Zdrole Language
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Zdrole | |
---|---|
Zdrêoll | |
Pronunciation | IPA: [zd̠ɹ̠ɤ̂.ləl] |
Native to | Fortizendria |
Region | Central Occeia |
Native speakers | Unknown |
Occe-Fortizian
| |
Mezéz | |
Official status | |
Official language in | Fortizendria |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | ZDR |
Zdrole (native: Zdrêoll, pronounced: [zd̠ɹ̠ɤ̂.ləl], lit. "tongue-like") is the official and most widely spoken language of Fortizendria, a nation of Krystar. Zdrole is regularly used by about 80% of Fortizendrians and is the first language of about 65%, although about 45% have notable dialectal differences, many of which differ substantially, in some cases being considered "unrecognized partially intelligible languages". It is by far the most widely spoken language, with the only officially recognized and local-official language of Fvonil and its dialects being close, being known by about 40% of the population and 20% learning it as a first language. Non-recognized varieties of Ovalul, Ziliel, and neighboring countries' languages being the first language of the remaining 15% and being understood by roughly 30% of the population. It is especially well-documented, although a couple online resources do exist.
Zdrole is not very centralized as a single language, with several dialects exhibiting mergers or splits in certain sounds, different cases being used for specific circumstances, differences in honorifics, and even a change in lexicon due to borrowing from other languages and coining new terms. This article covers a specific dialect of Zdrole, the Fortizendriana or Capital Dialect, which is most widely understood due to use in federal government. However, it should be noted that many provincial governments, as well as local governments, often different dialects, if not Fvonil (or in locales other minor languages). International diplomacy must be conducted in Zdrole, but dialects may vary wildly. Legal language and technical jargon is written or spoken with many technical loan words taken from more advanced economic neighbors, while the constitution was written in a now "archaic" version of a dialect that was not even the Capital dialect.
Phonology
Zdrole has at least 26 base consonants and 10 base vowels, along with three pitch accents. However, there is significant debate as to the true number of phonemes, as some of them only appear in complex clusters, some may be analyzed as clusters, and in some cases they have been simplified. Several of these clusters further have unique letters. To make matters more confusing, there is a significant degree of allophony with several consonants, as well as dialectal variations. Different analyses may be performed on even the same dialect to yield more or less phonemes. It is for this reason that there are estimated to be between 32 and 78 phonemes, although the lower estimate is generally given. This article provides the "standard" analysis of the Capital dialect.
Front | Mid-lateral* | Back | |
---|---|---|---|
Close | i /i/ ui /y/ | lyl /lʉl/* | iu /ɯ/ u /u/ |
Mid | e /e/ oe /ø/ | ll, lil /ləl/* /ə/ | eo /ɤ/ o /o/ |
Open | a /a/ | ao /ɒ/ |
* Mid-lateral vowels are denoted as "indefinite mid lateral" vowels, where /ə/ is any non-close vowel, and the entire sequence of /lʉl/ may be pronounced as [y], [lil], [juj], [l̩ʷ] or [ʝ]. /ə/ may appear epenthetically between complex clusters.
Vowels may either be unstressed or stressed. Stressed vowels have one of three pitch accent: a high or rising tone /í/, a dropping tone /î/, or a low tone /ì/. Tone is exclusively marked on the first letter in romanization, except in the case of <ll> /ləl/, in which a single pitch accent is traditionally written over the first or both letters (l̂l ĺl ll ̀). Understandably, this does not render very well on most computers, which has left some to put an emphatic <i> between the two <l>s to receive the accent instead.
Vowels may also be nasalized before /ŋ/, which may disappear entirely before another consonant. Vowels may also become breathy voiced by some speakers after a voiced /h/, although this is generally considered "incorrect" in formal speech and many dialects.
