Niniat: Difference between revisions
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Latest revision as of 21:19, 11 December 2019
Niniat | |
---|---|
ᓂᓯᐊᑦ ᐄᓕᖅ Nisiat Iiliq | |
Native to | Hinsey |
Region | Aldinea |
Native speakers | approx. 614 000 |
Language Isolate
| |
Official status | |
Official language in | Hinsey |
Regulated by | Irusiiras Institute of Hinseyish Studies |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | ni |
Regions where Niniat is the language of the majority Regions where Niniat is spoken by a considerable minority |
Niniat (ᓂᓯᐊᑦ ᐄᓕᖅ, Nisiat Iiliq) often referred to as Hinseysish is the language spoken in the arctic nation of Hinsey. Linguistically it is unrelated to any other language in Aldinea making it a language isolate relative to any other known language in Midgard. The Niniat are a people indigenous to the northern Sjealandic Archipelago.
Niniat is spoken by the majority of Hinseyish people around 90% of whom consider it their mother tongue. There is also a significant community of Niniat-speakers in Sjealand numbering around 10 000.
Niniat is a greatly monotone language charactirized by its high degree of inlfection and large number of irregular declensions. It is written in the Niniat Syllabry which was invented in the early 1800s by Avuhuariuq a Niniat nationalist politician as an alternative to the various foreign scripts in which Niniat was written at the time.
The Irusiiras Institute of Hinseyish Studies regulates Niniat which is funded by the state. The High Commission of the IIHS is the ultimate authority in the Niniat language and often discourages the use of foreign loanwords by denying them official status. Despite its efforts, many foreign loanwords have entered spoken Niniat. For example, the word for 'phone' in standard Niniat is nilihup, however most Niniat speakers use the Tynic-derrived loanword of itelefuun
History
For most of its existence, Niniat was a purely oral language. Old Niniat on which modern Niniat is greatly based on is preserved in the extensive oral tradition of the Niniat people specifically in the Imlukautiitamiriq, the national epic of Hinsey. The Imlukautiitamiriq roughly meaning Three Great Traditions is a series of stories and records passed down orally among the Niniat people. It is composed of the Irhiq, Atnuk and Asnaq. The Irhiq and Atnuk vary from person to person and place to place, however the most extensive part of the Imlukautiitamiriq, the Asnaq, is the same for all and details the perceived history of the Niniat people. The Asnaq was one of the first texts written down when Niniat first began to be written in the late 12th century.
In the early 1800s, Hinsey adopted the Niniat Syllabry as a domestic alternative to other foreign scripts. It was invented by the famous Hinseyish linguist Avuhuariuq. With the further standardization of Niniat in the early 1800s, Old Niniat words were taken back into use and new ones were invented or constructed to replace foreign vocabulary in Niniat. For example, the Standard Niniat word for 'phone' is nilihup which was constructed from the Niniat word for to speak, auhup. The written Niniat language has not changed much from the early 1800s apart from the addition of new words and minor spelling changes.
Phonology
Vowels
Niniat has a three-vowel system composed of the vowels /i/, /u/, and /a/. Other vowels such as /e/ and /o/ as well as /æ/, /y/ and /ø/ are used in rare instances with specific loanwords in certain dialects. However, in standard Niniat, only the three-vowel system is used, so loanwords such as itelefooni are written as itilifuuni despite some pronouncing it with the original vowels.
Front | Back | ||
---|---|---|---|
Unrounded | Unrounded | Rounded | |
Close | i iː | u uː | |
Open | ɑ ɑː |
Consonants
Labial | Alveolar | Palatal | Velar | Uvular | Glottal | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Stops | p | t | k | q | ||
Fricatives | v | s | g* | h | ||
Nasals | m | n | ||||
Liquids | l | |||||
Semivowel | j | |||||
Trill | r |
- g* is in certain dialects of standard Niniat
Writing System
The Niniat language is most often written in the Niniat Syllabry. It was originally created to write down Old Niniat, yet was adopted as the script of standard Niniat after a few changes to the pronunciation of letters. It is a syllabary where the direction of the letter tells with which vowel the letter is pronounced. A small circle called the Aripmi is added on top of the letter to mark long vowels.
