Silvinian

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Silvinian
Nyilvö
Pronounced: [ɲil.ʋə˦˨]
Writing system: Latin
Typology
Morphological type: Agglutinative
Morphosyntactic alignment: Split-S
Basic word order: VOS default, but free word order
Credits
Creator: Koyeniru
Created: 2025

Silvinian (autoglossonym: Nyilvö, Silvinian: [ɲil.ʋə]) is a personal conlang. Therefore, this language was made to express her creator's ideas and thoughts as truthfully and accurately as possible, as well as encompassing as few negative ideas as possible, most of them lacking a separate word, instead mostly relying on particles to express those meanings. Furthermore, this language has no intention of being fully naturalistic, even though some naturalist thinking has been done during the conception of this language.

Grammatically and morphologically speaking, Silvinian is an agglutinative, mostly suffixing VOS language, which makes use of postpositions, and lacks "true" adjectives, a function that is fulfilled by nouns. Verbs in this language have a very strict valency distinction, especially for ambitransitives, that may have two or more forms depending on their valency in-context.

Phonology

Silvinian distinguishes between 16 to 25 consonants, depending on whether allophones are counted or not, though the standard is to consider that there are 18 consonants. Similarly for vowels, Silvinian can be analysed as having between 6 and 8 vowels, where the maximum range (8 vowels) is considered to be the standard analysis.

Consonants

Labial Coronal Dorsal Glottal
Dental Alveolar Palatal[1] Velar
Nasal m n̪~n (ɲ) ŋ
Plosive p t̪~t, d̪~d (c, ɟ) k ʔ
Fricative ɸ (θ, ð)[2] s, z (ʃ, ʒ) x h
Approximant ʋ~w l̪~l (ʎ), j
Rhotic r̪~r
1. a  Palatal consonants (except /j/) are only allophones of coronals (except for [θ] and [ð]) followed by /j/.
2. a  [θ] and [ð] are allophones of intervocalic /t/ and /d/.

Further notes

  • Syllable-final "n" might be dropped, nasalizing the preceding vowel, as in "hatyön", which is pronounced anywhere between [ha.ˈcɵn] and [ha.ˈcɵ̃].
  • Nasal consonants assimilate in place of articulation with the following consonants, and precedes nasalization in rule order, like in "ándyas", pronounced [æːɲ.ɟas], and not *[æ̃ː.ɟas].
    • The cluster [ɲɟ] (or any nasal-plosive cluster) can also be pronounced as a pre-nasalised stop like [ɲɟ].
  • Intervocalic non-geminated plosives lenite into fricatives (see §Consonant lenition for more).

Vowels

Front Central Back
High i, (ɪ)[1] u, (ʊ)[1]
Mid e (ə)[2], ɵ o
Low (æ)[3] a (ɒ)[4]
1. a  b  Short [i] and [u] can be pronounced as [ɪ] and [ʊ]
2. a  [ə] is considered as an alternate realization of short [ɵ], but is also used to "break" some consonant clusters.
3. a  [æ] is considered as an alternate realization of long [a].
4. a  [ɒ] does not exist outside of diphthongs (see §Diphthongs for more).

Vowel length

In Silvinian, every vowel can be long, with length being written with an acute, or with a double acute in the case of "ö".

Furthermore, vowel length is contrastive, meaning that the meaning of a word changes whether a vowel is short or long:

Minimal pairs
Vowel Short vowel Long vowel
Word IPA Meaning Word IPA Meaning
[a~æ] sar [sar] (living) fish sár [sæːr]
[e] cyern [kjern] cyérn [kjeːrn]
[ɪ~i] mit [mɪt]~[mɪθ][1] mít [miːt]~[miːθ][1]
[o] ryon [rjon]~[rjõ] circle ryón [rjoːn]~[rjõ]
[ʊ~u] u [ʊ] ú [uː]
[ə~ɵ] sönt [səⁿt]~[sə̃θ][1] sőnt [sɵːⁿt]~[sɵ̃ːθ][1]
1. a b c d  The second pronunciation for each of those words correspond to the way they are pronounced before vowels.

Diphthongs

In theory, Silvinian has 6 diphthongs, which are:

  • /aj/~/aɪ̯/
  • /ej/~/eɪ̯/
  • /oj/~/oɪ̯/
  • /aw/~/aʊ̯/
  • /ew/~/eʊ̯/
  • /ow/~/oʊ̯/

In non-careful speech, however, some distinctions are loss, and some diphthongs even monophthongize.