Vowel harmony does exist, but it's weak. It primarily exists in suffixes, primarily grammatical suffixes, although collapsed consonant clusters and sound changes have made this inconsistent. Some small, old, and commonly used words also have undergone vowel harmony. Most long, uncommon, and newer words do not undergo harmony outside of their suffixes.
Sometimes vowels collapse into relatively similar approximants, primarily after similar vowels in certain environments. /i/ and /e/ become /j/; /y/, /ɯ/ and /u/ become /ʋ/; /ø/ and /ɤ/ become /ɹ/; and /o/ and /ɒ/ become /l/. /a/ remains impervious to liquifaction. Many of these clusters may be considered diphthongs, but are analyzed as a vowel plus a liquid. There is some debate as to whether /ʋ/, /l/ and /j/ are truly distinct consonants, as they form primarily from old vowels, but they are generally written down as such due to the fact that multiple vowels can collapse into the same sound.
A hyphen (-) may be used between two vowels if there is a vowel hiatus (i.e. qma-on for /mˀa.on/)
Labial | Dental-Alveolar | Palatal / Velar¹ | Glottal | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Nasal | m /m/ | n /n/ | ng /ŋ/² | |
Plosive | b /b/³ | t /t/ d /d/⁴ | k /k/ g /g/ | q /ʔ/⁵ |
Affricate | c /t͡s/ cz /d͡z/ | cx /t͡ɕ/ cj /d͡ʑ/ | ||
Fricative | f /f/⁶ | s /s/ z /z/⁷ | x /ɕ/ j /ʑ/ | h /h/⁷ |
Approximant | v /ʋ/⁸ | l /l/⁹ r /r/¹⁰ | y /j/ |
¹ Velar consonants (k g ŋ) may be palatal (c ɟ ɲ) before front vowels, and may remove /i/ entirely. Affricates and fricatives are actually alveolar-palatal, or postalveolar before /ɹ/
² velar nasal as in sing. Nasalizes previous vowels. May be lost entirely before consonants.
³ May be voiced /b/ or voiceless /p/, even when aspirated. Usually voiceless utterance-initially/finally and after voiceless consonants, while voiced elsewhere.
⁴ Dental; /d/ may be lenited to [ð] intervocally for some speakers. Other alveolar consonants are alveolar-dental.
⁵ Glottal stop, as in "uh-oh". Only distinct before vowels at some morpheme boundaries. Can appear after consonants in contractions (dze+ʔeba->dzʔeba). May be epenthetic between complex codas and onsets. Often used to explain pre-fricated and glottal consonants (see table below).
⁶ May be bilabial [ɸ] in some speakers, and is more common in clusters where it follows a bilabial stop (especially if it's preglottalized).
⁷ [x] if not followed by a vowel, sometimes before /u/ and /ɯ/, and occasionally any position not after a consonant; [ɦ] after voiced consonants, which may cause the following vowel to become breathy; [ç] before /i/ and /y/, which may delete /i/ entirely. /h/ after plosives and less often affricates (where it disappears in about half of all dialects) is often considered aspiration (i.e. /abhat/ -> [abʱatː]) (see below table).
⁸ May be a bilabial or labio-dental approximant or fricative (v ʋ ɥ β) interchangeably and by dialect, with fricatives more likely in clusters.
⁹ May be fricated or even affricated lateral fricative (ɮ ɬ) in coda positions, and may even be velarized to [ɫ] or even [ɣ] in a few speakers, primarily in a northwestern dialect. May become [l], [ʎ], [ʝ], [j], or even drop entirely before /i/ and /y/, sometimes deleting or merging with /i/ to become [i] or [y], varying widely across dialects.
¹⁰ usually a postalveolar approximant, and is actually very similar to the standard English /r/. Sometimes simply written as /r/ as in English. Can occasionally be trilled or tapped, especially after /t/ and /d/.
