Waa: Difference between revisions

From FrathWiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
 
(192 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 6: Line 6:


|morph=analytic
|morph=analytic
|ms=neutral
|ms=ergative
|wo=SVO
|wo=VSO, OVS, SVO
|creator=[[User:Warakemau|Xing]]}}
|creator=[[User:Warakemau|Xing]]}}


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


==Phonology==
==Phonology==
Line 21: Line 21:
   ! Alveolar
   ! Alveolar
   ! Palatal
   ! Palatal
   ! Velar
   ! Velar or glottal
   |-
   |-
   ! Voiceless stops
   ! Voiceless stops
   | p
   | p
   | t
   | t
   |
   |  
   | k
   | k
   |-
   |-
Line 34: Line 34:
   |
   |
   |  
   |  
  |-
  ! Voiceless fricatives
  |
  | s
  |
  | h
   |-
   |-
   ! Nasals
   ! Nasals
Line 41: Line 47:
   | ŋ
   | ŋ
   |-
   |-
   ! Taps/flaps/trills
   ! Trills
   |
   |
   | r
   | r
   |
   |
   |
   |
Line 56: Line 62:


/j/ is written ''y'', and /ŋ/ ''g''. Otherwise, the phonemes follow their 'expected' spelling according to the IPA.
/j/ is written ''y'', and /ŋ/ ''g''. Otherwise, the phonemes follow their 'expected' spelling according to the IPA.


===Vowels===
===Vowels===
Line 74: Line 79:
   |-
   |-
   ! Open
   ! Open
 
   | colspan="2" | a~ɑ
   | 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==
==Basic Phrases==
Line 96: Line 97:


'''katu witu''' - a/the white cat(s)
'''katu witu''' - a/the white cat(s)
cat white


'''huno maka''' - a/the large dog(s)
'''huno maka''' - a/the large dog(s)


dog large


==Pronouns==
==Pronouns==
Line 107: Line 111:
'''yu''' you (singular)
'''yu''' you (singular)


'''kia''' he, she, it  
'''te''' he, she, it
 
'''tenaa''' that one
 
'''tenei''' thisone


'''miera''' we
'''miera''' we
Line 113: Line 121:
'''yuera''' you (plural)
'''yuera''' you (plural)


'''kiaera''' or '''kiakia''' they
'''teera''' they


'''teeranaa''' those ones


A pronoun placed right after a noun can serve as a possessive pronoun:
'''teeranei''' these ones




'''katu mi''' - my cat


'''huno kia''' - her/his dog


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


==Simple clauses==
'''ei mea''' - something (lit. 'one thing')


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


The basic word-order is SVO, or just SV in intransitive clauses:


==Simple clauses==


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


One basic - though not the only - word-order is S.V.O. - Subject - Verb - Object.


'''Mi kopa katu''' I'm buying the cat


'''Katu e sewa.''' - The cat is sleeping. The cat will sleep.


Adjectives can serve as predicates. There are optionally introduced by the copula '''nea'' 'to be':
cat NPST sleep


'''Katu ta sewa.''' - The cat was sleeping.


'''Katu witu.''' Or: '''Katu nea witu''' - The cat is white.
cat PST sleep


'''Katu ta itu muso.''' - The cat ate the mouse.


'''Nea''' can also introduce prepositional phrases as predicates:
cat PST eat mouse




'''Katu nea i tebo.''' - The cat is on the table
==Embedded clauses==




'''Nea''' is optional when it comes to nominal predicates:
Relative clauses are introduced by '''ae''':


'''Kia tiatisu.''' - He is a teacher.


'''Kia nea tiatisu.''' - He is a teacher.
'''Katu ae mi kopa.''' - The cat that I bought.


==Prepositions==
cat that 1s buy


'''Katu ae bita kia.''' - The cat that bit her.


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.


Complement clauses are introduced by '''ge''':


===The dative/locative===


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


1s PST see that 3s buy cat


'''Mi wae ge kia kopa katu.''' - I want him to buy the cat.


'''I''' can be used to indicate various form of (spatial) location, as well as goal, destination or recipient.
1s want that 3s buy cat




'''katu i tebo''' - the cat on the table
==Prepositions==


'''rumo i huso''' - the room(s) in the house


'''tebo i rumoitu''' - the table in the dining room
There are two basic, simple prepositions: '''a''' 'of', 'by', 'from', and '''i''' 'in', 'on', 'at', 'to'.


