- | |||
! Ś°' ś°' | |||
| /ʃ'ʷ/ | |||
| ''ś°'yc'e'' "black" | |||
|- | |- | ||
! Š š | ! Š š | ||
Line 445: | Line 213: | ||
| /χʷ/ | | /χʷ/ | ||
| ''-x°y'' "male ___" | | ''-x°y'' "male ___" | ||
|- | |||
! colspan=2 | Y y | |||
| /ə/ | |||
| ''zy'' "one" | |||
|- | |- | ||
! rowspan=5 | Z | ! rowspan=5 | Z | ||
Line 478: | Line 250: | ||
==Grammar== | ==Grammar== | ||
Laqi has a Subject-Object-Verb word order. Its morphosyntactic alignment is Ergative-Absolutive, meaning that the Subject of an intransitive verb is marked with an Absolutive case while the Subject of a transitive verb is marked with an Ergative case. | |||
===Verbs=== | ===Verbs=== | ||
''Main Article: [[{{PAGENAME}}/Verbs|Verbs]]'' | |||
Laqi verbs are the most highly-inflected part of speech in the language, receiving both prefixes and suffixes to describe things like subject/object agreement, the direction of action, tense and mood, intentionality, and even the English equivalent to conjunctions and adverbs. | |||
===== | These affixes bind to the verb according to a defined sequence according to their type: | ||
{| class="wikitable" style="border: none;" | |||
|- | |||
! colspan=8 | Prefix Complex | |||
| rowspan=2 style="text-align: center; font-size: 125%; width: 5em; border: none;" | '''+''' | |||
! rowspan=2 | VERB STEM | |||
| rowspan=2 style="text-align: center; font-size: 125%; width: 5em; border: none;" | '''+''' | |||
! colspan=5 | Suffix Complex | |||
|- | |||
| {{color|green|Absolutive}} | |||
| Directional | |||
| Applicatives | |||
| Cislocative | |||
| {{color|red|Indirect Object}} | |||
| {{color|blue|Ergative}} | |||
| Causative | |||
| Negation | |||
| Tense | |||
| Mood | |||
| Negation | |||
| Epistemic | |||
| Conjunctive | |||
|} | |||
====Personal Agreement==== | |||
Laqi has two basic sets of markers to indicate personal agreement: Absolutive and Ergative-Oblique. Whether these endings mark the subject or the object depends on the greater context of the verb phrase. Person markers indicate three persons (1st, 2nd, 3rd), two numbers (singular, plural) as well as a reflexive. | |||
{| class="wikitable" | {| class="wikitable" | ||
! | ! | ||
! | ! style="font-variant: small-caps;" | {{color|green|{{altText|Abs|Absolutive}}}} | ||
| rowspan=7 | | |||
! style="font-variant: small-caps;" | {{altText|{{color|blue|Erg}}-{{color|red|Obj}}|Ergative-Oblique}} | |||
|- | |- | ||
! 1s | ! 1s | ||
| sy- | | sy- ~ | ||
| s- ~ | |||
|- | |- | ||
! 2s | ! 2s | ||
| uy- | | uy- ~ | ||
| u- ~ | |||
|- | |- | ||
! 3s | ! 3s | ||
| - | | 0- ~ | ||
| i- ~ | |||
|- | |- | ||
! 1p | ! 1p | ||
| ty- | | ty- ~ | ||
| t- ~ | |||
|- | |- | ||
! | ! 2p | ||
| ś°y- | | ś°y- ~ | ||
| ś°- ~ | |||
|- | |- | ||
! 3p | ! 3p | ||
| - | | ~ -x | ||
| a- ~ | |||
|} | |} | ||
: ''''' | Ergative-Oblique affixes (and all consonant-ending prefixes) may have an epenthetic vowel, ''e'', added to cushion them from forming consonant clusters that violate phonotactic constraints. | ||
:e.g. | |||