Labial | Dental-Alveolar | (Alveolar-)Palatal | Velar/Glottal | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Glottalized Nasal | qm [mˀ] [ɓ]¹¹ | qn [nˀ] [ɗ]¹¹ | ng [ɲ] qy [ɲˀ]¹² | qy [ŋˀ]¹² |
Prefricated Nasal | fqm [ɸˀm] [fˀm]¹³ | sqn [sˀn]¹³ | hqng [xˀɲ]¹³ | hqng [xˀŋ]¹³ |
Plosive | b [p] [pːˀ]¹⁴ | t [tːˀ]¹⁴ [t̠] [d̥]¹⁵ d[d̠] [d̥]¹⁵ | k [c] [cːˀ]¹⁴ g [ɟ] | k [kːˀ]¹⁴ |
Aspirated Plosive¹⁶ | bh [bʱ] [pʰ] | dh [dʱ] th [tʰ] | gh [ɟʱ] kh [cʰ] | gh [gʱ], kh [ʰ] |
Aspirated Affricate¹⁶ | czh [d͡zʱ] ch [t͡sʰ] | cjh [d͡ʑʱ] cxh [t͡ɕʰ] | ||
Prefricated Plosive/Affricate¹⁷ | fqb [ɸˀp] [fˀp] | sqt [θˀt̪] sqc [sˀt͡s] | xqc [ɕˀt͡ɕ] hqk [çˀc] | hqk [xˀk] |
Fricative/Approximant | v [v] [β] f [ɸ] | l [ɮ] [ɬ] | h [ç] l [ʎ̝] [ç] [ʝ] [ʎ̝̊] | h [x] l [x] [ɣ] |
Approximant | v [β̞] [ɥ] | d [ð̞] l [ɫ] lyl [lʷ] | qy [jˀ]¹² [ʄ] l [ʎ] | h /ɦ/ |
¹¹ May be analyzed as a sequence of glottal stop + nasal. Some dialects pronounce the glottalized nasals (and /j/) as glottalized plosives or implosives (ɓ ɗ ʄ).
¹² Historically /ŋˀ/ which has since become /jˀ/ in the majority of dialects, including in Fvonil. Rare northwestern dialects retain it and its palatal nasal counterpart. Still exists in pre-fricated state.
¹³ May be analyzed as a sequence of fricative + glottal stop + nasal. Fricative is brief. Nasal is usually also glottal and may be slightly implosive in nature. Glottal pause may be brief or long.
¹⁴ Realization of utterance-final plosives after short vowels, as well as double consonants (i.e. /et.ta/) in some dialects.
¹⁵ Some analysis of /t/ or /d/ in mixed-voice plosive/affricate sequences (/zt͡s/ /sd͡z/ /ʑt͡ɕ/ /ɕd͡ʑ/ as [zd̥s sd̥z ʑd̥ɕ ɕd̥ʑ])
¹⁶ Realization of /h/ after a plosive or affricate. They become aspirated, while voiced consonants may be considered breathy-voiced.
¹⁷ May be analyzed as a sequence of fricative + glottal stop + plosive/affricate. Fricative is brief. Glottal pause may be brief or long.
Romanization Notes
Some clusters are spelled differently in Romanization. They include: jj /ʑdʑ/; cc /ɕtɕ/; jx /ʑtɕ/; xj /ɕdʑ/; sc /sts/; zz /zdz/; zc /zts/; sz /sdz/; ll /ləl/, lyl /lyl/, xqc [ɕˀt͡ɕ], and debatably str and zdr, which may be analyzed as a fusion of different sounds. A hyphen (-) may be used between two consonants if they remain distinct (i.e. mac + co = Mac-co, man + go = man-go)
/stɹ/ and /zdɹ/ are more accurately transcribed as /stɕɹ/ and /zdʑɹ/, as dental plosives are pronounced as dentals before /ɹ/, and would be more narrowly transcribed as [st̠ɹ̠] and [zd̠ɹ̠]. /stɹ/ is sometimes considered to be a combination of what used to be /stɹ/ [st̪ɹ̠], /st͡sɹ/ and /ɕtɕɹ/, as a similar process is believed to have happened with its voiced counterpart. However, /tɹ/ [t̪ɹ̠], /t͡sɹ/ and /tɕɹ/ all remain distinct, and some dialects still pronounce them differently after a coda /s/, yielding either a situation where they are different clusters in one environment but the same in another, or yielding a four-way distinction with merged /stɹ/ being distinct from /s.tɹ/.
