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| familycolor = Thuado-Thrismaran
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| fam2 = Chenic
| fam3 = Aldonian
| fam3 = Aldonian
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Revision as of 20:26, 22 February 2021

Qazhshavan
Aldonian

Адаьу гезэ
Adaju gezë
/aˈdaju ˈɣɛ.z/ Speaker Icon.svg
Native toQazhshava
RegionSlavic Belt in Thuadia
EthnicityAldonian Qazhshavans
Native speakers
Total:85 million
L1:-
L2:- (2018)
Thuado-Thrismaran
  • Chenic
    • Aldonian
      • Qazhshavan
Dialects
  • Meadow
  • Hill
  • Rishic
  • Zalic
  • Laurentine
  • Kental
Modified Latin script
Modified Govoric alphabet
Official status
Official language in
 Qazhshava
 Sekidean Union
Recognised minority
language in
Regulated byCommission of the Qazhshavan Language
Language codes
ISO 639-1qs
ISO 639-2qsz
ISO 639-3
Qash Lang 2.png
Distribution of the language
  >90% Native Speakers
  >30% native speakers
This article contains IPA phonetic symbols. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters. For a guide to IPA symbols, see Help:IPA.

The Aldonian language, commonly reffered to as "Qazhshavan", is a language in southern Thuadia, it has similar grammatical features with the slavic languages neer the area spoken, but is its own branch of the Thuado-Thrismaran languages, and is the main official language of Qazhshava along side Srednogorian.

Introduction

This article focuses on the Meadow dialect of the language, as it is recognized to be the standerdized form of the language.

Writing system

The language uses a Modified Latin script, and a Modified Govoric. Both scripts are used, on the internet the Latin version does domminate due to its better axcesabilty, but every government official document has to be written in both. In the pre-1921 govoric alphabet threre were the letters ⟨й⟩, ⟨ю⟩, ⟨я⟩ and ⟨ъ⟩, but the alphabet was modernized in 1921 replacing ⟨й⟩ with ⟨ь⟩ which effectivly made ⟨ю⟩ and ⟨я⟩ obselite, and ⟨ъ⟩ with ⟨э⟩. There exists an old historic writing system that is currently used only in historic reconstructions and is tought at schools as part of history.
.
Govoric Alphabet:

Аа
/а~ɑ/
Бб
/b/
Вв
/v/
Гг
/g~ɣ/
Дд
/d~ð/
ДӀ дӏ
/d͡ʒ/
Ее
/ɛ~e/
Ээ
/ɤ̞~ɜ/
Жж
/ʒ/
Зз
/z/
Ии
/i~ɪ/
Кк
/k/
Лл
/ɫ~l/
Мм
/m/
Нн
/n/
Оо
/ɔ/
Пп
/p/
Рр
/ɾ~r/
РӀ рӀ
/r̥͡θ/
Сс
/s/
Тт
/t~θ/
Уу
/u/
Фф
/f/
Хх
/x/
Цц
/t͡s/
Чч
/t͡ʃ/
Шш
/ʃ/
ШӀ.шӀ
/ɕ/
ЧӀ чӀ
/t͡ɕ/
Ыы
/ɨ~i/
Ьь
/j/
Ӏ
-


Latin Alphabet:

Aa
/a~ɑ/
Bb
/b/
Vv
/v/
Gg
/g~ɣ/
Dd
/d~ð/
Dh dh
/d͡ʒ/
Ee
/ɛ~e/
Ëë
/ɤ̞~ɜ/
Žž
/ʒ/
Zz
/z/
Ii
/i~ɪ/
Kk
/k/
Ll
/ɫ~l/
Mm
/m/
Nn
/n/
Oo
/ɔ/
Pp
/p/
Rr
/ɾ~r/
Rh rh
/r̥͡θ/
Ss
/s/
Tt
/t~θ/
Uu
/u/
Ff
/f/
Hh
/x/
Cc
/t͡s/
Čč
/t͡ʃ/
Šš
/ʃ/
Šh šh
/ɕ/
Čh čh
/t͡ɕ/
Yy
/ɨ~i/
Jj
/j/
Hh*
-

Orthography

All words that end in a vowel sound must end in the letter ⟨э⟩/⟨ë⟩, which stay silent, the only time they are pronounced at the end is when they follow ⟨ь⟩/⟨j⟩ or a consonant cluster, though it can be pronounced without changing the meaning.
No consonant cluster is to exceed 2 consonants, foreign names with such clusters are to be devided.

