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


==Simple clauses==
==Simple clauses==




The basic 'neutral' word-order is usually VS or VSO.
One basic - though not the only - word-order is S.V.O. - Subject - Verb - Object.




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


NPST sleep cat
cat NPST sleep


'''Ta sewa katu.''' - The cat slept
'''Katu ta sewa.''' - The cat was sleeping.


PST sleep cat
cat PST sleep


'''E kopa a mi kat''' I'm buying the cat
'''Katu ta itu muso.''' - The cat ate the mouse.


NPST buy ERG 1 cat
cat PST eat mouse


'''Ta kopa a mi katu.''' - I bought a cat.


PST buy ERG 1 cat
==Embedded clauses==




Adjectives can serve as predicates  together with the copula '''nea''':
Relative clauses are introduced by '''ae''':




'''E nea rei katu.''' - The cat is grey.
'''Katu ae mi kopa.''' - The cat that I bought.


NPST be grey cat
cat that 1s buy


'''Ta nea runo huno.''' - The dog was brown.
'''Katu ae bita kia.''' - The cat that bit her.


PST be brown dog


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




The copula can also introduce a prepositional predicate:
'''Mi ta siu ge kia kopa katu.''' - I saw that he bought the cat.


1s PST see that 3s buy cat


'''E nea i tebo katu.''' - The cat is on the table.
'''Mi wae ge kia kopa katu.''' - I want him to buy the cat.
be LOC table cat


1s want that 3s buy cat


Or a nominal predicate:
'''E nea katu kia.''' - He is a cat.
===Non verb-initial sentences===
Something other than a verb or predicate may begin the sentence:
'''Deikee e kopa a mi katu.''' - Tomorrow I'll buy a cat.
tomorrow NPST buy ERG 1s cat
'''Katu e kopa a mi. ''' - I'll buy the cat.
cat NPST buy ERG 1s
'''Mi e kopa katu.''' - I'll buy a cat.
1s NPST buy cat


==Prepositions==
==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.
There are two basic, simple prepositions: '''a''' 'of', 'by', 'from', and '''i''' 'in', 'on', 'at', 'to'.
 
 
 
===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 man in the house
 
man LOC house
 
'''tebo i rumoitu''' - the table in the dining room
 
table LOC room:eat
 
'''Nea tebo i rumoitu.''' - The table is in the dining room.
 
table be LOC room:eat
 
'''Tuko meku 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
 
'''Ta kou teera i paiboa.''' - They went to the village
 
PSR go 3:PL DAT place:live
 
'''E sewa huno i roo.''' - The dog is sleeping on the floor.
 
NPST sleep dog LOC 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'
'''katu a kia''' - his cat


==Negations and questions==
cat GEN 3s


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


A clause is negated by '''ku''', which is placed right before the verb:
cat PST come ABL hous


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


'''E ku sewa katu.''' - The cat is not sleeping
3s PST kill cat INSTR hammer


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


NPST NEG sleep cat
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.


A yes/no-question may be formed by rising intonation. To respond to a question, you use '''ai''' for agreement, and '''ku''' or '''kuai''' for disagreement.
cat NPST be LOC table




'''E sewa katu?''' - Is the cat sleeping?


sleep cat


'''Ai. E sewa katu.''' - Yes. The cat is sleeping.


agree NPST sleep cat
These can be combined with locational and other nouns to indicate more precise relations.


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


NEG:agree NPST NEG sleep cat




'''E ku sewa katu?''' - Isn't the cat sleeping?
NPST NEG sleep cat
'''Ai. E ku sewa katu.''' - No. The cat isn't sleeping.
agree NPST NEG sleep cat
'''Kuai. E sewa katu.''' - Yes. The cat is sleeping.
NEG.agree NPST sleep cat
'''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
'''Ta siu a ku mene mi.''' - Nobody saw me.
PST see ERG NEG person 1s
'''Ta siu a mi ku mene.''' - I haven't seen anybody.
PST see ERG 1s NEG person
'''Ku+ene''' or '''kuene''' is 'never':
'''Ko ta kopa ene a mi katu.''' - I've never bought a cat.
PST NEG buy ever ERG 1s cat
'''Ta kopa kuene a mi katu.''' - I've never bought a cat.
PST buy NEG:ever ERG 1s cat
==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===
'''E nea a mi katu naa.''' That cat is mine
NPST be GEN 1s cat DIST
'''E nea katu a mi.''' I have a cat. ('There is a cat of mine')
NPST be cat GEN 1s
==Conjunctions==
'''e''' - and
'''eo''' - or
'''teya''' - but
==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':
'''Ta siu mi ge kia kopa katu.''' - I saw that he bought the cat.
PST see 1s CONJ 3s buy cat
'''Ta ku wita mi ge te redi selu katu.''' - I didn't know he had (already) sold the cat.
PST NEG know 1s CONJ 2s PRF sell cat
Note that you don't need the ergatve marker when the subject is followed by a complement clause.
==Adverbial clauses==
Temporal adverbial clauses can bi introduced by '''beo''' 'before', '''ata''' 'after' and '''sima''' while', 'when', 'at the same time as':
'''Ta kee te beo mi kou.''' - 'He arrived before I left.
PST come 3s before 1s go
'''Ta kee te ata mi kou.''' - 'He arrived after I had left.'
PST come 3s after 1s leave
'''Ta kee te sima mi itu.''' - 'He arrived when I was eating'
PST come 3s while 1s eat
==Auxiliary verbs==
'''Wae mi kopa katu.''' - I want to by a cat.
want 1s buy cat
'''Kae mi kopa katu.''' - I can buy a cat
can 1s buy cat
'''Nae mi kopa katu.''' - I must/have to buy a cat
must 1s buy cat
'''Mae mi kopa katu.''' - I may (am permitted to) buy a cat.
may 1s buy cat
'''Sae mi kopa katu.''' - I must (am morally obligted to) buy a cat.
must 1s buy cat
==Adverbs of frequemcy==
'''menitima''' often
'''orutima''' always
Adverbs of frequency are usually placed after the verb:
'''E kopa a mi memitima katu niu.'''
1s NPST buy often cat new
'''E sewa katu orutima i roo.''' The cat always sleeps on the floor.
cat NPST sleep alwas LOC floor
==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 e nea kerai''' - the chicken is/was fried
chicken be PASS.fry
'''Tiki e nea kerai a mane''' - The chicken is being fried by the man.
chicken be PASS.fry man
== The prefix kei-==
'''Kei-''' can be attached to adjectives to form abstract nouns:
'''kei''' + '''biu''' (beautiful, good-looking) -> '''keibiu''' - beauty (in the sense of an abstract quality, rather than 'a beautiful person', which would be '''tiabiu''' or '''tiaoka biu''')
'''kei''' + '''bono''' -> '''keibono''' - goodness
==Reflexive clauses==
The reflexive pronoun is '''se''':
'''Ta ruko te i se''' - He looked at himself.
3s PST look DAT REFL
'''Ta ruko teera i se''' - They looked at themselves.
PST look 3..PL 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:
'''Ta ruko mi i se.''' - I looked at myself.
PST look 1s DAT REFL
The reciprocal pronoun is '''seoa''':
'''Ta ruko teera i seoa.''' - They looked at each other.
3.PL PST look DAT RECP


==Lexicon==
==Lexicon==
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'''apa tegaei''' - forty-one (four ten one)
'''apa tegaei''' - forty-one (four ten one)


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


etc.
etc.
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'''siso''' - sister, female cousin
'''siso''' - sister, female cousin


==See also==
==See also==

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