Voltan language

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Voltan
Voltanisch
Native toVolta
Native speakers
30,000,000
Voltan alphabet
Official status
Official language in
 Volta
Language codes
ISO 639-3
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 Voltan language, also known as Voltan Creole, is a Dolch-based creole language spoken in Volta. It is the most commonly spoken language in Volta, and is also one of the two official languages in the country. The language started developing during the 17th century, after Dolchland initially colonized the region.

History

Phonology

Consonants

Labial (Dental) Alveolar Post-
alveolar
Palatal Velar Glottal
Nasal m n
Plosive Voiceless p t k (ʔ)
Voiced b d ɡ
Affricate Voiceless t͡s t͡ʃ
Voiced (d͡ʒ)
Fricative Voiceless f s ʃ ç h
Voiced v z (ʒ)
Approximant j
Tap/trill r
Approximant l
  • [ŋ] is merged with [n].
  • [p͡f] is replaced with either [p] or [f].
  • [θ] and [ð], only present for loanwords in Dolch, are dropped entirely and replaced with either [t] or [d].
  • [x] pronounced after back-vowels (and allophonic with [ç]) is replaced with [h].
  • /j/, realized in Dolch as either the approximant [j] or fricative [ʝ], is only realized as the approximant [j].
  • The Dolch /r/, realized in some dialects as the alveolar [r], uvular [ʀ], or uvular [ʁ], is only realized as the alveolar [r].
  • The [t͡ɬ] present in Tlaloc languages is not present in Voltan.

Vowels

Front Central Back
unrounded rounded unrounded rounded
short long short long short long short long
Close i u
Close-mid e ø øː (ə) o
Open a
  • [ɪ] is replaced with [i].
  • [ʊ] is replaced with [u].
  • [œ] is replaced with [ø].
  • [y] and [] are merged with [ø] and [øː] respectively.
  • [ɛ] is replaced with [e].
  • [ɛː] is merged with [].
  • [ɔ] is replaced with [o].
  • [ə] only exists as a reduced form of other vowels, such as the /a/ in /volta/ (pronounced [voltə]).

Diphthongs

Ending point
Front Back
Open-mid oi̯
Open ai̯ au̯
  • The standard Dolch diphthong [ɔʏ̯] became [oi̯] in Voltan rather than [oø̯] because many of the original Dolch speakers in Volta spoke a Dolch dialect where the Standard Dolch diphthong [ɔʏ̯] was actualy pronounced [ɔi̯].
  • Much of the Dolch phonetic diphthongs where a speaker vocalizes /r/ to [ɐ̯] are dropped entirely and instead replaced with long vowels.

Grammar

Word order

Voltan word order is rigidly SVO, and lacks the V2 word order present in Dolch.

Definite and Indefinite Articles

Like Dolch, Voltan does have both a definite and indefinite article. However, unlike Dolch these articles are not inflected based upon gender and case. All of the Dolch definite articles have been merged into a single article die (pronounced [diː]), and the indefinite article is the word se (pronounced [se]). Se is derived from the Tlaloc word ce, meaning the number 1, which is sometimes used as an indefinite article in Tlaloc.

Definite Indefinite
die se

However, the indefinite article se is considered optional, and is omitted by some speakers.

Nouns

Verbs

Verb conjugations in Voltan have been vastly simplified. The difference between the Dolch strong and weak verbs are not present in Voltan, with the entire category being simplified into a single class, with the exception of a handful of irregular verbs. Furthermore, much of the Dolch verb prefixes are dropped, being replaced with auxilury verbs.

Tenses

There are only 3 tenses without auxiliary verbs in Voltan: present, future, and preterite. The present tense is identical to the Dolch infinitive, which is not inflected. Voltan does not have an infinitive, with the present tense being used as the dictionary form of the verb instead.

Voltan Tenses
Base verb Present Future Preterite
brinen

("to bring")

brinen

[brinen]

brins

[brins]

brinte

[brintə]

leben

("to live")

leben

[le:ben]

lebs

[le:bs]

lebte

[le:btə]

essen

("to eat")

essen

[esən]

esses

[esəs]

esste

[estə]

arbeiten

("to work")

arbeiten

[aːbai̯tən]

arbeits

[aːbai̯ts]

arbeitet

[aːbai̯tət]

Aspect and Mood

Like many other creole's, Voltan marks aspect and mood through the use of preverbial markers.

Voltan has two grammatical aspects: past imperfect and progressive.

The progressive aspect is is marked with "am".

Voltan: Ich am essen
Dolch: Ich essen gerade
I am eating

Voltan has three moods: indicative, imperative, and optative.