Diphthongs in careful and non-careful speech
Careful speech Non-careful speech
/aj/~/aɪ̯/
/ej/~/eɪ̯/ [eː]
/oj/~/oɪ̯/ [ɒj]~[ɒɪ̯] > [aj]~[aɪ̯]
/aw/~/aʊ̯/
/ew/~/eʊ̯/
/ow/~/oʊ̯/ [oː]

Consonant lenition

Vowel-triggered lenition

In most cases, between vowels, plosives lenite and become fricatives, whether within a word (internal lenition) or across word boundaries (external lenition)

Initial Lenited
/p/ [ɸ]
/t/ [θ]
/d/ [ð]
/k/ [x]
Internal

Internal lenition can almost never be blocked, unless adding a "dyerá" just after the consonant, written as an apostrophe. The "dyerá", in this case, acts as an ultrashort schwa, which may or may not be pronounced.

Just like vowel length, lenition also creates minimal pairs, such as with "cadá" (pronounced [kaðæː]) and "cad'á" (pronounced [kad(ə̆)æː]), although those are very much rarer.

External

External lenition (a type of external sandhi) happens when a word ends in VP, and the following word starts with V where:

  • V is a vowel
  • P is a plosive

It can never be blocked, except in very rare cases involving certain particles.

Consonant-triggered lenition

In addition to intervocalic lenition, some consonant-initial words can cause lenition, which, in this case, is very similar to assimilation, and follow the same patterns as intervocalic lenition.

In this case, consonant lenition happens when the word ends in "iP" and the following word starts with "F", where F is a fricative. One very good example of a lenition trigger is the particle "sá", with "fáid sa" being pronounced as [ɸæːjð‿sa]

Phonotactics

Syllable structure

The maximum syllable structure is CSVVC, where:

  • C is a consonant (it can be any sound, as long it doesn't break the following rule)
  • S is an approximant, nasal, plosive (if the previous consonant is a fricative) or rhotic (the only restriction to this is that 2 consonants with the same manner of articulation can't follow each other, so "svei" is valid, but *"mnis" isn't)
  • V is a vowel (the second vowel in a syllable can only be /ɪ/ or /ʊ/ and their long equivalents /iː/ and /uː/)

Word-finally, an additional fricative can be added if the last consonant is a plosive

Pitch accent

Silvinian has a rather complex system of accentuation, with words taking one of 3 tones:

  • Falling tone or dyinás spinyas (litt. tone falling), corresponding to [V˦˨] and written with a grave in tonal orthography (or as a caron if the vowel is long).
  • Rising tone or dyinás kőrisyas (litt. tone standing or tone rising), corresponding to [V˨˦] and written with an underdot in tonal orthography.
  • Creaking tone or dyinás plúyas (litt. tone moving), corresponding to [V̰˦] and written with a tilde in tonal orthography.

Additionally, pitch accent is influenced by a moraic system, with the accent falling on the 4th mora from the start of the word:

  • Syllables with a short vowel count as 1 mora.
  • Syllables with a long vowel or a short diphthong (short vowel + semivowel) count as 2 morae.
  • Syllables with a long diphthong (long vowel + semivowel) count as 3 morae.

If a word has less than 4 morae, however, the accent falls on the last mora of the word.

Pitch accent can also help to differentiate homophones:

Word Tone IPA Meaning
dyócs/dyǒcs Falling [ɟoks˦˨] stone
dyócs/dyó͏̣cs Rising [ɟoks˨˦] fir tree
dyócs/dyṍcs Creaking [ɟo͏̰ks˦] stealth

Furthermore, pitch accent mostly sticks to the root. This means that the pitch accent remains on the root at all costs, even if prefixes might otherwise shift the accent.

Orthography

Letter charts

Silvinian uses 30 letters, with 13 of them representing vowels and 17 letters representing consonants:

Consonants
Letter Name Sound Letter Name Sound
c cás [k] p pás [p]
d dás [d] q qás [ʔ]
f [ɸ] r rái [r]
h [h] s [s]
j [x] t tás [t]
l lái [l] v vái [w]
m [m] y yái [j]
n [n] z [z]
ŋ ŋí [ŋ]
Short vowels
Letter Name Sound
a a [a]
e e [e]
i i [ɪ]
o o [o]
ö ö [ə]
u u [ʊ]
' dyerá [ə̆~∅]
Long vowels
Letter Name Sound
á a táus [æː]
é e táus [eː]
í i táus [iː]
ó o táus [oː]
ő ö táus [ɵː]
ú u táus [uː]

Tonal orthography

Pitch accent is generally not marked when using the base orthography.

However, a special orthography called the tonal orthography is used only to mark pitch accent, and keeps all the other letters from the base orthography.

As stated in §Pitch accent, the tones are written as such:

  • Grave for the "falling tone" (or a caron if the vowel is long
  • Underdot for the "rising tone"
  • Tilde for the "creaking tone"

Capitalization

Silvinian has a very minimal capitalization system. Uppercase letters only appear at the beginning of proper nouns.