:: ''qy'''s'''fad'' "(s)he is like me" versus ''qy'''se'''pły'' "(s)he looks at me" | |||
===== | =====Reflexive===== | ||
When two or more arguments represent the same person(s), reflexive prefixes are used instead, under the following circumstances: | |||
{| | * Indirect Object matches Absolutive: {{color|red|Indirect Object = '''''ze'''-''}} | ||
:: ''{{color|green|uy}}'''{{color|red|ze}}'''{{color|blue|s}}ġepły'' "I am making you look at yourself". | |||
* Indirect Object matches Ergative: {{color|red|Indirect Object = '''''zy'''-''}} | |||
:: ''{{color|green|uy}}'''{{color|red|zy}}'''{{color|blue|s}}ġepły'' "I am making you look at myself". | |||
* Ergative matches Absolutive: {{color|green|Absolutive = '''''zy'''-''}} | |||
:: '''''{{color|green|zy}}'''{{color|red|se}}{{color|blue|u}}ġepły'' "You are making yourself look at me". | |||
|- | * All three match: {{color|green|Absolutive = '''''zy'''-''}}, {{color|red|Indirect Object = '''''ze'''-''}} | ||
:: '''''{{color|green|zy}}{{color|red|ze}}'''{{color|blue|u}}ġepły'' "You are making yourself look at yourself". | |||
|- | |||
====Negation==== | |||
There are two methods available for negating a verb. One is with a prefix located immediately before the verb root, '''''my'''-'': | |||
: ''Qyse'''my'''płyġe''. "(S)he did '''not''' look at me." | |||
The second is with a suffix, located after tense and mood marking, ''-'''(e)p''''': | |||
: ''Qysepłyġe'''p'''''. "(S)he did '''not''' look at me." | |||
====Valency Patterns==== | |||
===== | =====Stative===== | ||
Laqi has a set of stative verbs, which indicate an unchanging condition for the subject. These stative verbs are formed out of augmented [[#Positional Prefixes|positional prefix]]. | |||
The subject is in the ''Absolutive Case'' and marked on the verb with ''Absolutive'' affixes, since the subject is taking no action and receives the verb's description. | |||
: '''''Cy'''šys.'' "I am sitting." | |||
A noun can also be reinterpreted as a stative verb in order to form basic predicative statements. | |||
: ''Dzeł'y'''h'''!'' "They are warriors!" | |||
=====Monovalent===== | |||
Monovalent verbs take a single argument, the subject who is performing an action. | |||
The subject is in the ''Absolutive Case'', since the subject's action affects itself. As a quirk in the language, the verb marks agreement in the Absolutive slot but with what appears to be a variant of the Ergative affixes. | |||
: ''Se '''se'''śhe.'' "I eat." | |||
3rd is uniquely marked with a ''ma-'' prefix (if the verb has no other prefixes), and the normal Absolutive ''-h'' suffix for the 3rd Plural | |||
: ''Tyiuynamć'e '''ma'''śhe'''h'''!'' "'''They''' eat in our home!" | |||
==== | ====Infinitive/Gerund==== | ||
==== | ====Imperative==== | ||
==== | ====Tense==== | ||
===== | {| class=wikitable | ||
|- | |||
! Time | |||
! Suffix | |||
! Example | |||
|- | |||
| Distant Past | |||
| -ġaġe | |||
| style="text-align:right" | ''g°yšy'e sthy'''ġaġe'''''<br />s-thy'''-ġaġe'''<br />"I had been writing a letter" | |||
|- | |||
! Simple Past | |||
| -ġe | |||
