Naeng
- This article describes Modern Windermere. See Windermere for Classical Windermere.
| Modern Windermere | |
|---|---|
| չէıɱ Ғ·ɟ˫ƍ brits Dămea | |
| Created by | IlL, Praimhín |
| Setting | Verse:Tricin |
| Native speakers | 270 million (13b0dd) |
Lakovic
| |
Modern Windermere arose from the vernacular of Imperial Windermere settlers in Mategia and Bjeheond. Today Windermere is widespread in Bjeheond and Talma, being spoken in the USB, Tumhan, Mategia, Wen Dămea, and in former Windermere colonies in Txapoalli; with 270 million native speakers, it is the fifth most widely spoken native language and the most widely spoken Lakovic language. In Talma, Modern Windermere forms a dialect continuum with other descendants of Classical Windermere.
Todo
Accents in Windermere
- Fincreaș
- Rural Fincreaș
- Standard Mategian
- Standard Wen Dămea
- Other Wen Dămea accents
- Sătmaș
- Chăloa
- Prucüew
Some accent should have th = Basque z, s = Basque s
Drel ya-rie srüe thăgem mărit e łen = Come with me if you want to live
Diachronics
Phonological history
- In Talman Windermere, ə > 0 after aspirated consonants and fricatives. This makes the voicing alternation in the Classical Wdm. spirants f and th phonemic.
- l > ʟ in the Wen Dămea dialect
- Classical Windermere *ts and *tł merged into "ts", while ł shifted to /ɬ/
Grammatical history
- Aspect largely becomes a derivational device, cf. the development of PIE aspects
- Tense particles, from Hlou influence
Phonology
Consonants
| Labial | Alveolar | Lateral | Palatal | Velar | Glottal | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nasal | m /m/ | n /n/ | ng /ŋ/ | ||||
| Plosive | voiced | b /b/ | d /d/ | g /g/ | |||
| voiceless | p /p/ | t /t/ | c /k/ | ' /ʔ/ | |||
| Affricate | ts /ts/ | ||||||
| Fricative | spirant | f /f~v/ | th /θ~ð/ | ch /x/ | |||
| nonspirant | s /s/ | ł /ɬ/ | ș /ʃ/ | h /h/ | |||
| Resonant | w /w/ | r /r/ | l /l~ʟ/ | y /j/ | |||
Voiceless plosives are aspirated in all dialects unless word-final or following a fricative. However the aspiration tends to be weaker in preinitial syllables.
Vowels
| Front | Central | Back | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| unrounded | rounded | |||
| Close | i /i/ | ü /y/ | [ɨ] | u /u/ |
| Near-close | ie /iə/ | üe /yə/ | ua /uə/ | |
| Close-mid | e, ä /e/ | ă /ə/ | o /o/ | |
| Open-mid | ea /ɛ~eə/ | oo /ɔ~oə/ | ||
| Open | a /ɐ/ | |||
Stress
Stress is almost always final, but can be non-final in function words.
Phonotactics
Allowed initial clusters in roots are the same as in Classical Windermere with the addition of pd, pg, tb, tg, cb, cd.
Accents
- Main article: Windermere/Modern/Accents
Parts of speech
Nouns
There are two articles: the definite article fi and the specific article se. Prepositions:
șa- = lative
ay = vocative (archaic)
nie = like
Pronouns
Łənam (capitalized) is used as a very respectful 2nd person pronoun.
The Classical gendered demonstratives seb/ses and fin/fis have been lost.
Verbs
Verbs are not conjugated, but are used with auxiliaries.
Adjectives
The comparative is formed with rech + adjective and the superlative is formed with hă'et + adjective.
- to = good
- rech to = better
- hă'et to = best
Pre-verbal particles
- chmi = progressive
- chea = past
- per = future
- tso = past progressive
- fa = perfect
- chea fa = past perfect etc.
- thăgem = desiderative (want to)
- future progressive? analytic constructions for other aspects like inchoative/inceptive, frequentative, telic ...?
Other particles
- eth = it does, doesn't it?
Derivation
- TODO: another nominalizer?
- ‹i› = nominalizer for underived verbs
- bin- = nominalizer for derived verbs
- hăl- = nominalizer for adjectives
- sa- = nominalizer
- di- = negation
- ing- = verbalizer
- mo- (+ voicing of plosives) = adjectivizer
- lă = verbalizer (how productive?)
- yă- = adjectivizer
- nu- = agentive (Classical Windermere; and productive to an extent in Modern Windermere)
- pa- = patientive (from Old Windermere *p + *ha)
- ⟨năr⟩ = a result/state (which becomes another adjectivizer?)
