Difference between revisions of "Akachenti"
(→The Copula) |
(→The Copula) |
||
Line 11: | Line 11: | ||
=== The Copula === | === The Copula === | ||
− | Thus far, we posit Pre-Modern Akachenti copular forms of ''se:'', "to be", and the nominalized ''sen'', "what (one) is". | + | Thus far, we posit Pre-Modern Akachenti copular forms of ''se:'', "to be", and the nominalized ''sen'', "what (one) is". The fact that the copula always takes alternate vowel forms rather than glottalic tone indicates an underlying long vowel affecting neighboring syllables despite being mutable, pronounced with a mid-tone and short. |
+ | |||
+ | {| class="wikitable sortable" | ||
+ | |+ |Diachronic Reconstruction | ||
+ | !lexeme || gloss | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | |se: || to be | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | |se:n || what (one) is | ||
+ | |} | ||
{| class="wikitable sortable" | {| class="wikitable sortable" |
Revision as of 14:23, 1 May 2017
Akachenti is the most commonly spoken major dialect of the Kachan language, spoken by the Ogunn people. It is an incorporating fusional polysynthetic language with fluid-S active morphosyntactic alignment and relatively free word order with default OVS.
Contents
Phonology
Vowels
Consonants
Verbs
The Copula
Thus far, we posit Pre-Modern Akachenti copular forms of se:, "to be", and the nominalized sen, "what (one) is". The fact that the copula always takes alternate vowel forms rather than glottalic tone indicates an underlying long vowel affecting neighboring syllables despite being mutable, pronounced with a mid-tone and short.
lexeme | gloss |
---|---|
se: | to be |
se:n | what (one) is |
lexeme | sample | definition | translation | alignment |
---|---|---|---|---|
se: | hese: | how are (you)? | how be? | denuded |
se: | ise: ganche | it is beautiful | it's beautiful | i-agentive |
se | ise ganchá | it, I am an experiencer, (it) does beauty (to) me.PAT | it's beautiful to me | e-patientive, á-patientive |
se | isikachan evagonchan | it is, Kachan, my home voice | Kachan is the language I speak at home | e-patientive |
se | igonar isiganchanta | it, my home, it is beautiful | my home is beautiful | i-agentive |
se | sa gudá | I am an experiencer of home-want | I'm a shut-in OR I don't get out much | á-patientive |
se | usa iba:sh | (with) you, I am that, a lover | with you, I am a lover | i-patientive |
se | huede esef (huede esev) | and that is (going to be)? | and that is too? | e-patientive |
sen | isen ís | it.AGT, what (it) is, (it) is that.PAT | it is what it is | í-patientive |
sen | hesen | what is (it)? | what is it? | denuded |
Affixation and Derivation
Inflectional Affixes
Inflectional affixes appear to all be postpositions, in keeping with an OVS language and verbs tending to fuse at the end of a word. Unlike evening constructions, inflectional affixes have fused sufficiently that they no longer attract glottalic tone to their first and last syllables. Inflectional affixes serve as a compounded extension of the root.
The Verb Base
There are two primary verb bases, demonstrated below.
unmarked | + agentive affix | optative | + agentive affix |
---|---|---|---|
baga: | baga:v(a) | baga:sha | ∅ |
ashi | ashik(a) | ashiv(a) | ∅ |