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The basic word-order is SVO, or just SV in intransitive clauses. Present and future (non-past) tense is marked by '''me''', past tense by '''ta''':
The basic word-order is SVO, or just SV in intransitive clauses. Present and future (non-past) tense is marked by ''e''', past tense by '''ta''':




'''Katu me sewa.''' The cat is sleeping
'''Katu e sewa.''' The cat is sleeping


cat NPST sleep
cat NPST sleep
Line 150: Line 150:
cat PST sleep
cat PST sleep


'''Mi me kopa kat''' I'm buying the cat
'''Mi e kopa kat''' I'm buying the cat


1 NPST buy cat
1 NPST buy cat

Revision as of 18:13, 22 April 2025





Leopardcivilflag.png
Waa
Pronounced: waː, wɑ:
Typology
Morphological type: analytic
Morphosyntactic alignment: neutral
Basic word order: SVO
Credits
Creator: Xing

Waa is a constructed language. A large part of its vocabulary is derived from English, or a selection of other languages.

Phonology

Consonants

Labial Alveolar Palatal Velar or glottal
Voiceless stops p t k
Voiced stops b d
Voiceless fricatives s h
Nasals m n ŋ
Taps/flaps/trills r~l
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

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)

cat white

huno maka - a/the large dog(s)

dog large

Pronouns

mi I

yu you (singular)

te he, she, it

tenaa that one

tenei thisone

miera we

yuera you (plural)

teera they

teeranaa those ones

teeranei these ones



ei tiaoka - somebody (lit. 'one person')

ei mea - something (lit. 'one thing')

ei osa - some amount (lit. 'one part')

Simple clauses

The basic word-order is SVO, or just SV in intransitive clauses. Present and future (non-past) tense is marked by e', past tense by ta:


Katu e sewa. The cat is sleeping

cat NPST sleep

Katu ta sewa. - The cat slept

cat PST sleep

Mi e kopa kat I'm buying the cat

1 NPST buy cat

Mi ta kopa katu. - I bought a cat.

1s PST buy 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.

cat white cat be white


Nea can also introduce prepositional phrases as predicates:


Katu nea i tebo. - The cat is on the table

cat be LOC table


Nea is optional when it comes to nominal predicates:

Kia tiatisu. - He is a teacher.

3s person:teach

Kia nea tiatisu. - He is a teacher.

3s be person:teach

The copula

The copula nea can typically be left out. An adjective, verb, noun, or prepositional phrase following the verb may be interpreted as either a predicate or a modifier, depending on the context. The copula is used when one needs to make unambiguous that the following phrase is a predicate.


Katu witu - the cat is white, or: the white cat.

Katu nea witu - The cat is white.

Huno i huso - The dog in the house, or: the dog is on the house.

Huno nea i huso - The dog is in the house.


The past tense particle ta can be used with the copula:


Katu ta nea witu. - The cat was white.

Huno ta nea i huso. - The dog was in the house.

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

cat LOC table

mane i huso - the room(s) in the house

mane LOC house

tebo i rumoitu - the table in the dining room

table LOC room:eat

Tebo nea i rumoitu. - The table is in the dining room.

table be LOC room:eat

Tuko mele i kapikuro. - Put the milk in the fridge.

put milk DAT box:cool

Kiwe buko i mi. - Give me the book.

give book DAT 1s

Teera ta kou i paiboa. - They went to the village

1:PL go DAT place:live

Huno me sewa i roo. - The dog is sleeping on the floor.

The genitive/instrumental/ablative

A indicates the genitive, indicating ownership, part-whole relationships, etc.


katu a teera - their cat

cat GEN 3:PL

kemaka a huno - the size of the dog

size GEN dog

muro a huso - the walls of the house

wall GEN house

osa a dei - a part of the day

part GEN day


A can also be used to indicate source, means, etc.


Te ta kee a paiboa. - He came from the village.

3s PST come ABL place:live

Te ta padedu katu a korokuto. - He killed the cat with a knife.

3 PST cause:dead cat INSTR tool:cut

Compound prepositions

The simple prepositions i and a can be combined with other words to indicate more precise relationships, with i usually indicating location or destination, and a departing point or path.


i apo - 'on', 'above'

i roka - 'inside', 'into'

i puri - 'under', 'beneath'

a apo - 'from above', 'through above'

a roka - 'from inside', 'through the inside of'

a puri - 'from beneath', 'passing under'

Negations and questions

A clause is negated by ku:


Kat ku sewa. - The cat is not sleeping

cat NEG sleep


A yes/no-question may be formed by rising intonation. To respond to a question, you use ye for agreement, and kuye or just ku for disagreement.


Katu sewa? - Is the cat sleeping?

cat sleep

Ye. Katu sewa. - Yes. The cat is sleeping.

agree cat sleep

Ku. Katu ku sewa. - No. The cat isn't sleeping.

NEG cat NEG sleep

Kuye. Katu ku sewa.

NEG:agree cat NEG sleep

Katu ku sewa? - Isn't the cat sleeping?

cat NEG sleep

Ye. Kat ku sewa. - No. The cat isn't sleeping.

agree cat NEG sleep

Ku. Katu sewa. - Yes. The cat is sleeping.

NEG cat sleep

Kuye. Katu sewa. - Yes. The cat is sleeping.

NEG.agree cat sleep


Ku can also be used with adjectives or nouns:


ku bono - no good, not good

NEG good

ku katu - no cat(s)

NEG cat

ku mene - no one, nobody (lit. 'no person')

NEG person

Adjectives

Adjectives go after the words they modify:

Kat miti - a/the small cat

cat small

Hun maka - a/the large dog

dog large


Adjectives as predicates are optionally introduced by the copula nea:


Kat (nea) miti - The cat is small.

cat (be) 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.