- Că(syllable S) -> Că(S reduced)(S) = diminutive
- yar = flower > yăryar 'little flower'
- Head-initial concatenation. Common concatenated morphemes:
- hălwier = '-logy' (lit. 'beauty of')
- wang = 'matter, affairs'
- ngoth = 'manner, way'
- sces = 'style of, à la'
- ăma = 'proto, ur-' (lit. 'mother of')
"Trigger" verb affixes
These were originally trigger affixes but had become derivational affixes to derive verbs by Classical Windermere times.
- ‹ăn/ăng› = Applicative trigger
- ‹ith› = Locative trigger
- ‹ăw› = Instrumental trigger
- ‹ăfong› = Destination trigger
- răfongüe 'to endow' < rüe 'to give'
- ‹ălis› = Comitative trigger
- ‹ăm› = Source/cause trigger
- ‹ăchem› = Benefactive/purpose trigger
- ‹ărea› = Malefactive trigger
Lexical aspect affixes
Classical Windermere aspects became derivational, analogous to how PIE aspects became lexical in daughter IE languages. This mirrors the development in other Talman Lakovic languages but Windermere has been the most heavily affected.
Reduplicant uses 1st consonant (F) or last consonant (L)
- imperfective/stative = unmarked; marked with li- for others
- perfective = unmarked for some verbs but marked with em- for others
- prospective = hef- (closest equivalent of future tense)
- momentane = pla-
- progressive = ăL-
- gnomic = FăL-
- frequentative = eNFă-
- inchoative/inceptive = osăL-
- graduative = tăFa-
Syntax
SVO; VSO in subordinate clauses with the subject marked with e-; but subordinate clauses are SVO when marked with the complementizer nga
- Riə chmi brits cədes cə'üs tes tsəctsoc.
- 1SG PROG speak about-SPEC love and-SPEC hate
- I speak of love and hate.
- Fi rüəch chmi tsrin se troəs.
- DEF bird PROG eat SPEC seed
- The bird is eating a seed.
Vocabulary
Modern Windermere contains more Talmic and Hlou-Shum loanwords than Classical Windermere; even derivational affixes have been borrowed. In modern times, many Eevo loans are entering the language.
Sample texts
UDHR
in Bjeheondian Windermere:
Tsor croth fa ășeal pluam te thür mis hăltlas tes imłin. Ănam hac răfongüe yas hălpăthin tes hălslith'a, te pdar thunoa e 'nam tănse fidoan măceaf nătha mis șăgor chasräf.
(Mategian) [ts̠or̥ kʰr̥oθ fä ʔɘˈʂeəl pʰluəm tʰe θyr mis̠ hɘlˈtʰläs̠ tʰes̠ ʔimˈɬin ‖ ʔɘnäm häk rɘvoˈŋyə jäs̠ hɘlpɘˈðin tʰes̠ hɘls̠liθˈʔa, tʰe pʰɘ̥d̥ar̥ θuˈnoə ʔe näm tʰɘ̥ˈns̠e fiˈd̥oən mɘˈkʰeəv nɘˈðä mis̠ ʂəˈɣor̥ xɘs̠ˈræf]
(Wen Dămea) [tso̞:r kʰr̥o̞:θ fä əˈʃeːɤˁ pʰχˁuəm tʰe̞ θy:r mis hɤˁˈtʰχˁɑs tʰe̞s imˈɬi:n ‖ ənä:m häk rəvo̞ˈŋyə jäs hɤˁpəˈðin tʰe̞s hɘlsʁˁiθˈʔa, tʰe̞ pʰta:r θuˈnoə ʔe̞ nä:m tʰnse̞: fiˈdoən məˈkʰeəv nəˈðä: mis ʃko̞:r xəsˈre:v]
Imthumăytil
This passage is from the Imthumăytil Păchac, a retranslation of the Imthumăytil into Modern Windermere by Yăchef Clay.
Mi ngith doan dur e tach imchäth mis mogor litheath. Pda Brăwied fa wiets: "Mea ra łănam runse?"
Swe mot chmi nung ef imchäth nătha, doan fa că'aw: "Tathaf stiw! Ruay immognas tach runse, te immălin thaf müets, te imchustiw răthaf..."
Łop Pda Brăwied fa wiets: "Ăna, mea ra chmi, srüe hădean e do croth hiboath?"
Ăfifay că'aw e fid: "Lea die placănărlu, Pda? Bang ruay tsor tăy'uag paleac, sach se făbeang imtăy'uag nătha yaf croth mălem!"
Once, six children were in a round table. Master Brăwied asked them: "How many of you are here?"
While the others were still counting, one child replied: "Sixty-three! 6 individuals, 15 teams of two, 20 teams of 3, ..."
Then Master Brăwied asked: "Well then, how many people will be there if another person enters?"
He nonchalantly responded: "Isn't it obvious, Master? Here we have all of the old teams, as well as another set of teams with the new person!"