Glottalized consonants get their own letters in the script, but do not in Romanization. ll and lyl also get their own letters, as to str and zdr. No other cluster gets its own symbol.
Phonotactics
Zdrole is a CCCVCC language; in other words, up to three consonants may start a syllable, and up to two may end one. Different consonant clusters are permitted in different areas, and some clusters only appear in loan words. /h/ may follow any plosive or affricate, even if a fricative appears before them, allowing for three-consonant onsets. /ʋ/ /l/ and /j/ may also appear after any other set, on account of their once vowel-based nature. The only exceptions are /stɹ/ and /zdɹ/. Consonants need not have the same voicing if they contrast phonetically; /zt/ /st/ /zd/ and /sd/ are all distinct. Fricatives can appear before any plosive, but not any affricate, with only alveolar-only and palatal-alveolar-only sequences being possible (with the exception of /stɹ/ and /zdɹ/; see section under Romanization Notes).
Some onset clusters are permitted, but only in loan words. One notable example is /ɹ/ after velar/glottal consonants, i.e. /kɹ/ /gɹ/ and /hɹ/ [xɹ], which do not actually appear normally in Zdrole words. ("Krystra" [Krystar] is in fact one example of this.) Other examples include /skɹ/, /sb/ and /sbɹ/. Fricatives followed by a nasal, without a glottal stop, only appear across syllable boundaries natively, although /sn/ and /zn/ exist in onset from derived loan words. Coda plosive + fricative pairs (/sb/ /st/ /sk/ /ht/ and /hk/) also derive from loan words.
Orthography
This section is heavily WIP and has no data in it.
Script | Name | Romanization | IPA | Approximate
English Equivalent |
Script | Name | Romanization | Approximate
English Equivalent |
Script | Name | Romanization | Approximate
English Equivalent | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Grammar
Zdrole is primarily a Verb-Subject-Object (VSO) language, although it becomes a Subject-Verb-Object (SVO) language when 1st and 2nd person pronouns are used. Things are more complicated for ditransitive verbs, where the order is Verb-Donor-Recipient-Theme (or Verb-Subject-IndirectObject-DirectObject) or Donor-Verb-Recipient-Theme, unless the donor is implied to have less volition than the recipient, in which the order is Verb-Recipient-Donor-Theme, or Verb-Theme-Recipient-Donor if the direct object is of significant importance.
Zdrole has split ergativity, where it is primarily an ergative-absolutive language, however it becomes nominative-accusative under several circumstances. It could be accurate to refer to Zdrole as having an active-stative alignment, where "I run" would be nominative but "I sit" would be absolutive, which only applies to pronouns and proper names; all other instances are usually ergative-accusative. There is also dative construction, where the dative case is used for the subject in sentences where the subject underwent an action, most likely involuntarily or even against their better wishes (as in "To me was hit be a tree"). In ditransitive sentences, the recipient receives the causative case if it has more agency than the donor. Subjects in dependent clauses also receive the causative case, sometimes also called the "Clausal Agent" case.
Head directionality is complicated in Zdrole. Setting aside the fact that the subject and verb swap positions depending on pronoun usage, it mostly functions as a head-final language: adjectives come after nouns, adverbs come after verbs, affixes and case marking are primarily suffixes, and possession, number, and relative clauses all come after their core arguments. Despite this, it has also largely become a prepositional language, where adpositions come before their clauses, instead of after. It's believed that Zdrole used to be postpositional at one point, as is the case with its sister language Fvonil and in some dialects in that area, but has largely changed over in central and northern dialects.