Comparisons are formed with the preposition i meso a:


Kat nea miti i meso a hun. - The cat is smaller than the dog.

cat be small DAT measure GEN dog

Possession

The possessor is placed after the possessum:

katu a mi - my cat

cat GEN 1s

huno a ota - (the) father's dog

dog GEN father

katu a ota a mi my father's cat

cat GEN father GEN 1s


Predicative possession

Katu naa nea a mi. That cat is mine

cat that be GEN 1s

Nea katu a mi. I have a cat. ('There is a cat of mine')

be cat GEN 1s

Relative clauses

Relative clauses are introduced with the particle ae:


Mane ae kopa katu. - The man that bought the cat.

man REL buy cat

Katu ae te kopa. - The cat that he bought.

cat REL 3s buy


The past tense particle ta need not be used in the relative clause.


If the relativized noun is introduced by a preposition - i or a - it must be represented by a pronoun in the relative clause:


Korokuto ae kia padedu katu a kia. - The knife that he killed the cat with.

tool:cut REL 3s cause:dead cat INSTR 3s

Mane ae mi kiwe katu i te. - The man that I gave the cat to.

man REL 1s give cat DAT 3s


Prepositional stranding is not allowed:


*Mane ae mi kiwe katu i.

man REL 1s give cat DAT

Complement clauses

Complement clauses are introduced by the conjunction ge 'that':


Mi ta siu ge kia kopa katu. - I saw that he bought the cat.

1s PST see CONJ 3s buy cat

Mi ta ku wita ge te redi selu katu. - I didn't know he had (already) sold the cat.

1s PST NEG know CONJ 2s PRF sell cat

Adverbial clauses

Temporal adverbial clauses can bi introduced by beo 'before', ata 'after' and sima while', 'when', 'at the same time as':


Te ta kee beo mi kou. - 'He arrived before I left.

3s PST come before 1 go

Te ta kee ata mi kou. - 'He arrived after I had left.'

3s PST come after 1s leave

Te ta kee sima mi itu. - 'He arrived when I was eating'

3s PST come while 1s eat

Auxiliary verbs

Mi wae kopa katu. - I want to by a cat.

1s want buy cat

Mi kae kopa katu. - I can buy a cat

1s can buy cat

Mi nae kopa katu. - I must/have to buy a cat

1s must buy cat

Mi mae kopa katu. - I may (am permitted to) buy a cat.

1s may buy cat

Mi sae kopa katu. - I must (am morally obligted to) buy a cat.

1s must buy cat

The prefix pa-

The prefix pa- can be attached to certain verbs to render a causative meaning. It can turn an intransitive verb into a transitive one:


pa + kou ('to go') -> pakou - to lead

pa + rera ('to learn') -> parera - to teach


It can be attached to adjectives:


pa + witu ('white') -> pawitu to make white, to bleach

The prefix ke-

The prefix ke- has a couple of functions. It can be added to verbs, to form nouns indicating what would typically be the result of the event described by the verb:


ke + rita ('to write') -> kerita - letter, (piece of) writing.

ke + rima ('to dream') -> kerima - dream

ke + tiga ('to think') -> ketiga 'thought'


It can form passive participles:

tiki kerai - fried chicken

chicken PASS.fry

tiki nea kerai - the chicken is/was fried

chicken be PASS.fry

Tiki nea kerai a mane - The chicken is being fried by the man.

chicken be PASS.fry man



It can be attached to adjectives to form abstract nouns:


ke + biu (beautiful, good-looking) -> kebiu - beauty (in the sense of an abstract quality, rather than 'a beautiful person', which would be tiabiu or tiaoka biu)

Reflexive clauses

The reflexive pronoun is se:


Te ta ruko i se - He looked at himself.

3s PST look DAT REFL

Teera ta ruko i se - They looked at themselves.

3:PL PST look DAT REFL


Se need not refer to a third person subject. It can just as well refer back to a first or second person subject, corresponding to 'myself', 'ourselves', 'yourself', or 'yourselves' in English:


Mi ta ruko i se. - I looked at myself.

1s PST look DAT REFL


The reciprocal pronoun is seoa:


Teera ta ruko i seoa. - They looked at each other.

3.PL PST look DAT RECP

Lexicon

Colours

kara - colour

raku - black

witu - white

rei - grey

beu - blue

rinu - green

redu - red

yero - yellow

runo - brown


beuraku - dark blue, black-blue

beuwitu - light blue

Numerals

ei - one

oa - two

kore - three

apa - four

lima - five

sesu - six

sewe - seven

eto - eight

niu - nine

tega - ten

tegaei - eleven (ten one)

tegaoa - twelve (ten two)

etc.


oa tega - twenty (two ten)

kore tega - thirty (three ten)

etc.


apa tegaei - forty-one (four ten one)

apa tegarao - forty-two (four ten two)

etc.


(ei) huna - (one) hundred

(ei) tusa - (one) thousand

(ei) mirione - (one) million

(ei) birione (one) billion (short scale, like English)

(ei) tirione (one) trillion


Cardinal numerals are placed before the noun:

lima tiaoka - five people

sesu katu - six cats


Ordinal numerals are placed after the noun:


katu kore - the third cat

tiaoka oa - the second person


For 'first', You can use either the numeral ei, or the special word mua:


kat ei - the first cat

kat mua - the first cat


Fractionals are formed with osa 'part' + numeral:


osakore - (a) third

ei osakore - one third

oa osakore - two thirds

ei osatega - one tenth

Family

hami - family

hamiaka - extended family, kin

aba - father, uncle

ama - mother, aunt

bote - brother, male cousin

siso - sister, female cousin


See also

Waa-English dictionary