Red Laqi language: Difference between revisions

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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 grasslands of Brookshire, but split off to migrate west as Ashkenatza fell to ruin.

Phonology

Labial Alveolar Postalveolar Alveolopalatal Retroflex Velar Uvular Pharyngeal Glottal
plain lab. plain lab. plain lab. plain lab. plain lab. plain lab.
Nasal m n
Plosive voiceless p t q ʔ ʔʷ
voiced b d
ejective p' pʷ' t' tʷ' kʷ'
Affricate voiceless t͡s t͡sʷ t͡ʃ t͡ʂ
voiced d͡z d͡zʷ d͡ʒ
ejective t͡s' t͡ʃ' t͡ʂ'
Fricative voiceless f s ɬ ʃ ʃʷ ɕ ʂ x χ χʷ ħ
voiced z ɮ ʒ ʒʷ ʑ ʐ ɣ ʁ ʁʷ
ejective ɬ' ʃ' ʃʷ'
Approximant j w
Trill r
Central
Close-mid ə
Open a aː

Orthography

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° /ʃʷ/ ś°y- "you all (imperative plural marker)", ś°ece "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 ___"
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

Verbs

Person

Stative

Stative verb phrases indicate an unchanging condition. The subject of such a verb is in the Absolutive.

A noun can also be reinterpreted as a stative verb to form basic predicative statements.

Person Affix
1s sy-
2s uy-
3s -
1p ty-
2s ś°y-
3p -yh
Cyšys. "I am sitting."
Dzeł'yyh! "They are warriors!"
Monovalent

Monovalent verbs take a single argument, the subject. The subject of such a verb is in the Absolutive.

Subject
1s se-
2s ue-
3s ma-
1p te-
2p ś°e-
3p ma- ~ -eh
Tyiuynać'e maśheh! "They are eating in our home!"
Bivalent

Bivalent verbs take two arguments, the subject and the object. Red Laqi distinguishes between whether the action affects the subject or the object.

Absolutive Bivalent

Bivalent intransitive verb. The subject is in the Absolutive. The Indirect Object is in the Ergative-Oblique. This indicates that the subject is affected by the action of the verb.

Subject Object
1s 2s 3s 1p 2p 3p ref
1s syqyue- syqei- syqyś°e- syqa- syqyze-
2s uyqyse- uyqei- uyqyte- uyqa- uyqyze-
3s qyse- qyue- qei- qyte- qyś°e- qa- qyze-
1p tyqyue- tyqei- tyqyś°e- tyqa- tyqyze-
2p ś°yqyse- ś°yqei- ś°yqyte- ś°yqa- ś°yqyze-
3p qyse- ~ -eh qyue- ~ -eh qei- ~ -eh qyte- ~ -eh qyś°e- ~ -eh qa- ~ -eh qyze- ~ -eh
Ergative Bivalent

Bivalent transitive verb. The subject is in the Ergative-Oblique. The Direct Object is in the Absolutive. This indicates that the direct object is affected by the action of the verb.

Subject Object
1s 2s 3s 1p 2p 3p ref
1s uese- se- ś°ese- se- ~ -eh zese-
2s seue- ue- teue- ue- ~ -eh zeue-
3s sei- uei- ei- tei- ś°ei- ei- ~ -eh zei-
1p uete- te- ś°ete- te- ~ -eh zete-
2p seś°e- ś°e- teś°e- ś°e- ~ -eh ześ°e-
3p sa- ua- a- ta- ś°a- a- ~ -eh za-
Trivalent

Trivalent verbs take three arguments, the subject, the direct object, and the indirect object. Trivalent verbs are similarly distinguished between whether they are inherently transitive or intransitive. The trivalent person markers, however, are consistent between the two groups.

The trivalent person markers are placed between the bivalent cluster and the verb stem.

Subject
1s -se-
2s -be-
3s re-
1p -te-
2p -ś°e-
3p -ra-

Infinitive/Gerund

Imperative

Tense

Additional Modifiers

The verb can receive additional affixes to build an augmented stem with additional meaning.

