Uhm... no, my whole point was that nouns that are predominantly used accustively, are not more marked in the accusative.
JAL
Right, that makes sense. I didn’t notice you were talking about specifically accusative nouns.
Does this depend on what case is used for describing things, e.g. applying adjectives or stative verbs?
Are animates used in the unmarked form? I suspect that this unmarked form may be the naturally unmarked form (absolutive?), in which case the only oddity is having agentive, absolutive and patientive - rather like late Sanskrit's instrumental, nominative and accusative in the past tense. This oddity is a minority taste, but it's well attested and has been quite common in Indo-Iranian - apparently orthogenetic.Akangka wrote: ↑Sun Jul 21, 2019 9:31 pm The problem is in my language, agentive and patientive case is only marked in animate noun. Inanimate noun only receives adverbial marking (i.e. ranges from Instrumental, Locative, and -ly) or patientive case. So, the noun isn't even predominantly used patientively. To be fair, nouns don't receive agentive case unless they have a control about the action. (Exception: verb that is marked causative or beneficial applicative wants the subject to be agentive).
The agentive is originally the unmarked form. And the patientive is originally the marked form (with -i). However, -i causes stress shift and umlaut before it get deleted. In words in form CVCVC where the first two consonant is a voiceless consonant, -i causes first vowel to be dropped, forming CCVC because stress falls in second syllable. However, in agentive noun, CVCVC has no vowel elision (except if the first vowel is high. Apparently in Kayardild, even stressed vowel can be reduced) because stress falls in first syllable. If the two original syllable have different tone, the second syllable is lengthened. (This language doesn't have contour tone in short syllable). Otherwise, it remained short. The adverbial case is marked with -ĩk, and unlike -i, the suffix survived.Richard W wrote: ↑Mon Jul 22, 2019 11:44 amAre animates used in the unmarked form? I suspect that this unmarked form may be the naturally unmarked form (absolutive?), in which case the only oddity is having agentive, absolutive and patientive - rather like late Sanskrit's instrumental, nominative and accusative in the past tense. This oddity is a minority taste, but it's well attested and has been quite common in Indo-Iranian - apparently orthogenetic.Akangka wrote: ↑Sun Jul 21, 2019 9:31 pm The problem is in my language, agentive and patientive case is only marked in animate noun. Inanimate noun only receives adverbial marking (i.e. ranges from Instrumental, Locative, and -ly) or patientive case. So, the noun isn't even predominantly used patientively. To be fair, nouns don't receive agentive case unless they have a control about the action. (Exception: verb that is marked causative or beneficial applicative wants the subject to be agentive).
That reminds me of Hebrew absolute /davar/ 'word' and construct /dvar/. One normally thinks of the absolute as the unmarked from in Hebrew.Akangka wrote: ↑Mon Jul 22, 2019 8:06 pm The agentive is originally the unmarked form. And the patientive is originally the marked form (with -i). However, -i causes stress shift and umlaut before it get deleted. In words in form CVCVC where the first two consonant is a voiceless consonant, -i causes first vowel to be dropped, forming CCVC because stress falls in second syllable. However, in agentive noun, CVCVC has no vowel elision (except if the first vowel is high. Apparently in Kayardild, even stressed vowel can be reduced) because stress falls in first syllable. If the two original syllable have different tone, the second syllable is lengthened. (This language doesn't have contour tone in short syllable). Otherwise, it remained short. The adverbial case is marked with -ĩk, and unlike -i, the suffix survived.
The allophonic [u] is a typo, though (/ɯ/ is written as <u> in standard orthography). My plan is actually to make /ɯ/ turn into /u/ next to labialized velar. The /a/ is necessary, because the only diphthong that combines with /ɯ/ in this language is /a/.Pabappa wrote: ↑Thu Jul 25, 2019 11:08 am Both of those sound fine although I'd think the /ʷɯ/ sequence would be phonetically close to [ʷu] if there is no contrasting bare /u/. It looks like you even have some plans for an allophonic [ u] unless that second question is for a different language... also, I think the following /a/ isnt necessary .... a three-way contrast between /kʷ/, /kɯ/, and /kʷɯ/ is almost certainly found somewhere in the world.
Disregarding the choice of vowel, Mohawk distinguishes /kʷ kʷo ko kʷũ kũ/, bearing in mind that both /ʷ/ and /ũ/ are rather flat in Mohawk (cf. Japanese).
The terms marked/unmarked are typically applied to individual words of a specific word class, not roots. What you call "default" is what people mean when they say "unmarked". In Hebrew, the consonant sequence of the root cannot be said to be unmarked by definition because it doesn't occur.
I've read that /A/ is the backmost vowel, not /u/ like I'd thought. I could do this in Late Andanese, whose phonology contains only 30 syllables, and therefore have 3 allophones of /k/. Then the vowels could be dropped in rapid speech without much confusion. I already use the same idea for the allophones of /h/, but it didn't occur to me to extend it to the stop.Estav wrote: ↑Mon Jul 22, 2019 2:57 amIs it unconditional? Descriptions of Japanese that I've read mention extensive conditioned allophony between palatalized and non-palatalized versions of consonants; e.g. the Wikipedia article on Japanese phonology includes the transcription [ɡẽŋʲkʲi]. I would expect backing or uvularization of /k/ to be less common or absent in the environments that condition palatalization (i.e. I'd expect it to be most common in syllables like /ka/ or /ko/, and least common in syllables like /ki/ or /kja/).
I think Pabappa means distinct. E.g. vowel length and, except for one case in an interjective, vowel nasalization are not phonemic in my English, but there exists audible distinctions for them (because they communicate information about other surrounding phonemes).