Sacovian language: Difference between revisions

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Standard word order in Sacovian is Subject-Verb-Object. A common exception to this is when the direct object of the verb is a pronoun, in which case the pronoun comes before the verb (unless the verb is imperative, in which case the pronoun is attached to the end of the verb).
Standard word order in Sacovian is Subject-Verb-Object. A common exception to this is when the direct object of the verb is a pronoun, in which case the pronoun comes before the verb (unless the verb is imperative, in which case the pronoun is attached to the end of the verb).


Adjectives always come after the noun they modify, and also are always preceded by 'dê' ('of').
Adjectives always come after the noun they modify, and also are always preceded by 'dê' ('of') (except for adjectives that denote the count of a noun, such as 'all').




[[Category:Caradia]]
[[Category:Caradia]]
[[Category:Languages]]
[[Category:Languages]]

Revision as of 20:21, 24 October 2019

Sacovian
Sacovo
Spoken natively in Caradia Caradia
Language family

Constructed languages

  • Sacovian
Writing system Latin
Source Romance, (Portuguese, French)
Official status
Official language in Caradia Caradia

The Sacovian language is spoken in Caradia, mostly in the Gcealick March and in small parts of Cearîm and Scear counties. The language stems from the more ancient language "Sòlasçi", and was developed by the nomadic Sacovian tribes.

Alphabet

Sacovian IPA English
approximation
A a /ɑ/ car
B b /b/ barrel
C c /k/ in front of a, o, u, /s/ in front of e, i cancer
Ç ç /s/ see
Ĉ ĉ /tʃ/ cheese
Ch ch /ʃ/ sheer
Cz cz /ts/ cats
D d /d/ dog
E e /ɛ/, silent at the end of a word fed
F f /f/ feel
G / Gu g / gu /g/ goose
/gw/ No English approximation
H h /h/ house
I i /i/ read
J j /ʒ/ vision
L l /l/ lemon
Lh lh /ʎ/ million
M m /m/ maple
N n /n/ never
Nh nh /ɲ/ onion
O o /ɔ/ hole
P p /p/ pie
Qu qu /k/ queso
/kw/ quarter
R r /r/ Trilled English R
S s /s/ (silent after vowel clusters at the end of words) silent
T t /t/ (silent after vowel clusters at the end of words) tell
U u /ʌ/, /w/ before vowel put
V v /v/ vehicle
X x Rare, only present after vowel clusters, where it is silent No English approximation
Y y /j/ yes
Z z /z/ zebra

Diacritics and Digraphs

Sacovian makes use of two differnt digraphs: Circumflex ( ^ ) Â Ê Î Ô Û And tilde ( ~ ) Ã Ẽ Ĩ Õ Ũ. Circumflex denotes stress on odd syllables, and also changes the sound of A, E, and U

  • Â = /a/
  • Ê = /e/
  • Û = /ʊ/

The tilde diacritic denotes a nasalisation of the letter.

Sacovian also employs ten different vowel cluster digraphs:

  • Ae (/ɑi/)
  • Ai (/ɛ/)
  • Au (/ɔ/)
  • Eau (/ɔ/)
  • Ei (/e/)
  • Eu (/ə/)
  • Oa (/wɑ/)
  • Oe (/ə/)
  • Oi (/wɑ/)
  • Ou (/ʊ/)

'Nt' is also sometimes used. At the end of a word, 'nt' is silent and nasalises the preceding vowel.

Strong, Neutral, Weak

Though technically classified as 'grammatical gender', Sacovian classifies its nouns as strong, neutral, or weak. This classification affects the conjugation of adjectives, and also how the noun changes based on its count. Nouns are strong if they end in a voiced consonant, neutral if they end in a vowel, and weak if they end in an unvoiced consonant (even if that consonant is silent). Nouns in Sacovian do not inflect for case or mood.

Verb conjugation

Sacovian verbs conjugate based on who is performing the action, as well as the mood of the verb. Sacovian verbs do not have past or future tense; instead using the 'fuê' (past) and 'sêr' (future) indicators.

Sacovian verbs also conjugate according to the verb's infinitive ending, which is either '-a' or '-e'.

-a -e
Number Sing. Plur. Sing. Plur.
First Person -ama -aime
Second Person -ạs -ae -aiç -ae
Third Person -at -ast -et -aist
Imperative -asa -asa -eisê -eisê

Adjectives conjugate to the grammatical gender of the noun they describe:

  • Standard (no noun): -ay
  • Strong: -o
  • Neutral: -i
  • Weak: - (remove -ay)

Ex.:

  • Standard (no noun): Asûray
  • Strong: Asûro
  • Neutral: Asûri
  • Weak: Asûr

Grammar

Standard word order in Sacovian is Subject-Verb-Object. A common exception to this is when the direct object of the verb is a pronoun, in which case the pronoun comes before the verb (unless the verb is imperative, in which case the pronoun is attached to the end of the verb).

Adjectives always come after the noun they modify, and also are always preceded by 'dê' ('of') (except for adjectives that denote the count of a noun, such as 'all').