Prefixes
Directional Prefixes
Directional q- qepłe
"(S)he looks here"
Towards ł- łepłe
"(S)he looks towards (sth)"
Backwards zać'e- zać'epłe
"(S)he looks backwards"
Bypass ble- blepłe
"(S)he overlooks (sth)"
Through phyry- phyrypłe
"(S)he looks through (sth)"
Beyond ŝḥepy- ŝḥepypłe
"(S)he looks beyond (sth)"
Over ŝḥade- ŝḥadepłe
"(S)he looks over (sth)"
Neck ś'°ehe- ś'°ehepłe
"(S)he looks at the neck of (sth)"
Informative Prefixes
Causative ġe- ġepłe
"(S)he makes (sb) look at (sth)"
Locative š- šepłe
"(S)he looks at (sth)"
Comitative de- depłe
"(S)he looks with (sb)"
Benefactive fe- fepłe
"(S)he looks for/on behalf of (sb)"
Malefactive ś°'e- ś°'epłe
"(S)he looks against (sb)'s interest"
Mood Suffixes
Conjunctive Suffixes
Other Suffixes

Nouns

Number

Nouns distinguish between singular and plural number. Singular nouns do not receive a suffix to the stem. Plural nouns receive -he. This is placed immediately before case endings.

Cases

Indefinite Definite
Abs - ŝ°yze -r ŝ°yzer "a/some woman"
"the woman"
Erg-Obj - ŝ°yze -m ŝ°yzem "a/some woman"
"the woman"
Inst-Dir -ć'e ŝ°yzeć'e -mć'e ŝ°yzemć'e "with a/some woman"
"with the woman"
Adv -u ŝ°yzeu "as a/the woman"
Adj _ ŝ°yz_ "womanly"

Case markers affix to the very end of the noun stem, after all other modifying suffixes have already been attached.

Absolutive

The Absolutive Case marks the subject of an intransitive verb or the direct object of a transitive verb.

Subject of an Intransitive
ć'aler iedźap'em k°'aġe "The boy went to the school."
Direct Object of a Transitive
Pšylym syġ°enćedźeher ieġeqabze. "The slave cleans my trousers."
Ergative-Oblique
Subject of a Transitive
Pšylym syġ°enćedźeher ieġeqabze. "The slave cleans my trousers."
Indirect Object of an Intransitive
Possessive
Locative
Ć'aler iedźap'em k°'aġe "The boy went to the school."
Ć'ale mezym šy'. "A boy is in the woods."
Instrumental-Directional
Instrumental
Ś°'yc'eć'e depqer sele. "I paint the wall (in) black."
Direction Towards/From
Adverbial
Profession or Role
Topic
Resulting State
Adjectival

The Adjectival Case marks when a noun is being used as an adjective to directly modify the following noun.

ġ°yć'y "iron" → ġ°yć' wate "iron hammer"
Formation

The Adjectival Case is notable in that it is marked not with an ending, but with a reduction of the noun stem. For multi-syllabic nouns, the end vowel is clipped:

plyžy "red" (abs)plyž "red" (adj)

For mono-syllabic nouns, the end vowel is retained; for these nouns, the Adjectival has the same form as the indefinite Absolutive or Ergative-Oblique:

ł'y "man" (abs)ł'y "manly" (adj)

This absence of clipping extends to compounds in which a monosyllabic noun comes last:

dzeł'y "fighter" (abs) [< dze "army" + ł'y "man"] → dzeł'y "fighter" (adj)

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

Possessive Pronouns

Possession can be marked as a prefix on the possessed noun. Red Laqi distinguishes according to alienation. An inalienated noun is one which cannot exist without belonging to someone, e.g. a hand is someone's hand, a mother is someone's mother, by default.

Inalienable Possessive

Inalienable possessive prefixes have two forms, for whether or not the ajoined word begins with a vowel or a consonant.

Prefix Meaning
1s s- / sy- "my"
2s w- / wy- "your (s)"
3s - / y- "his, her, its"
1p t- / te- "our"
2p ś°- / ś°e- "your (pl)"
3p - / a- "their"
Alienable Possessive
Prefix Meaning
1s syi- "my"
2s wyi- "your (s)"
3s iyi- "his, her, its"
1p tyi- "our"
2p ś°yi- "your (pl)"
3p iai- "their"

Predicate Pronouns

Lexicon