Like other Occe-Fortizian languages, Zdrole is predominantly an agglutinative language when it comes to grammar, but more analytic (or less-often fusional) when it comes to lexical compounding. There exist 4-5 numbers/noun classes, 7-11 grammatical cases, 10 verbal tenses/aspects with 5 moods, although one noun case may also be considered a 6th mood, while one mood can also function as a tense (namely the future).
Nouns
Nouns in Zdrole are coded for number, noun class (or gender), and case. Grammatical number and gender affect their case marking, as well as adjectives (which to an extant are a "case") and notably adpositions. Animacy (i.e. how much "life" or "movement" a noun has) can have an effect on verbs and what adpositions are used.
Noun Classes
The four main noun classes in Zdrole include "Broad", "Narrow", "Spindly", and "Plural", although some sources indicate a very small and distinct "Spindly Singular". Certain person-specific words may have masculine and feminine counterparts (i.e. "wife" vs. "husband", "waiter" vs. "waitress", which may sometimes affect the noun class of a word, although neither usually nor predictably.
"Broad" and "Narrow" are used for all kinds of objects, including people and proper names of males and females alike. They are named on account of "Broad" nouns generally describing more vague as well as larger concepts, while "Narrow" generally describes smaller or specific concepts. In reality, they mostly are arbitrary and mainly apply to the phonetics of the word, with male and female names (and their associated pronouns) alike falling into either category.
"Spindly" nouns, on the other hand, often do describe (often more specific) that are longer and thinner in nature. This is because a lot of the inflections reflect what was once derivational morphology. Certain names also have the Spindly noun case, and are usually names given to "spindly" or "enigmatic" people and places, often in place of a former Broad or Narrow name. Spindly nouns are often loosely associated with negativity, and several nouns and nominalized verbs such as spiders, snakes, illness, mortality, and death are Spindly nouns. Nonetheless, it can also be viewed positively, as life, love, seaweed, and seedlings are also Spindly.
"Plural" nouns are the most straight-forward noun class, as the morphological changes are applied largely to nouns that indicate more than one object, as well as multiple nouns (i.e. a cat and a dog, 2 fish, etc.). There are however a few exceptions. Certain quite arguably plural nouns (such as "thoughts" or "methods" or "people"), as well as several (but not all) mass nouns, are in fact broad or narrow in nature, while some arguably singular nouns (such as "spasm", "touch", or "toolkit" are always plural. Some names (particularly those of "elites") are plural-class, despite being "singular", and plural pronouns are used to address those of a higher social status (see: pronouns). Once narrow or broad names may eventually be changed to plural, much like spindly names. Spindly nouns are usually spindly, even when plural, although there are a small handful of exceptions which trigger plural agreement even when paired with other spindly nouns. This is why "Spindly Singular" is a proposed distinct noun class. Snakes, as well as certain words and poetry derived from snakes, are unique for being Spindly when there's only one, Plural several, and Spindly again for many.
