Northeadish/Correlatives

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Northeadish
Druðþþȳðesc
Genealogical classification: Indo-European
Germanic
South Germanic
Basic word order: SVO or SOV
Morphological type: fusional
Morphosyntactic alignment: accusative
Created by:
BenJamin P. Johnson 2000
Northeadish Resources:


The Northeadish system of correlatives is similar to those in most other Germanic languages, though by analogy, it has become much more extensive than the others. The correlatives based on H, Þ, and Ƕ are easily recognizible in Germanic, being descended fairly directly from Indo-European K, T, and Kʷ, indicating a proximal, a medial, and an interrogative form. İ is also somewhat recognizable, though this distal form is not as widespread in Germanic languages as the others. N for negative is also fairly common, though normally not in these particular forms. Finally, the somewhat more elusive Q form for the relative is likely derived from the fortition of Ƕ in relative cluases.

H Þ İ Ƕ Q N
proximal medial distal interrogative relative negative
Place har here þar there iar yonder ƕar where qar where nar nowhere
Goal haðra hither þaðra thither iaðra yonder ƕaðra whither qaðra whither naðra to nowhere
Source harɴ hence þarɴ thence iarɴ from yonder ƕarɴ whence qarɴ whence narɴ from nowhere
Time han now þan then ian then (a long time) ƕan when qan when nan never
Thing hat this þat that iat yon ƕat what qat what nat nothing
Reason herefore þī therefore yonderfore ƕī why why for no reason
Manner like this þū - some other way ƕū how how no way
Abstraction het it þet that iet yet ƕet - qet - net not
  • þū has the meaning of the second person singular pronoun and is not used in this manner.
  • There are also a collection of personal pronouns which do not strictly adhere to this system, but make up the basis of "who" in the various cases.