Waa: Difference between revisions
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Note that katu miti may be | Note that katu miti may be ambiguous, it can mean either 'the small cat' or 'the cat is small'. Without the copula, one must often rely on context to determine the intended meaning. | ||
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'''Nea katu mi.''' That cat is mine. ('There a cat of mine') | '''Nea katu mi.''' That cat is mine. ('There a cat of mine') | ||
==Tense== | |||
Tense is not obligatory. A simple clause might interpreted as past, present, or future, depending on the context. | |||
'''Katu itu musu.''' - The cat ate the mouse, the cat is eating the mouse, the cat will eat the mouse etc. | |||
'''Katu sewa.''' - The cat is sleeping, the cat has slept, etc. | |||
There is an optional past tense particle '''ko''', which is place before the verb, and before the negation particle '''kuo''' in negative sentences. | |||
'''Katu ko itu musu.''' The cat ate the mouse. | |||
'''Katu ko kuo itu musu.''' The cat didn't eat the mouse. | |||
'''Ko''' can, however, be left out if the tense is obvious from the context. | |||
Other ways to indicate tense is through explicit temporal adverbs: | |||
'''Ina katu sewa.''' - Now the cat is sleeping. | |||
'''Katu sewa ina.''' - The cat is sleeping now. | |||
'''Deinei mi kopa katu.''' - Today I bought/will buy a cat. | |||
'''Deipasu mi kopa katu.''' - Yesterday I bought the cat. | |||
The verb/particle '''redi''' ('already, to be finished doing', 'to have done') may serve to indicate something like the perfect tense/aspect: | |||
'''Mi redi kopa katu.''' - I have (already) bought a cat.' | |||
'''Katu redi sewa.''' - The cat hasn't (yet) slept. | |||
Unlike '''ko''', '''redi''' goes after the negative particle '''kuo''': | |||
'''Katu kuo redi sewa.''' - The cat hasn't slept. | |||
Revision as of 06:51, 29 March 2025
| Waa | |
|---|---|
| Pronounced: | waː, wɑ: |
| Typology | |
| Morphological type: | analytic |
| Morphosyntactic alignment: | neutral |
| Basic word order: | SVO |
| Credits | |
| Creator: | |
Waais a constructed language.
Phonology
Consonants
| Labial | Alveolar | Palatal | Velar | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Voiceless stops | p | t | k | |
| Voiced stops | b | d | ||
| Nasals | m | n | ŋ | |
| Taps/flaps/trills | r~ɾ | |||
| Glides | w | j |
/j/ is written y, and /ŋ/ g. Otherwise, the phonemes follow their 'expected' spelling according to the IPA.
Vowels
| Front | Back | |
|---|---|---|
| Close | i | u |
| Mid | e | o |
| Open | a~ɑ |
Waa has essentially a five-vowel system. On a phonological level, all vowels could be analysed as short monophthongs. In connected speech, however, adjacent vowels may be realized as diphthings on a phonetic level, and two identical vowels next to each other as a single, long vowel. Stress falls on the second-to-last mora, or second to last phonological vowel.
Basic Phrases
There is no distinction between singular and plural, or between definite and indefinite forms, nor are there any other inflections of the noun.
katu - a cat, the cat, (some) cats, the cat,s etc.
huno - a dog, the dog, (some) dogs, the dogs, etc.
Adjectives and other modifying expressions follow the noun:
katu witu - a/the white cat(s)
huno maka - a/the large dog(s)
Pronouns
mi I
yu you (singular)
kia he, she, it
miera we
yuera you (plural)
kiaera or kiakia they
A pronoun placed right after a noun can serve as a possessive pronoun:
katu mi - my cat
huno kia - her/his dog
Simple clauses
The basic word-order is SVO, or just SV in intransitive clauses:
Katu sewa. The cat is sleeping
Mi kopa katu I'm buying the cat
Adjectives can serve as predicates. There are optionally introduced by the copula 'nea 'to be':
Katu witu. Or: Katu nea witu - The cat is white.
Nea can also introduce prepositional phrases as predicates:
Katu nea i tebo. - The cat is on the table
There is a past tense particle ko:
Katu ko sewa. - The cat slept.