Noun Class | Code | Common Endings | Examples |
---|---|---|---|
Broad | [B] | Man, Woman, Child, Tree, Pebble, Water, Chair, Pineapple, Phosphorous, Food, Thoughts, Language, People, Machine, Tooth, Static Verb Participles, Sight, Some people/places’ names/pronouns, | |
Narrow | [N] | Boy, Girl, Baby, Professor, Hammer, Fire, Leg, Cherry, Shrub, Dirt, Sulpher, Dish, Rhyme, Method, Test, Time, Smell, Active Verb Participles, Ditransitive Verbs, Some people/places’ names/pronouns, etc. | |
Spindly | [S] | Spider(s), Coily Bean(s), Hair, A ton of snakes, Wind, Seaweed, Fly/Flies, Seedling(s), Dirt Grain(s), Oxygen, Love, Sand (grains and altogether), Death, Life, verbs involving mortality/illness/lengthening/heat/reaching/drooping, unknown/hypothetical persons’/places’ names/pronouns, etc | |
Spindly Singular | [SS] | a weed, a twig, a single sock, a snake | |
Plural | [P] | Chairs, Plants, Corn, Pair of Socks, Dishes, Several Snakes, Teeth, Multiple Participles, Taste, Touch, Mercury, Stone, Rivers, Toolkit, Clothing, Repeated/Iterative Verbs (eating, bobbing, glistening, jumping twice, running, etc.), Dialogue (“talkings”), Medicine, Grapes, Spasm, multiple nouns (cat and dog, mouse and sock), some people/places’ names/pronouns [always plural], etc.) |
Case
There are 8 widely agreed upon grammatical cases in Zdrole, of which 7 are considered to be widely used: the Ergative, Absolutive, Dative, Causative, Locative, Equative, and Relative, as well as the much less common Locative-Genetive. However, there exist up to 14 total cases: 3 are historic and essentially never used in modern Zdrole, one is a recent and unofficial development used in poetry and colloquialisms that has already begun to change its uncertain meaning, one is uncommon and only exists in certain dialects, and one (the Semblative) is commonly used and largely analyzed as a case, but debated by some to be a derivational affix that acts more as an adjectival derivation than a true noun case, despite its appearance as part of the compound cases.
Of the 14 cases, 7 of them are analyzed as compound cases, where two or more cases are stacked on top of each other agglutinatively to form a new case with a similar (as with the historic allative) or different (as with the relative) meaning. 3 of these cases have since merged phonetically and semantically into the other cases, primarily one of the constituent cases they were built from.
Formatting is a WIP, as the site used to upload the information looked different in editing than upon display.
Case | Endings | Primary Usage | Alternative "Case" | Alternate/Historic Usage | Examples | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ergative | -(n)de(o)/-(n)do(e) [B], -(n)da(o)î [N]
-(n)de(o)t/-(n)do(e)t [P], -(n)da(o)îcxe [S] (n) after vowels, front/back and rounding harmony |
The subject of a
transitive or ditransitive sentence. Sparsely for intransitive sentences. |
Nominative, Ablative, | "From" something,
including inalienable possession. |
I run, I gave lint to Donna,
"I took lint from the chair, that is my arm/hair" |
|
Absolutive | Unmarked | The subject of most intransitive
sentences; The direct object; object of many prepositional phrases. |
Accusative, Instrumental,
Alienable Possessive |
"with" or "using" something,
weak possession |
I sit, I gave lint to Donna,
I hit it with a hammer, I used my pen (the pen I had on me), I am not with friends on my birthday. |
|
Dative | -(q)e(o)t/(q)o(e)t, [B] + [N],
(q)e(o)xqce/(q)o(e)xqce [P] + [S] (q) after vowels, front/back & rounding harmony |
Indirect Object; May be
subject in passive sentences (See: Grammar) |
I gave lint to Donna,
I am shivering |
|||
Causative | (q)ù(i)na [B], -va(o)n [N],
(q)ù(i)/(q)ì(u) [P], (q)ù(i)x [S] (q) after vowels, front/back harmony and rounding harmony in plurals |
Caused by something;
May be indirect object where the recipient has more agency than the donor (See: Grammar) |
Benefactive | Something was done for something
or someone. |
I failed because of you,
I didn't work because (I was) sick, I built this for you, |
|
Locative | -stra(o) [B], -stro(e) [N],
-(z)dr(i)eo [P], -cce [S] (z) after /n/, partial/irregular front/back harmony |
Marks the location of something. Used in most