Phonology

Labial Dental Alveolar Post-
alveolar
Palatal Velar
Nasal m n (ɲ)
Plosive voiceless p t~θ k
voiced b d~ð ɡ~ɣ
Affricate voiceless t͡s t͡ʃ t͡ɕ
voiced d͡ʒ
Fricative voiceless f s ʃ ɕ
voiced v z ʒ
Approximant ɫ~l j
Tap & Trill r̥͡θ ɾ~r
Front Central Back
Close i ɨ u
Close-Mid (e~ɪ)
Mid (ə)* ɤ̞
Open-Mid ɛ (ɜ) ɔ
Neer Open (ɐ)*
Open a~ɑ

Nouns

Grammatical Gender

Qazhshavan has 2 grammatical genders, they are identified by the ending sound of the base word of a word.

  • Masculine - all masculine nouns end in a ⟨n⟩ or ⟨j⟩, ⟨ë⟩, ⟨o⟩, ⟨u⟩.
  • Feminine - all feminine nouns end in ⟨a⟩, ⟨e⟩, ⟨i⟩, ⟨y⟩

Grammatical Cases

Qazhshavan has 5 grammatical cases.

The Table Below also shows how the adjective suffix works with the examples

Common Translation Nom. Acc. Gen. Loc. Voc. Adj.
Masculine - n & j
Man Sin. Nerën Nerënun Nerëno Nerënme Nerëne! Nerëny
Plr. Nerënaj Nerënej Nerënoj Nerënmej Nerënaj! Nerënjy
Sin.Def. Nerënte Nerëntun Nerënto Nerëntme Ø Nerënty
Plr.Def. Nerëntij Nerëntej Nerëntoj Nerëntmej Ø Nerëntjy
Masculine - ë & o & u
Dog Sin. Txeno Čhenon Čhenono Čhenme Čheno! Čheny
Plr. Čhenaj Čhebej Čhenoj Čhenmej Čhenaj! Čhenjy
Sin.Def. Čhenote Čhenotën Čhenotno Čhentme Ø Čheny
Plr.Def. Čhentij Čhebtej Čhenotoj Čhentmej Ø Čhentjy
Feminine - a & e
Woman Sin. Gona Gonan Gonano Goname Gono! Gonaja
Plr. Gony Gonin Gonono Gonmy Gony! Gonajy
Sin.Def. Gonata Gonatan Gonatno Gonatme Ø 'Gonatja
Plr.Def. Gonty Gontin Gontono Gontmy Ø Gonatjy
Feminine - i & y
Mountain Sin. Šhany Šhanyn Šhanyno Šhanyme Šhano! Šhanyja
Plr. Šhane Šhanej Šhaneno Šhanmy Šhane! Šhanojy
Sin.Def. Šhanty Šhanytyn Šhanytno Šhanytme Ø Xanytja
Plr.Def. Šhante Šhantei Šhanteno Šhantmy Ø Šhantojy

Adjectives

Adjectives are also gendered, and come in the 5 cases, but they are more consistent compared to nouns.

Common Translation Nom. Acc. Gen. Loc. Voc.
Masculine - all
Strong Sin. Sadhan Sadhanan Sadhanon Sadhame Sađane
Plr. Sadhanaj Sadhanej Sadhanoj Sadhanmej Sadhanaj
Sin.Def. Sadhante Sadhantan Sadhanton Sadhantme Ø
Plr.Def. Sadhantij Sadhantej Sadhantoj Sadhantmej Ø
Feminine - all
Beatufull Sin. Vële Vëlen Vëleno Vëleme Vëlo
Plr. Vëlje Vëljej Vëljeno Vëljemy Vëlje
Sin.Def. Vëlete Vëleten Vëletno Vëletme Ø
Plr.Def. Vëltje Vëltjej Vëltjeno Vëltjemy Ø

Qazhshavan uses Comparison forms of Adjectives:

  • Positive - Bassic form of the word- happy - šasinSpeaker Icon.svg
  • Negative - Negation of the word - unhappy - nišasinSpeaker Icon.svg
  • Comparitive - Form for comparison relative to something - happier - jan-šasinSpeaker Icon.svg
  • Superlative - Form showing absolute relative to a group - happiest - žen-šasinSpeaker Icon.svg
  • Augmentative - Form showing absolute position without a relative - ultimately happy - žen-žen-šasinSpeaker Icon.svg

Verbs

Tenses

The Lnaguage is 'Pro drop', meaning that using pronouns is optional, usually when used, they add emphasis, for example: " jemë denmë " - " i am eating ", " Dy denexë " - " you are eating ".

Mood Person Number Past Present Future Future
in the
past
Simple Perfect Simple Perfect Simple Perfect Simple Perfect
Indicative 1 Singular <>(ja)hë <>hre an <>(ja)më <>(ja)hë je <>(ja)më je an <>merë jehë jo <>(ja)më jehë jo an <>merë
Plural <>(ja)hme <>hmerë an <>(ja)mëme <>(ja)hme je <>(ja)mëme je an <>mëmerë jerhme jo <>(ja)mëme jerhme jo an <>mëmerë
2 Singular <>(e)žë/a jedë <>(e)žë/a jedë <>(e)šhë <>(e)žë/a jedë je <>(e)šhë je <>(e)žë/a jehe jo an <>(e)šhë jehe jo an <>(e)šhrë
Plural <>ža dej <>žarë dej <>eje <>ža dej je <>eje je <>ejerë jerhe jo an <>eje jerhe jo an <>ejerë
3 Singular <>(e)šë <>(e)še an <>jë <>eš je <>jë je an <>jerë jehe jo <>jë jehe jo an <>jerë
Plural <>(e)ša <>(e)šarë <>jëdë <>ša je <>jëdë je an <>jëderë jerhë jo <>jëdë jerhë jo an <>jëderë
Imperative All Singular Ø <>ši <>ži Ø
Plural <>šati <>žati

Note: Word Order Can Switch around depending on context.

Pronouns

Translation to Common Person and number Nom. Acc. Gen. Loc. Voc.
I Me First Singular Jemë Me Me Men Ø
You
(Singular)
Second Vi Vy Vy Vyn Vi!
He Him Third Voj Go Ego Egon Ø
She Her Vaj Ga Ega Egan Ø
It Vo Go Ego Egon Ø
We
Us First Plural Nen Men Ny Nasë Ø
You
(Plural/formal)
Second Vau Vaun Vaj Vajn Vau!
They Them Third Singular
& Plural
Aža Ažan Ažej Ažejn Ø

Numbers

Qazhshavan is a Decimal language, meaning it has a base 10 number system.

In Qazhshavan the way to construct numbers higher than 10 is generally simple, 11 being 1-on-10, 12 being 2-on-10, and so on, for numbers such as 20, 30 and 40, you drop the '-on-', 20 - 2-10, 30 - 3-10, and so on
Numbers of 100 are literally: 101- 100 & 1 ; 110- 100 & 10 ; 111- 100 & 1-on-10 ; 120- 100 & 2-10 ; 121- 100 2-10 & 1

