Disclaimer! This language is still under construction and as such is not yet complete.

Introduction

Marèngil is a constructed language inspired by both Elvish and Dwarvish, languages spoken by the elves and dwarves respectively in the fictional world of Middle Earth, invented by J. R. R. Tolkien. Thus, the language is spoken by an elf-like people, but of a more hardy stock, akin to the dwarves. These elves are known as the Lárï, and live in a mountainous, dry, jungle-like region of the planet Arâti. This planet could be likened to Caladan, from Frank Herbert's Dune, with very little deserts or arid, inhospitable biomes. While the words themselves have no correlation to Elvish or Dwarvish, it is intended to mimick it in terms of phonology and syllable and sentence structure. It keeps a similar tonal musicality to Elvish, it also has aspects of the harsher Dwarvish, and with a combined phonetic inventory of the both.

Phonology

IPA Consonants
Labial Dental Alveolar Post-alveolar Palatal Velar Glottal
central lateral
Plosive p   b t   d k   g
Fricative f   v θ   ð s   z ɬ ʃ   ʒ x h
Affricate t͡s t͡ʃ   d͡ʒ
Nasal m n ŋ
Tap/Flap r
Approximant l j w
IPA Vowels
Front Middle Back
Close i   i: u   u:
Near-close ɪ ʊ
Close-mid e   e: ə o   o:
Open-Mid ɛ ʌ
Open a   a:

Romanization

IPA Romanized Consonants
Labial Dental Alveolar Post-alveolar Palatal Velar Glottal
central lateral
Plosive p   b t   d k   g
Fricative f   v th   dh s   z ll sh   zh kh h
Affricate c tl ch   j
Nasal m n ng
Tap/Flap r
Approximant l y w
IPA Romanized Vowels
Front Middle Back
Close i   ï u   ü
Near-close ì ù
Close-mid e   ë è o   ö
Open-Mid à ò
Open a   ä

Orthography

Stress and Vowel Length

Stress in Marêngil is indicated by diacritics above the vowel of the stressed syllable. The stress is most often on the penultimate syllable, but can also occur elsewhere. Likewise, length is also denoted by diacritics. The letter "a" will be used as the placeholder letter for any of the vowels.

  • a (no stress, short)
  • ä (no stress, long)
  • á (stressed, short)
  • â (stressed, long)
  • à (secondary vowel)

This last diacritic shows that the modified vowel takes on a different sound. It is never long, nor is it stressed, and appears infrequently.

Phonotactics

(In Progress)

There are many syllable structures in Marêngil, but with that comes a number of rules.

  • V
  • VC
  • VCC
  • CV
  • CVC
  • CVCC
  • CCVC
  • CCVCC
  • CCCV
  • CCCVC
  • CCCVCC

Rules

  • No more than three consonants can occur next to each other in a single world. (e.g.: VCC+CCVC)
  • No more than two vowels can occur next to each other in a single world. (e.g.: CV+V+VCC)
  • Under no circumstances should two sounds of the same manner of articulation appear adjacent to each other.
  • No consonants of the same place of articulation should appear adjacent to each other, excepting central alveolar consonants.
  • A fricative cannot be in the same consonant cluster an affricate or vise versa.

Morphophonology

Morphology

Syntax

Marêngil is a strictly head-initial language that acquired no changes to this structure. The word order strictly follows order of case; Nom., Acc., Dat., Loc., Gen.


Constituent order

Noun phrase

Verb phrase

Sentence phrase

Dependent clauses

Example texts

Other resources