Hyperborean Code: Difference between revisions

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{{Construction}}
{{Construction}}
{{Infobox language
|image            = Mercator Septentrionalium Terrarum descriptio.jpg
|imagesize        = 300px
|imagecaption      = An arctic continent on the [[w:Gerardus Mercator|Gerardus Mercator]] map of 1595
|name              = Hyperborean Code
|setting          = Siberia (?)
|speakers          = -
|date              = 2024
|created          = {{gcl|c.|circa}} 25,000-12,000 BP
|familycolor      = [[Pangaean Code]]
|fam2              = [[Diluvian Code]]
|ancestor          = Paleolithic Code
|creator          = Veno
|script1          = Latn
|map              = Hyperborean.jpg
|mapcaption        = Map of areas where the Hyperborean Code is believed to have once been spoken
|notice=IPA
}}


The Hyperborean Code is ...
'''Hyperborean''' is a [[Philosophical language|philosophical]] [[ab interiori language]] of the [[w:mesolithic|Mesolithic]] that consists of a scheme of templates through [[w:Polysynthesis|polysynthesis]]. Its creator, [[User:Veno|Veno]], named the [[Paleolithic Code]] as such due the similarity with the Muskogean, Salishan, Athabaskan, Yeniseian, Northwest-Caucasian, and other linguistic families mainly from Siberia and North-America.


==Introduction==
==Introduction==
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Template of 9 positions...
''adļandļ'' /ət͡ɬˀənt͡ɬ/, an adjective describing ''adļandļs'' /ət͡ɬˀənt͡ɬs/ "X that is not a right/property", from ''dļas'' /t͡ɬˀəs/ "obligation/ownership"
''śaškhpáļ'' "I will kill you"
''kʷˀ-n'' "dog"
''kʷˀ-ŋχʲ'' "rain"
''t͡sʲˀ-k'' "stone"
''-χʷˀ-'' "house"
Diluvian ''nacar'' "familiarity, norms, people" > Hyperboran ''nas'' /nˀəs/ "people"
Diluvian ''hecar'' "wind" > Hyperboran ''ngias'' /ŋkʲˀəs/ "wind"
> [adaptation] > ''-gci-'' /kˀt͡sˀʲ/ > [stabilization] > ''ciax'' /t͡sˀʲəks/ "stone"
Diluvian ''da'' "movement" > Hyperboran ''nda'' /ntə/
nxia /ŋχʲʰəʔ/ "X moves"
nxiap /ŋχʲʰəpˀ/ "a wrappable long material moves"
nxiat /ŋχʲʰətˀ/ "a slender stiff object moves"
nxiakt /ŋχʲʰəkˀtˀ/ "a pasta-like material moves"
nxial /ŋχʲʰəlˀ/ "a flexible material moves"
kʷ- action occuring in water [locative affix]
-kʷ object is liquid [adjective affix]
tʲ + s = tʃ
t + s = ts
tʷ + s = tʂ
Fusions
j + ɬ = ʎ
Reductions
t͡s - s = θ


''vaļ''
''vaļ''


švadļ
''śkwądls''<br>
ʂ-kʷˀ-(∅)-ə̃-(∅)-tɬ-s
á progressive
à past inconclusive
ā̀ past conclusive
∅ present iconclusive
á future inconclusive ā̀
ā́ future conclusive
/aː/ /áː/ /àː/ /âː//ãː/ /ã́ː/ /ã̀ː/ /ã̂ː//aːʔ/ /áːʔ/ /àːʔ/ /âːʔ//ãːʔ/ /ã́ːʔ/ /ã̀ːʔ/ /ã̂ːʔ/


švadļ
ļ + s = ļ


ś /ʂ/ [1s] š /ʃ/ [2s] s /s/ [3]


''śqua'' "you speak"


There are 4 classifiers (*∅, *d, *ļ, and *dļ), but two of their forms require the generic subject *s [-4] in order to represent the 6 voices:
''qua'' /qˀʷəˀ/ "he/she/it experiences the saying" [experimental voice]
''quad'' [passive voice]
''squad'' [passive-obligative voice]
''quaļ'' [medio-passive voice]
''squaļ'' [active voice]
''quadļ'' [active-obligative voice]


<ļ> + <s> = <ļ>
{| class="wikitable" style="width:100%"
! colspan="9" align="center"| Conjunct
|-
| align="center"| -4
| align="center"| -3
| align="center"| -2
| align="center"| -1
| align="center"| 0
| align="center"| 1
| align="center"| 2
| align="center"| 3
| align="center"| 4
|-
| align="center"| Subject
| align="center"| Biradical Root
| align="center"| ?
| align="center"| Animacy
| align="center"| Tense / Aspect / Number
| align="center"| Voice / Subject / Negation
| align="center"| Subject
| align="center"| Biradical Root
| align="center"| Function
|}


==Syntax==
==Syntax==
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<!-- An example of a translated or unique text written in your language. Again, it is recommended that you make sure that the phonology, constraints, phonotactics and grammar are more or less finished before writing. -->
<!-- An example of a translated or unique text written in your language. Again, it is recommended that you make sure that the phonology, constraints, phonotactics and grammar are more or less finished before writing. -->
==Other resources==
==Other resources==
<!-- Example: Word order, qualifiers, determinatives, branching, etc. -->
The Na-Dene Languages, a Preliminary Report; E. Sapir; American Anthropologist, New Series, Vol. 17, No. 3 (Jul. - Sep., 1915), pp. 534-558 (25 pages).
 


<!-- Template area -->