Water Language: Difference between revisions
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* Word order | * Word order | ||
* Verb tenses | * Verb tenses | ||
* | ** To add to the person/number fun-times, the verbs don't conjugate, or only conjugate in certain forms? So essentially the forms would be: 'I walk', 'you walk', 'person walk', 'I-I walk', 'you-you walk', 'person-person walk'. Or swim. Because water. | ||
** This would make word order important, at least in relation to subject-verb. | |||
==Semantic fields and pragmatics== | ==Semantic fields and pragmatics== |
Revision as of 16:33, 18 June 2015
Waterspeak {{{nativename}}} | |
---|---|
Language Family | Water |
Dialects |
|
Written Forms | (Knotted String) |
Location | |
This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols.
Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters. |
Introduction
Phonology
Consonants
- z (Eng: 'ruse')
- ʒ (Eng: 'rouge')
- n (Eng: 'run')
- ŋ (Eng: 'rung')
Vowels
- iː (Eng: 'key')
- eɪ (Eng: 'cane')
- aɪ (Eng: 'kite')
- ɛ (Eng: 'ken')
- æ (Eng: 'cat')
- ɝː (Eng: 'cur')
- ʌ (Eng: 'cult')
- ɑː (Eng: 'cop')
- aʊ (Eng: 'cow')
- ɔɪ (Eng: 'coy')
- ɔː (Eng: 'caw')
- ʊ (Eng: 'could')
- oʊ (Eng: 'cope')
- uː (Eng: 'cool')
Stress
Hard to indicate 'stress' underwater, I imagine. Maybe a change in pitch? *whale noises*
Phonotactics
- BEWARE OF DIPTHONGS. If there's two vowels next to each other, assume dipthong FIRST.
- Duplicated vowels are a shift in pitch/register?
- Add the list of forms from the generator, later, lazyass
Morphology
Nouns
- Numerative markers? Plural? One-two-many?
- Case?
Pronouns
- Pronouns are genderless
- Pronouns exist for person, place, thing, abstract concept
Adjectives
Prepositions
- I expect we have some?
Conjunctions
Numbers
Names
Derivational morphology
Syntax
- Word order
- Verb tenses
- To add to the person/number fun-times, the verbs don't conjugate, or only conjugate in certain forms? So essentially the forms would be: 'I walk', 'you walk', 'person walk', 'I-I walk', 'you-you walk', 'person-person walk'. Or swim. Because water.
- This would make word order important, at least in relation to subject-verb.