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


'''Tuku meku i kapikulu.''' - Put the milk in the fridge.
'''katu a kia''' - his cat


'''Kiwe buku i mi.''' - Give me the book.
cat GEN 3s


'''Katu ta kee a huso.''' - The cat came from the house.


cat PST come ABL hous


===The instrumental/ablative===
'''Kia ta padedu katu a hama.''' - He killed the cat with the hammer.


3s PST kill cat INSTR hammer


'''Katu ta kou i rumohaya.''' - The cat went to the kitchen.


cat PST go DAT kitchen


'''A''' can be used to indicate source, means, etc.
'''Kia ta ruko i yu.''' - She looked at you.


3s PST look DAT 2s


'''Kia kee a paiboa.''' - He came from the village.
'''Katu e nea i tebo.''' - The cat is on the table.


'''Kia padedu katu a korokutu.''' - He killed the cat with a knife.
cat NPST be LOC table




'''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==
These can be combined with locational and other nouns to indicate more precise relations.




A clause is negated by '''kuo''':




'''Katu kuo sewa.''' - The cat is not sleeping


==Lexicon==


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.


===Colours===


'''Katu sewa?''' - Is the cat sleeping?


'''Io. Katu sewa.''' - Yes. The cat is sleeping.
'''kara''' - colour


'''Kuo. Katu kuo sewa.''' - No. The cat isn't sleeping.
'''raku''' - black


'''Katu kuo sewa?''' - Isn't the cat sleeping?
'''witu''' - white


'''Io. Katu kuo sewa.''' - No. The cat isn't sleeping.
'''rei''' - grey


'''Kuo. Katu sewa.''' - Yes. The cat is sleeping.
'''beu''' - blue


'''rinu''' - green


'''redu''' - red


==Adjectives==
'''yero''' - yellow


'''runo''' - brown


Adjectives go after the words they modify:


'''Katu miti''' - a/the small cat
'''beuraku''' - dark blue, black-blue


'''Huno maka''' - a/the large dog
'''beuwitu''' - light blue


===Numerals===


Adjectives as predicates are optionally introduced by the copula ''nea'':


'''ei''' - one


'''Katu (nea) miti''' - The cat is small.
'''oa''' - two


'''kore''' - three


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.
'''apa''' - four


'''lima''' - five


Another way to introduce adjective predicates is to us a demonstrative or a possessive pronoun:
'''sesu''' - six


'''sewe''' - seven


'''Katu miti mi''' - my small cat  vs. '''Katu mi miti''' - My cat is small.
'''eto''' - eight


'''Katu miti naa''' - that small cat vs. '''Katu naa miti''' - That cat is small.
'''niu''' - nine


'''tega''' - ten


There are a couple of ways to form comparisons. One can mark the standard to which something is compared with ''a'':
'''tegaei''' - eleven (ten one)


'''tegaoa''' - twelve (ten two)


'''Katu nea miti a huno.''' - The cat is smaller than the dog. (Lit. 'The cat is small from the dog.')
etc.




Another way is to use two adjacent clauses:


'''oa tega''' - twenty (two ten)


'''Katu nea miti huno nea maka.''' - The cat is smaller than the dog. (Lit. 'The cat is small the dog is  big.')
'''kore tega''' - thirty (three ten)


etc.


To express that something is ''as (adj.) as ...'':




'''Katu nea maka huno.''' - The cat is as big as the dog.
'''apa tegaei''' - forty-one (four ten one)


'''apa tegaoa''' - forty-two (four ten two)


==Possession==
etc.




The possessor is placed after the possessum:


'''(ei) huna''' - (one) hundred


'''katu mi''' - my cat
'''(ei) tusa''' - (one) thousand


'''huno ota''' - (the) father's dog
'''(ei) mirione''' - (one) million


'''katu ota mi''' my father's cat
'''(ei) birione''' (one) billion (short scale, like English)


'''(ei) tirione''' (one) trillion


===Predicative possession===




Cardinal numerals are placed before the noun:


'''Katu naa nea katu mi.''' That cat is mine (Lit. 'That cat is my cat.')
'''lima tiaoka''' - five people


'''Nea katu mi.''' That cat is mine. ('There a cat of mine')
'''sesu katu''' - six cats




Ordinal numerals are placed after the noun:


==Tense==


'''katu kore''' - the third cat


Tense is not obligatory. A simple clause might interpreted as past, present, or future, depending on the context.
'''tiaoka oa''' - the second person




'''Katu itu musu.''' - The cat ate the mouse, the cat is eating the mouse, the cat will eat the mouse etc.
For 'first', You can use either the numeral '''ei''', or the special word '''mua''':


'''Katu sewa.''' - The cat is sleeping, the cat has slept, etc.


