Tayamo language

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Tayamo
Tayamese
т'аясы итол, итол т'аямоно
Pronunciation/ˈt’ajas̻ɨ̯ ˈitol/
Native to
RegionTayamo Archipelego, Selenzia
EthnicityTayamo people
Cyrillic
Latin
Tayamese (historically)
Language codes
ISO 639-1tm
ISO 639-2tym
ISO 639-3tym
GlottologNone
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 Tayamo language (also known as Tayamese) (Tayamo: т'аясы итол; t'ayasy itol) is a pre-Thuado-Thrismaran languages language isolate spoken on the islands of the laurentine gulf.

History

TBA

Status

Classiffied as Vigorous, the language is spoken by majority of the ethnic Tayamese population, majority of the speakers live on the largest island of Kayri within the Qazhshavan borders. The western dialect almost went extinct due to Krenyan supression, but with pressure of the post-Great war Qazhshavan government, it is making a slow come back, but is still threatened. The Eastern dialect is in a better spot but still has a relatively low number of speakers.

Classification

With a lot of foreign influence over 2000 years the language has taken in a lot of Thuado-Thrismaran and even some Aschari influence, due to which the modern grammar is very poluted compared to it's original form, of which there are very little texts, due to active periods of supressions from more powerfull nations, which makes the language hard to classify, some believe it to be a relative of the extinct Hewehetan language in Qazhshava.

Dialects

There are three main dialect areas of modern Tayamo which all form a Dialect continuum:

  • The western dialects spoken on the island of Selenzia/Hrastmož, which are hard to understand for speakers of any other Tayamese dialects, due to its more complex syllables.
  • The central dialects spoken on the Qazhshavan islands, which are the most spoken dialects.
  • The eastern dialects spoken on the islands owned by Gadorien, they aren't much diferent from the central dialects, with their major distinction being a distinctive soft speech.

The standard literary forms of the language was based on the Kayri dialect, which is one of the central dialects and the most spoken dialect, however the standard form was created around 100 years ago, so the modern pronounciation varies from how it's written.

Phonology

Consonants

Labial Alveolar Palatal Velar/
Uvular
Plosive/
Affricate
voiced b d d͡z̻ ɡ
voiceless p t t͡s̻ k
ejective t͡s̻ʼ
Fricative voiced ʁ̟
voiceless x
Sonorant m n l j w
Rhotic ɾ

Vowels

Front Central back
Close i u
Mid ɛ ɨ̞ o
Open a

Phonotactics

The syllable template in Tayamo is (C)V(S), where S is sonorant consonant. In the Western dialect the template (C)(C)V(C)(C) is possible due to the disapearence of the vowel /ɨ̞/ in polysylabbic words.

Allophones and Pronounciation

Allophones vary on the spoken dialect, usually rural dialects tend to have more allophonic diferences, while urban areas speak more literary, some common allophones are:

1. Unstressed vowels get reduced: /a/ → /ə/, /ɨ̞/ → /ɪ/, /o/ → /u/, /ɛ/ → /i/
2. When /ɨ̞/ is the last vowel of a word, it can get reduced to /ɨ̯(◌ʲ), ◌ᵊ/: к'ацы /k’at͡s̻ɨ̞/ → /k’at͡s̻ɨ̯/ /k’at͡s̻ʲ/
3. /x/ before or after /i/, /j/ becomes /ç/: хины /xinɨ̞/ → /çinʲ/, рыхы /ɾɨ̞xɨ̞/ (→ /ɾɨ̞xʲ/) → /ɾɨ̞ç/
4. In some dialects (predominantly the eastern ones) /s̻/ and /z̻/ and their afficates are pronounced as /s, z/ before /a, ɨ̞, o ,u/ but as /ʃ, ʒ/ before /ɛ, i, j/: сайжы /s̻ajz̻ɨ̞/ (→ /s̻ajz̻ʲ/) → /sajʒᵊ/
5. When a word ends in a nasal consonant it can merge with the previous vowel: катан /ˈkatan/ → /ˈkatɑɰ̃/, там /tam/ → /tɒw̃/
6. Palatalization of consonants before /ɛ/ and /i/: маке /ˈmakɛ/ → /ˈmaci/
7. Lenghtening of /ij/ and /uw/, and unstressed /ɛj/, /ow/ (when between consonants or as the last syllable of a word): рий /ɾij/ → /ɾiː/, хоней /ˈxonɛj/ → /ˈxoneː/
8. In the western dialects it's common for /ja/ to become /e/ when it's between consonants: т'аманян /ˈtˈamanjan/ → /ˈtˈamanen/

Out of the listed, 1, 2 and 3 are common in the pronounciation of standard Tayamo.

Writing System

Tayamo is most commonly written in the Cyrillic and Latin scripts, the language was historically written in it's own Alphasyllabarical script, which fell out of use during the last years of the Yirgadas empire, but it modern times it is making a revival.

Historically some islands also used the Aschari script to write their language in, which was replaced with the Tayamo script shortly after it's invention.

Alphabets

Cyrillic Tayamo alphabet:

А а Б б В в Г г Г' г' Д д Е е Ж ж
З з И и Й й К к К' к' Л л М м Н н
О о П п П' п' Р р С с Т т Т' т' У у
Ў ў Ф ф Х х Ц ц Ц' ц' Ч ч Ш ш Ъ ъ
Ы ы Ь ь Ю ю Я я        


Latin Tayamo alphabet:

A a B b C c C' c' D d E e F f G g
Gh gh H h I i J j K k K' k' Kh kh L l
M m N n O o P p P' p' Q q R r S s
T t T' t' U u V v W w X x Y y Z z
Zh zh              
Order 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36
Cyrillic upper case А Б В Г Г' Д Е Ж З И Й К К' Л М Н О П П' Р С Т Т' У Ў Ф Х Ц Ц' Ч Ш Ъ Ы Ь Ю Я
Cyrillic lower case а б в г г' д е ж з и й к к' л м н о п п' р с т т' у ў ф х ц ц' ч ш ъ ы ь ю я
Latin upper case A B V G Gh D E Z Zh I J K K' L M N O P P' R S T T' U W F Kh C C' Ch Sh H Y J Ju Ja
Latin lower case a b v g gh d e z zh i j k k' l m n o p p' r s t t' u w f kh c c' ch sh h y j ju ja
IPA sound a b w ɡ ʁ̟ d ɛ d͡z̻ i j k l m n o p ɾ t u w p x t͡s̻ t͡s̻ʼ t͡s̻ ɨ̞ ◌j ju ja

Historical writing

TBA

Grammar

Nouns

Verbs

Examples

TBA