Latest posts: questions.
Table of Contents
- Phonology
- Word formation
- Pronouns and ki
- Clause types (matrix clauses)
- Resultatives
- More about
resultativesperfectives - Direct objects
- Passives
- Argument raising and impersonal passives
- Subject control; mwi
- Other nonfinite complements; na
- Secondary predicates
- tija "now" and mikwa "already"
- acuta "soon," &c
- Numbers
- Relative clauses, I
- Relative clauses, II
- Relative clauses, III: Correlative clauses
- Ideophones and manner adverbs
- Locative phrases
- Path verbs
- Causatives
- Saying and thinking
- Focus, I: The why
- Focus, II: The how
- Partial reduplication
- ki, the definite determiner
- Locative subjects
- Raising and control, again
- Resultatives, again
- Stress basics
- Some morphophonology
- Phonological do-over
- Clitics
- Compounds
- Telicity, aspect, applicatives, focus...
- Questions
Hi everybody! Here's a thread I'll be using to sort out ideas for a language I've been working on; hopefully it'll be interesting to someone other than me.
First, a quick aside: I've been lurking hereabouts for quite a while now, but only recently started commenting, after the move to the new board. I'll post a proper introduction over on the census thread once life settles down a bit; for now I guess you can call me Akam.
Anyway, the language I'll be posting about here is called Akiatu
Long overdue update: actually that should be /akijatu/ [ˌä.kˣɪˈjäː.tʊ]. I can't have thought it should actually be /akjatu/ for more than a day or two, to be honest.
The Akiatu people live near the mouth of a major river in an imaginary world. I'm a bit hesitant to say much about their society and situation, because my background is so far pretty thin on relevant geological, environmental, technological, and anthropological issues. But for concreteness I'll be assuming that the Akiatu live in about a dozen permanent settlements, mostly surrounded by rainforest; they practice shifting cultivation, and fish with stone-tipped spears. Sample sentences will mention yams, canoes, ancestral spirits, and maybe ancient giants. The implied social structure will be dominated by clan mothers, male village heads, and complicatedly gendered shamans. The Akiatu will (I'll assume) be linked to neighbouring (and not-so-neighbouring) peoples by trade and ritual networks of various sorts.
The broader context is an unnamed subcontinent together with a long looping chain of volcanic islands off to the west. The Akiatu were among the first human settlers of this subcontinent, and as far as my larger project is concerned their language is a diachronic starting point. So: hopefully I can at least some of the time make Akiatu seem like a language with a history, but telling that history is not one of my goals here; and I'll make some design decisions with the aim of opening up interesting and divergent possibilities for daughter languages.
One such design decision that I made early on was that Akiatu would be ruthlessly analytic, and we'll see how that plays out. As it happens, three of the languages I know best are English, Mandarin, and classical Chinese, and those are nicely analytic---so those are likely to be the main natlang inspirations for this language.
Here are some other broad features of the language. It mostly patterns as a VO language, with the big exception that objects will precede verbs (admittedly I'm wavering on this one, have to sort out information structure before I'll be sure). Aspect distinctions are drawn in a variety of periphrastic ways, many of them not really grammaticalised; tense is expressed, if at all, by standard temporal adverbs. Animacy, definiteness, and specificity all play important roles in the syntax, though there are no markers specifically for those categories. The language is pro-drop (in fact argument drop). There are few ambitransitive verbs, at least two ways to form passives, and also an antipassive, which serves syntactic as well as pragmatic purposes, though the language's alignment is nom/acc. Verb chains are common. There's a closed class of about 15 pure adjectives. There's a lot of topicalisation and subordination (and a lot of topicalisation of subordinate clauses). Explicit complementisers do a lot of work, even in matrix clauses, a bit like taking Mandarin's sentence-final particles and putting them at the start of the clause.
Here goes...