| style="text-align:right" | ''g°yšy'e sthy'''ġe'''''<br />s-thy'''-ġe'''<br />"I wrote a letter" | |||
|- | |||
| Near Past | |||
| -štyġe | |||
| style="text-align:right" | ''g°yšy'e sthy'''štyġe'''''<br />s-thy'''-štyġe'''<br />"I just wrote a letter" | |||
|- | |||
! Present | |||
| - | |||
| style="text-align:right" | ''g°yšy'e sthy''<br />s-thy'''-'''<br />"I am writing a letter" | |||
|- | |||
! Future | |||
| -št | |||
| style="text-align:right" | ''g°yšy'e sthy'''št'''''<br />s-thy'''-št'''<br />"I will write a letter" | |||
|} | |||
===Nouns=== | ===Nouns=== | ||
''Main Article: [[{{PAGENAME}}/Nouns|Nouns]]'' | |||
{| class="wikitable" style="white-space: nowrap; text-align:center" | {| class="wikitable" style="white-space: nowrap; text-align:center" | ||
! | ! | ||
! colspan=2 | | ! colspan=2 | Singular | ||
! colspan=2 | | ! colspan=2 | Plural | ||
|- | |- | ||
! style="font-variant: small-caps;" | {{altText|Abs|Absolutive}} | ! style="font-variant: small-caps;" | | ||
{{altText|Abs|Absolutive}} | |||
| - | | - | ||
| ''ŝ°yze'' | | ''ŝ°yze'' | ||
| -he | |||
| ''ŝ°yze'''he''''' | |||
|- | |||
! style="font-variant: small-caps;" | | |||
{{altText|Abs|Absolutive}} | |||
| -r | | -r | ||
| ''ŝ°yze'''r''''' | | ''ŝ°yze'''r''''' | ||
| | | -her | ||
| ''ŝ°yze'''her''''' | |||
|- | |- | ||
! style="font-variant: small-caps;" | {{altText|Erg-Obj|Ergative-Oblique}} | ! style="font-variant: small-caps;" | {{altText|Erg-Obj|Ergative-Oblique}} | ||
| -m | | -m | ||
| ''ŝ°yze'''m''''' | | ''ŝ°yze'''m''''' | ||
| | | -hem | ||
| ''ŝ°yze'''hem''''' | |||
|- | |- | ||
! style="font-variant: small-caps;" | {{altText|Inst-Dir|Instrumental-Directional}} | ! style="font-variant: small-caps;" | {{altText|Inst-Dir|Instrumental-Directional}} | ||
| -ć'e | | -(m)ć'e | ||
| ''ŝ°yze'''ć'e''''' | | ''ŝ°yze'''(m)ć'e''''' | ||
| - | | -he(m)ć'e | ||
| ''ŝ°yze''' | | ''ŝ°yze'''he(m)ć'e''''' | ||
|- | |- | ||
! style="font-variant: small-caps;" | {{altText|Adv|Adverbial}} | ! style="font-variant: small-caps;" | {{altText|Adv|Adverbial}} | ||
| | | -u | ||
| ''ŝ°yze'''u''''' | |||
| | | -heu | ||
| ''ŝ°yze'''heu''''' | |||
|- | |- | ||
! style="font-variant: small-caps;" | {{altText|Adj|Adjectival}} | ! style="font-variant: small-caps;" | {{altText|Adj|Adjectival}} | ||
| _ | |||
| ''ŝ°yz'''_''''' | |||
|} | |} | ||
===Pronouns=== | ===Pronouns=== | ||
Line 905: | Line 509: | ||
====Demonstrative Pronouns==== | ====Demonstrative Pronouns==== | ||
====Predicate Pronouns==== | ====Predicate Pronouns==== | ||
==Lexicon== | ==Lexicon== | ||
''Main Article: [[{{PAGENAME}}/Lexicon|Lexicon]]'' | |||
[[Category:Republic of Inner Benacia]] | [[Category:Republic of Inner Benacia]] | ||
[[Category:Languages]] | |||
[[Category:Laqs]] |
Latest revision as of 17:52, 25 February 2021
The Red Laqi language (RL. Plyžlaqebze) is the variety of Laqi speech most closely associated with the Red Laqs. Red Laqs originate from the Laqi Homeland in the highlands of Brookshire, but split off to migrate west as Ashkenatza fell to ruin.