'''kat ei''' - the first cat


Ways to indicate tense include explicit temporal adverbs:
'''kat mua''' - the first cat




'''Ina katu sewa.''' - Now the cat is sleeping.
Fractionals are formed with '''osa''' 'part' + numeral:


'''Katu sewa ina.''' - The cat is sleeping now.


'''Deinei mi kopa katu.''' - Today I bought/will buy a cat.
'''osakore''' - (a) third


'''Deipasu mi kopa katu.''' - Yesterday I bought the cat.
'''ei osakore''' - one third


'''oa osakore''' - two thirds


'''ei osatega''' - one tenth


'''Pasu''' may be used to indicate past tense:
===Family===




'''Katu pasu sewa.''' - The cat slept. the cat was sleeping, the cat has slept. ('the cat is past sleeping'
'''hami''' - family


'''hamiaka''' - extended family, kin


'''Mi pasu kopa katu.''' - I bought a cat.
'''aba''' - father, uncle


'''ama''' - mother, aunt


The verb/particle '''redi''' ('already, to be finished doing', 'to have done') may serve to indicate something like the perfect tense/aspect:
'''bote''' - brother, male cousin


'''siso''' - sister, female cousin


'''Mi redi kopa katu.''' - I have (already) bought a cat.'
==See also==


'''Katu redi sewa.''' - The cat hasn't (yet) slept.
'''Katu kuo redi sewa.''' - The cat hasn't slept.
The adverb '''taa''' 'then' may be placed before the predicate, in order to render a past tense meaning:
'''Mi taa kopa katu.''' - I bought a cat.
==Relative clauses==
Relative clauses are introduced with the particle '''ae''':
'''Mene ae kopa katu.''' - The man that bought the cat.
'''Katu ae kia kopa.''' - The cat that he bought.
If the relativized noun is introduced by a preposition - '''i''' or '''a''' - it must be represented by a pronoun in the relative clause:
'''Korokutu ae kia padedu katu a kia. - The knife that he killed the cat with.
'''Mene ae mi kiwe katu i kia.''' - The man that I gave the cat to.
Prepositional stranding is not allowed:
'''*Mene ae mi kiwe katu i.'''
==See also==


[[Waa-English dictionary]]
[[Waa-English dictionary]]

Latest revision as of 02:32, 9 May 2025





Leopardcivilflag.png
Waa
Pronounced: waː, wɑ:
Typology
Morphological type: analytic
Morphosyntactic alignment: ergative
Basic word order: VSO, OVS, 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
Trills r
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

One basic - though not the only - word-order is S.V.O. - Subject - Verb - Object.


Katu e sewa. - The cat is sleeping. The cat will sleep.

cat NPST sleep

Katu ta sewa. - The cat was sleeping.

cat PST sleep

Katu ta itu muso. - The cat ate the mouse.

cat PST eat mouse


Embedded clauses

Relative clauses are introduced by ae:


Katu ae mi kopa. - The cat that I bought.

cat that 1s buy

Katu ae bita kia. - The cat that bit her.


Complement clauses are introduced by ge:


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

1s PST see that 3s buy cat

Mi wae ge kia kopa katu. - I want him to buy the cat.

1s want that 3s buy cat


Prepositions

There are two basic, simple prepositions: a 'of', 'by', 'from', and i 'in', 'on', 'at', 'to'.


katu a kia - his cat

cat GEN 3s

Katu ta kee a huso. - The cat came from the house.

cat PST come ABL hous

Kia ta padedu katu a hama. - He killed the cat with the hammer.

3s PST kill cat INSTR hammer

Katu ta kou i rumohaya. - The cat went to the kitchen.

cat PST go DAT kitchen

Kia ta ruko i yu. - She looked at you.

3s PST look DAT 2s

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

cat NPST be LOC table



These can be combined with locational and other nouns to indicate more precise relations.



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 tegaoa - 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