Calusto
| Calusto | |
|---|---|
| Kalust | |
| ππππππ | |
| Pronunciation | [ka'lu:sto] |
| CreatedΒ by | Fox Saint-Just |
| Date | 2017 |
| Language codes | |
| CLCR | --- |
Calusto is an a posteriori language created by user Fox Saint-Just in 2017. It is based on Indo-European languages.
Introduction
Calusto was created for a literary project, as an Indo-European language that was lost during the Roman expansion and later artificially reconstructed. Thus, despite having an alphabet derived from Old Italic script and a grammar influenced by Latin, Calusto's vocabulary includes a large amount of words common to the languages of the Silk Road, including Chinese. It can be also written with Coptic alphabet.
Its name derives from the word ππππ for "mist", making the meaning of Calusto close to "misty".
Phonology
Vowels
Calusto has long and short vowels.
| Front | Central | Back | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Close | i iΛ y yΛ1 | u uΛ | |
| Close-mid | e e: ΓΈ | o o: | |
| Open-mid | Ι ΙΛ | Ι2 | Ι ΙΛ |
| Open | a aΛ |
1/y:/ is very rare.
2/Ι/ is not related to a specific letter or combination of letters.
Consonants
| β PoA β Manner |
Labial | Labiodental | Alveolar | Post-alveolar | Palatal | Velar | Glottal | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nasals | π m | π n | ππ Ι²1 | |||||
| Plosives | Voiceless | π p | π t | π k π kΚ· |
||||
| Voiced | π b | π d | π Ι‘ | |||||
| Affricates | ππ ts π dz |
π tΜ Κ ππ dΜ Κ1 |
||||||
| Fricatives | Voiceless | π ΙΈ | π s | π Κ π Κ |
π x | π h | ||
| Voiced | π
v π ΞΈ |
π z | ππ Ι£1 | |||||
| Liquids | π r π l |
ππ Κ1 | ||||||
| Approximants | π j | |||||||
1 Used only in loanwords.
Stress
Generally, words ending in consonant are stressed on the third to last syllable, while words ending in vowels are stressed on the penultimate one.
Orthography
Phonotactics
Morphophonology
Morphology
Calusto has three genders (masculine, feminine, neuter) and five cases (nominative, accusative, genitive, dative, ablative).
Declensions
Nouns and adjective follow a system of five declensions. Few names follow an irregular declension.
The -os declension includes names and adjectives that are mostly masculine. The paradigm is given for the word πππππ ("son").
| Singular | Plural | |
|---|---|---|
| Nominative | πππππ synos |
ππππ syni |
| Accusative | πππππ synon |
ππππππ synous |
| Genitive | ππππ syni |
πππππ synom |
| Dative | ππππ syno |
πππππ synis |
| Ablative | πππππ synod |
ππππππ synois |
The -a declension includes names and adjectives that are mostly feminine. The paradigm is given for the word ππππ ("face").
| Singular | Plural | |
|---|---|---|
| Nominative | ππππ Δera |
πππππ Δerae |
| Accusative | πππππ Δeran |
πππππ Δeras |
| Genitive | πππππ Δeras |
πππππ Δeram |
| Dative | ππππ Δere |
πππππ Δeris |
| Ablative | πππππ Δerad |
ππππππ Δerais |
The consonantic declension is the widest one, as it contains:
- A consonant not already covered by the previous declensions, independently from gender
- Names ending in -is, generally derived from Greek and/or Latin
- Despite its name, nouns and/or adjectives ending in -e or -i
- Nouns ending in -as or Δ
The paradigm is given for the first three cases, with the words ππ ππ ("beast"), ππππππππ ("psychosis") and πππππ ("fast") respectively. Note that several words belonging to this declension show an oblique stem, such as names ending in -Δ (with the genitive singular ending in -atis).
| Singular | Plural | Singular | Plural | Singular | Plural | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nominative | ππ
ππ gver |
ππ
πππ gvers |
ππππππππ psychosis |
ππππππππ psychoses |
πππππ Ε‘igri |
ππππππ Ε‘igres | ||
| Accusative | ππ
ππ gver |
ππ
πππ gvers |
ππππππππ psychosis |
ππππππππ psychoses |
πππππ Ε‘igri |
ππππππ Ε‘igres | ||
| Genitive | ππ
ππππ gveris |
ππ
πππππ gveries |
ππππππππ psychosis |
πππππππππ psychosies |
ππππππ Ε‘igris |
πππππππ Ε‘igries | ||
| Dative | ππ
πππ gvere |
ππ
πππππ gvereis |
πππππππ psychose |
πππππππππ psychoseis |
πππππ Ε‘igre |
πππππππ Ε‘igreis | ||
| Ablative | ππ
ππππ gverei |
ππ
πππππ gvereis |
ππππππππ psychosei |
πππππππππ psychoseis |
ππππππ Ε‘igrei |
πππππππ Ε‘igreis |
The -u declension includes neuter nouns and can be considered the descendant of the Indo-European u-stem. The paradigm is given for the word ππππ ("human being").
| Singular | Plural | |
|---|---|---|
| Nominative | ππππ manu |
πππππ manus |
| Accusative | πππππ manun |
πππππ manus |
| Genitive | πππππ
manuv |
πππππ manum |
| Dative | πππππ manui |
ππππππ manuis |
| Ablative | πππππ manoui |
ππππππ manuis |