Number Number term
(Qazhshavan)
IPA Number Number term
(Qazhshavan)
IPA
0 Nulo
Нуло
/ˈnu.ɫɔ/ Speaker Icon.svg 11 Ennëndjetë
Еннэндьетэ
/ˈɛn.ɤ̞n.djɛt/ Speaker Icon.svg
1 En
Ен
/ˈɛn/ Speaker Icon.svg 12 Dinëndjetë
Динэндьетэ
/ˈdi.nɤ̞n.djɛtᵊ/ Speaker Icon.svg
2 Di
Ди
/ˈdi/ Speaker Icon.svg 13 Terenëndjetë
Теренэндьетэ
/ˈtɛ.ɾɛ.nɤ̞n.djɛtᵊ/ Speaker Icon.svg
3 Tere
Тере
/ˈtɛ.ɾɛ/ Speaker Icon.svg 14 Ketënëndjetë
Кетэнэндьетэ
/ˈkɛ.tɤ̞.nɤ̞n.djɛtᵊ/ Speaker Icon.svg
4 Ketë
Кетэ
/ˈkɛtᵊ/ Speaker Icon.svg 15 Pešhënëndjetë
ПешӀэнэндьетэ
/ˈpɛ.ɕɤ̞.nɤ̞n.djɛtᵊ/ Speaker Icon.svg
5 Pešhë
ПешӀэ
/ˈpɛ.ɕᵊ/ Speaker Icon.svg 16 Šešënëndjetë
Шешэнэндьетэ
/ˈʃɛ.ʃɤ̞.nɤ̞n.djɛtᵊ/ Speaker Icon.svg
6 Šešë
Шешэ
/ʃɛʃᵊ/ Speaker Icon.svg 17 Šemënëndjetë
Шемэнэндьетэ
/ˈʃɛ.mɤ̞.nɤ̞n.djɛtᵊ/ Speaker Icon.svg
7 Šemë
Шемэ
/ˈʃɛmᵊ/ Speaker Icon.svg 18 Ašemënëndjetë
Ашемэнэндьетэ
/aˈʃɛ.mɤ̞.nɤ̞n.djɛtᵊ/ Speaker Icon.svg
8 Ašemë
Ашемэ
/aˈʃ.ɛmᵊ/ Speaker Icon.svg 19 Nentënëndjetë
Нентэнэндйетэ
/ˈnɛn.tɤ̞.nɤ̞n.djɛtᵊ/ Speaker Icon.svg
9 Nentë
Нентэ
/ˈnɛntᵊ/ Speaker Icon.svg 100 (en)Čhyn
(ен)ЧӀн
/ˈɛn.t͡ɕɨn/Speaker Icon.svg
/t͡ɕɨn/ Speaker Icon.svg
10 Djetë
Дьетэ
/ˈdjɛtᵊ/ Speaker Icon.svg 1000 (en)Mjada
(ен)Мьада
/ˈɛn.mja.da/Speaker Icon.svg
/ˈmja.da/ Speaker Icon.svg

Questions

Yes & No

Qazhshavan forms Yes and No questions with a quesiton suffix, which follows slight vowel harmony

Translation in Common Sentence in Qazhshavan Suffix
words with last vowels: ë, o, u
Did you shoot him? Berëžko Go -ko
/bɛˈɾɤ̞ʒˌkɔ ˈɣɔ/ Speaker Icon.svg
words with last vowels: a, e,
Do you like her? Čhanašhka Ga -ka
/ɕa.ˈnaɕ.ka ˈɣa/ Speaker Icon.svg
words with last vowels: i , y
Do you love me? Šenišhki Me -ki
/ʃɛˈniɕ.ki ˈmɛ/ Speaker Icon.svg

Wh-

Dialects

The Qazhshavan language consists of 6 dialect groups, which split into their own sub-dialects.

Dialects list
Qash Dialects map.png
 -Zalic Dialect
Located mainly outside the country, its one of the least inteligable to the Standart form of the language, seperatists in the 1960s claimed it as a seperate languages, some still do today.
/ˈɒ.ză.tuj ɣaz/ Speaker Icon.svg
 -Rishic Dialect
Generally understood by both meadow and Zalic speakers, it is seen as an intermediate.
/ˈɑ.ðă.ju gɛz/ Speaker Icon.svg
 -Meadow Dialect
This is the most spoken dialect, and the standerdized form of the language.
/aˈdaju ˈɣɛ.z/ Speaker Icon.svg
 -Hill Dialect
Second most spoken dialect, in the 1910 it competed with the Meadow dialect for title of Standart dialect, but lost.
/ˈa.da.joⁿ ˈɣɛz/ Speaker Icon.svg
 -Laurentine Dialect
Also called "the Islander Dialect", its spoken in the few islands owned by Qazhshava and also in oversees diaspora left over from ex-colonies.
/aˈtaju kes/ Speaker Icon.svg
 -Kental Dialect
A strongly Ereskan and Kental influenced dialect spoken south of Ereska in Kentalis, and holds a recognized status in the said nation.
/aˈdʒa.jʉ gɨs/ Speaker Icon.svg