Phonology
Main Article: Phonology
Character | Phoneme | Examples | |
---|---|---|---|
A a | /aː/ | aban "hole" | |
B b | /b/ | be "a lot (of)" | |
C | C c | /t͡s/ | cage "rib", cy "body hair" |
C° c° | /t͡sʷ/ | c°y "ox" | |
C' c' | /t͡s'/ | c'yfy "person" | |
Ć ć | /t͡ʃ/ | ćefy "cheerful, pleased" | |
Ć' ć' | /t͡ʃ'/ | ć'ymafe "winter", ćase "late", ćyg°e "land" | |
Ĉ ĉ | /t͡ʂ/ | ĉy'e "cold" | |
Ĉ' ĉ' | /t͡ʂ'/ | ĉyfe "debt" | |
D | D d | /d/ | dedźe "bitter" |
Dz dz | /d͡z/ | dzeue "bag", dze "combat, war" | |
Dz° dz° | /d͡zʷ/ | ḥandz°e "rick, 1.208 m3" | |
Dź dź | /d͡ʒ/ | dźane "dress, robe, shirt", łamydź "bridge" | |
E e | /a/ | 'eneẑ, neneẑ "grandmother" | |
F f | /f/ | fyžy "white" | |
G | G g | /ɣ/ | gyć'yġ "laundry", ge "gonad" |
G° g° | /gʷ/ | g°y "heart" | |
Ġ ġ | /ʁ/ | ġathe "spring", -ġe "-ity, -ness" | |
Ġ° ġ° | /ʁʷ/ | ġ°yneġ°y "neighbour" | |
H | H h | /x/ | -he "-s (plural marker)" |
Ḥ ḥ | /ħ/ | ḥe "dog" | |
I i | /j/ | iai "theirs", iat'e "dirt" | |
K | K° k° | /kʷ/ | k°y "cart" |
K°' k°' | /kʷ'/ | k°'akle "strong", -k°'e "-er" | |
L | L l | /ɮ/ | ly "meat" |
Ł ł | /ɬ/ | łaše "weak" | |
Ł' ł' | /ɬ'/ | ł'y "man" | |
M m | /m/ | maze "moon", mepy "sheep" | |
N n | /n/ | ne "eye", ny "mother" | |
P | P p | /p/ | plyžy "red" paie "for, in order to" |
P' p' | /p'/ | p'e "bed" | |
P°' | /pʷ'/ | p°'yr "apprentice" | |
Q | Q q | /q/ | qek°'eḥyn "to stroll, roam" maq "voice" |
Q° q° | /qʷ/ | q°yŝe "mountain", q°e "-son (patronymic)" | |
R r | /r/ | rezeġen "to become content" | |
S | S s | /s/ | se "I, me", seśh°e "sabre" |
Ś ś | /ʃ/ | śy "horse, brother" | |
Ś' ś' | /ʃ'/ | ś'yn "to do" | |
Ś° ś° | /ʃʷ/ | ś°y- "you all (imperative plural marker)" | |
Ś°' ś°' | /ʃ'ʷ/ | ś°'yc'e "black" | |
Š š | /ɕ/ | šy "three" | |
Ŝ ŝ | /ʂ/ | ŝe "hundred", ŝabe "soft, meek" | |
T | T t | /t/ | te "we" |
T' t' | /t'/ | nyt'e "yes" | |
T°' t°' | /tʷ'/ | t°'yrys "old" | |
U u | /w/ | uyben "to tamp, make smooth" | |
X | X x | /χ/ | xyien "to move" |
X° x° | /χʷ/ | -x°y "male ___" | |
Y y | /ə/ | zy "one" | |
Z | Z z | /z/ | -bze "female ___, -speech" |
Ź ź | /ʒ/ | bźyḥe "autumn" | |
Ź° ź° | /ʒʷ/ | ź°aġ°e "star" | |
Ž ž | /ʑ/ | žaua "shadow" | |
Ẑ ẑ | /ʐ/ | ẑy "old", ẑaẑe "slow" | |
' | ' | /ʔ/ | 'e "hand" |
'° | /ʔʷ/ | '°yćen "to meet" |
Grammar
Laqi has a Subject-Object-Verb word order. Its morphosyntactic alignment is Ergative-Absolutive, meaning that the Subject of an intransitive verb is marked with an Absolutive case while the Subject of a transitive verb is marked with an Ergative case.
Verbs
Main Article: Verbs
Laqi verbs are the most highly-inflected part of speech in the language, receiving both prefixes and suffixes to describe things like subject/object agreement, the direction of action, tense and mood, intentionality, and even the English equivalent to conjunctions and adverbs.
These affixes bind to the verb according to a defined sequence according to their type:
Prefix Complex | + | VERB STEM | + | Suffix Complex | |||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Absolutive | Directional | Applicatives | Cislocative | Indirect Object | Ergative | Causative | Negation | Tense | Mood | Negation | Epistemic | Conjunctive |
Personal Agreement
Laqi has two basic sets of markers to indicate personal agreement: Absolutive and Ergative-Oblique. Whether these endings mark the subject or the object depends on the greater context of the verb phrase. Person markers indicate three persons (1st, 2nd, 3rd), two numbers (singular, plural) as well as a reflexive.