Niniat Syllabry
Vowel Only |
P | T | K | G | M | N | S | L | J | V | R | Q | GN | RN | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
I | ᐃ | ᐱ | ᑎ | ᑭ | ᒋ | ᒥ | ᓂ | ᓯ | ᓕ | ᔨ | ᕕ | ᕆ | ᕿ | ᖏ | ᖠ |
II | ᐄ | ᐰ | ᑏ | ᑮ | ᒌ | ᒦ | ᓃ | ᓰ | ᓖ | ᔩ | ᕖ | ᕇ | ᖀ | ᖐ | ᖡ |
U | ᐅ | ᐳ | ᑐ | ᑯ | ᒍ | ᒧ | ᓄ | ᓱ | ᓗ | ᔪ | ᕗ | ᕈ | ᖁ | ᖑ | ᖢ |
UU | ᐆ | ᐴ | ᑑ | ᑰ | ᒎ | ᒨ | ᓅ | ᓲ | ᓘ | ᔫ | ᕘ | ᕉ | ᖂ | ᖒ | ᖣ |
A | ᐊ | ᐸ | ᑕ | ᑲ | ᒐ | ᒪ | ᓇ | ᓴ | ᓚ | ᔭ | ᕙ | ᕋ | ᖃ | ᖓ | ᖤ |
AA | ᐋ | ᐹ | ᑖ | ᑳ | ᒑ | ᒫ | ᓈ | ᓵ | ᓛ | ᔮ | ᕚ | ᕌ | ᖄ | ᖔ | ᖥ |
Consonant Only |
ᑋ | ᑉ | ᑦ | ᒃ | ᒡ | ᒻ | ᓐ | ᔅ | ᓪ | ᔾ | ᕝ | ᕐ | ᖅ | ᖕ | ᖦ |
H | P | T | K | G | M | N | S | L | J | V | R | Q | GN | RN |
Grammar
Niniat is classified as being a Synthetic langauge that makes great use of agglutination to varying modifiers in verbs, nouns, numerals and adjectives.
Pronouns
Singular | Plural | |
---|---|---|
1st person | ᐊᒥ / Ami | ᐃᒻ / Im |
2nd person | ᐊᓯ / Asi | ᐃᑦ / It |
3rd person | ᓇᑋᐃ/ᐊᑋᐃ / Nahi/Ahi | ᐃᑋ / Ih |
Singular | Plural | |
---|---|---|
1st person | Am/A | Uim |
2nd person | As/Uis | Uut |
3rd person | Is | Uih |
Pronouns are mostly used for emphasis as verbs are modified to show the person doing the action.
Verbs
Per. | No. | Present | Past | Near Future | Far Future | Potential | Potential Past | Imperative |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1st | sg. | ᓄᓗ Nulu |
ᓂᓗ Nilu |
ᓄᓗ ᑐᓪᓗ Nulu Tullu |
ᓂᓗ ᑐᓪᓗ Nilu Tullu |
ᓂᓯᓗ Nisilu |
ᓂᓃᓪ Niniil |
- |
2nd | sg. | ᑐᓗ Tulu |
ᑎᓗ Tilu |
ᑐᓗ ᑐᓪᓗ Tulu Tullu |
ᑎᓗ ᑐᓪᓗ Tilu Tullu |
ᑎᓯᓗ Tisilu |
ᑎᓃᓪ Tiniil |
ᐅᓕ Uli |
3rd | sg. | ᓄ Nu |
ᐃᓗ Ilu |
ᓄ ᑐᓪᓗ Nu Tullu |
ᐃᓗ ᑐᓪᓗ Ilu Tullu |
ᐃᓯᓗ Isilu |
ᐄᓃᓪ Iiniil |
ᓅᖅᓗ Nuuqlu |
1st | pl. | ᐃᒻᒧᓗ Immulu |
ᐃᒻᒥᓗ Immilu |
ᐃᒻᒧᓗ ᑐᓪᓗ Immulu Tullu |
ᐃᒻᒥᓗ ᑐᓪᓗ Immilu Tullu |
ᐃᒻᒥᓯᓗ Immisilu |
ᐃᒻᒥᓃᓪ Imminiil |
ᐃᒻᒫᖅᓗ Immaaqlu |
2nd | pl. | ᐃᑦᑐᓗ Ittulu |
ᐃᑦᑎᓗ Ittilu |
ᐃᑦᑐᓗ ᑐᓪᓗ Ittulu Tullu |
ᐃᑦᑎᓗ ᑐᓪᓗ Ittilu Tullu |
ᑎᓯᓗ Ittisilu |
ᑎᓃᓪ Ittiniil |
ᐋᖅᓗ Aaqlu |
3rd | pl. | ᑕᕗ Tavu |
ᑕᕕᓗ Tavilu |
ᑕᕗ ᑐᓪᓗ Tavu Tullu |
ᑕᕕᓗ ᑐᓪᓗ Tavilu Tullu |
ᑕᕕᓯᓗ Tavisilu |
ᑕᕕᓃᓪ Taviniil |
ᑑᖅᓗ Tuuqlu |
passive | - | ᓈᓪᓗ Naallu |
ᓃᑦᓗ Niitlu |
ᓈᓪᓗ ᐅᑦᓗ Naallu Utlu |
ᓃᑦᓗ ᐅᑦᓗ Niitlu Utlu |
ᓃᓯᐊᑦᓗ Niisiatlu |
ᓃᓇᑦᓗ Niinatlu |
ᓅᑲᑦᓗ Nuukatlu |
The verb Allu behaves like a suffix and is put at the end of a noun/adjective/number.
- ᑐᓄᖠᓲᑋᓄᓗ [Tunurniluuh-nulu] ( I'm worried; lit. Worried-I'm).
- ᑐᓄᖠᓲᑋᐅᑦᑎᓄ [Tunurniluuh-uttit-nu] (The Child is worried/there is a worried child; lit. worried-child-is)