prepositions involving location (including in/on/ over/under/behind) |
Vocative, Allative | Directing attention to
someone; towards something |
I am at the theater;
O Johnathon!, I am going to the bridge, He is in (at) the house |
|
Semblative | -ll/-e(o)l [B],
(unrounded vowel)-lluil/(other)-lyl [N], let/lat (e after closed vowels, a after open vowels) [P], l(e)ocx/lo(e)cx [S] |
Acts as an adjective modifier,
but can also be used as a noun or even as a verb phrase. -like/-y/-ly |
Descriptive,Comparative,Deductive Equative | Denotes that something is like something. -ish/-oid/-esque
Sometimes used like the Equative for uncertainty or comedic effect. May be used to denote a "deductive" mood for to be. |
You are like a barbarian;
You are sweeter than apple pie; The rope-like scarf flapped in the wind; It's a craboid; You are just like Johnathon; That's fantasy-like (fantastic); Looks like rain. |
|
Equative | ce(o)/-co(e) [B], -cce(o) [N],
u(i)zec/i(u)zec [P], -ce(o)x(e/i)x [S] rounding and partial front/back harmony |
Acts as a copula; Links words together;
Describes composition |
Compound, Compositional,Interrogative,Semblative | Acts as a way of compounding nouns,
denoting the elemental contents of something, and asking if something is something. May also be used as a poetic Semblative. |
You are Johnathon; He is a
doctor; The pumpkin pie is fantasty-like; This is a Wall Scene (movie);Is that a pillbug? |
|
Locative-
Genitive (Locative-Causative) |
Locative + Causative (streona) | Used to denote where something
or someone is originally from, or where something belongs. |
Locative-Causative,
Kinship (Archaic, Poetic) |
Could be used as a Causative in
certain situations: "I look bad because of this spot on my shoe; I'm upset because of an issue at the pub. |
I am from Iceland; This is
my home; This is for my shoe; This is the museum's; I'm from her (lit. "she's my mom") |
Rarely used
outside of Locative- Genetive. |
Locative-
Semblative |
Locative + Semblative (streoll) | Used to indicate something is like
somewhere else, or at a position similar to something else. |
Approximative | Used to indicate a vague location,
or that something is around something. |
This feels like home,
This is near Fortizendria, It's around here somewhere, It's by the house. |
Not used
in several dialects |
Relative
(Semblative -Causative) |
Semblative + Causative (-lli(u)à(o)n) | Replaces the subject
in a dependent clause; acts as a relative pronoun |
Clausal Subject,
Approximate/ Partial Causative |
Functions like a causative, but denotes
a partial, incomplete, or similar reason or logic. |
The cage, which I destroyed, is over there where Johnathon
is now standing; That is only part of why I'm sad. |
Rarely used
outside of Clausal Subject |
Approximal-Genitive(Locative-Semblative-Causative) | Locative + Semblative + Causative(-streolliàna) | Says the approximate origins or place
of belonging for someone. A relatively recent innovation. Rarely used outside of poetry and some local colloquialisms. Not found in most dialects. |
Ablative; Locative;False Semblative | As if something was from somewhere;
As if something was something. Even more recent innovation, likely born from a misconception of its original meaning/intention. |
I am from around here;
The cheese nearby is delightful; You're talking (about) that idea as if it were good. |
Recent;
Unofficial; Not used in most dialects. |
Inessive-Possessive(Locative-Equative) | same as locative; No longer used | Historically was the inessive
and instrumental, denoting "contains", "has" or "holds". Merged with Locative and Ergative cases |
Locative Copula | Verbal phrase version of the locative. | I have the keys; It is
in the house; The cat stole my cheese!; I am in Fortizendria. |
Archaic;
No longer in use. |
(Al)lative(Locative-Dative) | (q)e(o)/(q)o(e) + Locative;same as locative; No longer used | Historically was the lative/allative, but
since merged with the Locative. |
I'm going to the house. | Archaic;
No longer in use. | ||
Benefactive(causative-Dative) | same as causative; No longer used | Historically was the benefactive,
but since merged with the causative due to semantic similarities and phonological erosion. |
I built this for you. | Archaic;
No longer in use. |