Abs | Erg-Obj | ||
---|---|---|---|
1s | sy- ~ | s- ~ | |
2s | uy- ~ | u- ~ | |
3s | 0- ~ | i- ~ | |
1p | ty- ~ | t- ~ | |
2p | ś°y- ~ | ś°- ~ | |
3p | ~ -x | a- ~ |
Ergative-Oblique affixes (and all consonant-ending prefixes) may have an epenthetic vowel, e, added to cushion them from forming consonant clusters that violate phonotactic constraints.
- e.g.
- qysfad "(s)he is like me" versus qysepły "(s)he looks at me"
Reflexive
When two or more arguments represent the same person(s), reflexive prefixes are used instead, under the following circumstances:
- Indirect Object matches Absolutive: Indirect Object = ze-
- uyzesġepły "I am making you look at yourself".
- Indirect Object matches Ergative: Indirect Object = zy-
- uyzysġepły "I am making you look at myself".
- Ergative matches Absolutive: Absolutive = zy-
- zyseuġepły "You are making yourself look at me".
- All three match: Absolutive = zy-, Indirect Object = ze-
- zyzeuġepły "You are making yourself look at yourself".
Negation
There are two methods available for negating a verb. One is with a prefix located immediately before the verb root, my-:
- Qysemypłyġe. "(S)he did not look at me."
The second is with a suffix, located after tense and mood marking, -(e)p:
- Qysepłyġep. "(S)he did not look at me."
Valency Patterns
Stative
Laqi has a set of stative verbs, which indicate an unchanging condition for the subject. These stative verbs are formed out of augmented positional prefix.
The subject is in the Absolutive Case and marked on the verb with Absolutive affixes, since the subject is taking no action and receives the verb's description.
- Cyšys. "I am sitting."
A noun can also be reinterpreted as a stative verb in order to form basic predicative statements.
- Dzeł'yh! "They are warriors!"
Monovalent
Monovalent verbs take a single argument, the subject who is performing an action.
The subject is in the Absolutive Case, since the subject's action affects itself. As a quirk in the language, the verb marks agreement in the Absolutive slot but with what appears to be a variant of the Ergative affixes.
- Se seśhe. "I eat."
3rd is uniquely marked with a ma- prefix (if the verb has no other prefixes), and the normal Absolutive -h suffix for the 3rd Plural
- Tyiuynamć'e maśheh! "They eat in our home!"
Infinitive/Gerund
Imperative
Tense
Time | Suffix | Example |
---|---|---|
Distant Past | -ġaġe | g°yšy'e sthyġaġe s-thy-ġaġe "I had been writing a letter" |
Simple Past | -ġe | g°yšy'e sthyġe s-thy-ġe "I wrote a letter" |
Near Past | -štyġe | g°yšy'e sthyštyġe s-thy-štyġe "I just wrote a letter" |
Present | - | g°yšy'e sthy s-thy- "I am writing a letter" |
Future | -št | g°yšy'e sthyšt s-thy-št "I will write a letter" |
Nouns
Main Article: Nouns
Singular | Plural | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Abs |
- | ŝ°yze | -he | ŝ°yzehe |
Abs |
-r | ŝ°yzer | -her | ŝ°yzeher |
Erg-Obj | -m | ŝ°yzem | -hem | ŝ°yzehem |
Inst-Dir | -(m)ć'e | ŝ°yze(m)ć'e | -he(m)ć'e | ŝ°yzehe(m)ć'e |
Adv | -u | ŝ°yzeu | -heu | ŝ°yzeheu |
Adj | _ | ŝ°yz_ |
Pronouns
Personal Pronouns
Personal pronouns can be optional, due subject and object markings on finite verbs. On the other hand, their inclusion in sentences add redundancy and can be used for emphasis. The category of "personal" covers only First and Second Person as well as a Reflexive.
First | Second | Reflexive | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Singular | Abs | se | ue | iež |
Erg-Obj | se | ue | iež | |
Inst-Dir | serć'e | uerć'e | iežć'e | |
Adv | sereu | uereu | iežeu | |
Plural | Abs | te | ś°e | iežher |
Erg-Obj | te | ś°e | iežhem | |
Inst-Dir | terć'e | ś°erć'e | iežhamć'e | |
Adv | tereu | ś°ereu | iežhereu |
Demonstrative Pronouns
Predicate Pronouns
Lexicon
Main Article: Lexicon