Mi ko kopa katu. - I bought the cat.
Katu ko nea witu. - The cat was white.
Katu ko nea i tebo. - The cat was on the table.
Prepositions
There are two main prepositions in Waa: the dative/locative i, and the ablative/instrumental a. They can have a variety of meanings, depending on the context.
The dative/locative
I can be used to indicate various form of (spatial) location, as well as goal, destination or recipient.
katu i tebo - the cat on the table
rumo i huso - the room(s) in the house
tebo i rumoitu - the table in the dining room
Tebo nea i rumoitu. - The table is in the dining room.
Tuku meku i kapikulu. - Put the milk in the fridge.
Kiwe buku i mi. - Give me the book.
The instrumental/ablative
A can be used to indicate source, means, etc.
Kia ko kee a paiboa. - He came from the village.
Kia padedu katu a korokutu. - He killed the cat with a knife.
A can be used to mark the standard in a comparison:
Huno nea maka a katu. - The dog is bigger than the cat.'
Negations and questions
A clause is negated by kuo:
Katu kuo sewa. - The cat is not sleeping
A yes/no-question may be formed by rising intonation. To respond to a question, you use io for agreement, and kuo io for disagreement.
Katu sewa? - Is the cat sleeping?
Io. Katu sewa. - Yes. The cat is sleeping.
Kuo. Katu kuo sewa. - No. The cat isn't sleeping.
Katu kuo sewa? - Isn't the cat sleeping?
Io. Katu kuo sewa. - No. The cat isn't sleeping.
Kuo. Katu sewa. - Yes. The cat is sleeping.
Adjectives
Adjectives go after the words they modify:
Katu miti - a/the small cat
Huno maka - a/the large dog
Adjectives as predicates are optionally introduced by the copula nea:
Katu (nea) miti - The cat is small.
Note that katu miti may be ambiguous, it can mean either 'the small cat' or 'the cat is small'. Without the copula, one must often rely on context to determine the intended meaning.
Another way to introduce adjective predicates is to us a demonstrative or a possessive pronoun:
Katu miti mi - my small cat vs. Katu mi miti - My cat is small.
Katu miti naa - that small cat vs. Katu naa miti - That cat is small.
There are a couple of ways to form comparisons. One can mark the standard to which something is compared with a:
Katu nea miti a huno. - The cat is smaller than the dog. (Lit. 'The cat is small from the dog.')
Another way is to use two adjacent clauses:
Katu nea miti huno nea maka. - The cat is smaller than the dog. (Lit. 'The cat is small the dog is big.')
To express that something is as (adj.) as ...:
Katu nea maka huno. - The cat is as big as the dog.
Possession
The possessor is placed after the possessum:
katu mi - my cat
huno ota - (the) father's dog
katu ota mi my father's cat
Predicative possession
Katu naa nea katu mi. That cat is mine (Lit. 'That cat is my cat.')
Nea katu mi. That cat is mine. ('There a cat of mine')
Tense
Tense is not obligatory. A simple clause might interpreted as past, present, or future, depending on the context.
Katu itu musu. - The cat ate the mouse, the cat is eating the mouse, the cat will eat the mouse etc.
Katu sewa. - The cat is sleeping, the cat has slept, etc.
There is an optional past tense particle ko, which is place before the verb, and before the negation particle kuo in negative sentences.
Katu ko itu musu. The cat ate the mouse.
Katu ko kuo itu musu. The cat didn't eat the mouse.
Ko can, however, be left out if the tense is obvious from the context.
Other ways to indicate tense is through explicit temporal adverbs:
Ina katu sewa. - Now the cat is sleeping.
Katu sewa ina. - The cat is sleeping now.
Deinei mi kopa katu. - Today I bought/will buy a cat.
Deipasu mi kopa katu. - Yesterday I bought the cat.
The verb/particle redi ('already, to be finished doing', 'to have done') may serve to indicate something like the perfect tense/aspect:
Mi redi kopa katu. - I have (already) bought a cat.'
Katu redi sewa. - The cat hasn't (yet) slept.
Unlike ko, redi goes after the negative particle kuo:
Katu kuo redi sewa. - The cat hasn't slept.