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T-Shirt yet again, and Chevraqis revisions

From:Yoon Ha Lee <yl112@...>
Date:Friday, October 6, 2000, 23:28
On Thu, 5 Oct 2000, Sally Caves wrote:

> Double WOW! Ailly! I wish I had an easy "Teach Yourself Teonaht" > page up there. The one I put up a year ago is hopelessly outdated > now that I've changed the capricious post-clitic indefinite particles. > Maybe I should follow something sort of like "Welsh is Fun-tastic" by > Heini Gruffydd.
Huh, and I thought the post-clitics were neat. <wry g>
> It feels natural to me, too; I've worked hard trying to make it so, > but remember that T. is a thirty year project of mine, and some of > its idioms just grew. I can pretty much tell if it's a tacked on > gimmick, like the stupid post-clitic indefinites. Or when T. was > "ergative" for a month. Didn't work. Another conlang that sounds > natural to me is Tokana. Is Matt Pearson still on the list?
O fortunate person! :-) I can spot-on answer any questions about the associated *conculture* for my current project, but that's because it's on the nth draft of a novel that I've been working on for some 7 years (though the current draft has no resemblance to most of the n-2 and earlier drafts).
> Tell me about your conlang, and you too, Yoon Ha Lee.
Gosh...Teoh's conlang is a lot better developed, and a lot more original. :-p I've got a rudimentary amount of information up at http//yhl.freeservers.com/conlang.html I'm working on a reader with exercises, though it's probably gonna take a looong time. Mine's Chevraqis. Sounds (Kirschenbaum): vowels: i: /i/ when word-final, before a vowel, or before h or y /I/ otherwise e: /@/ when word final and the previous syllable also has e /e/ otherwise a: /@/ when between two syllables that also have a /a/ otherwise o: /O/ u: /u-/ diphthongs: aé: /eI/ (I know it's an odd transliteration, but it has to do with how the alphabet is written) aí: /aI/ quasivowels (Chevraqis classification, because alphabetically they're marked on the vowel): h: /h/ y: /j/ r: /r/ consonants: b: /b/ initial/medial, /p/ final m: /m/ t: /t/ d: /d/ n: /n/ s: /s/ z: /z/ initial/medial, /Z/ final sj: /sj/ or /S/ ch: /tS/ j: /dZ/ k: /k/ q: /?/, occasionally /k/ when it starts a word The phonology's not nearly as sensible as it could be :-( but there are some words I just can't bear to change after using them for 3-4 years (before I even had a real conlang, just names). Syllable structure: (C)(r)V (Q)V (C)(r)V(n,v,b,r,s,z,t,d,k) if word-final (Q)V(n,v,r,s,z,t,d,k) if word-final where C is a consonant, V is a vowel or diphthong, or Q is a quasivowel. The language is pitch-accented in backward trochees (I think): mi'-ha-ra, A-bri'-o-ren, etc. Morphology: Chevraqis uses triconsontal morphology a la Arabic. There are two-classes of roots, i-class and a-class; you can tell by looking at the root infinitive, which is how I list things (for convenience). C *here* stands for a consonant or quasivowel. (I need better notation.) i-class a-class CiCaCu CaCaCu [root infinitive/imperative] CiCoCu CaCoCu [causative infinitive] CaCoCu CeCaCu [generic infinitive] CiaCaCu CiaCaCu [habitual infinitive] CieCaCu CieCaCu [iterative infinitive] daCiC(e)Cu daCaC(e)Cu [intensive infinitive] daCeC(e)Cu daCeC(e)Cu [evolutive infinitive] roCiC(e(Cu roCaC(e)Cu [attenuative infinitive] roCeC(e)Cu roCeC(e)Cu [devolutive infinitive] CiCaíCu CaCaíCu [adjective infinitive] CiCaCa CaCeCa [noun describing state] CaCeCana CaC(e)Cana [noun describing performer/profession] CeCaCa CeCaCa [noun describing tool] An example, albeit with mutations: jiqachu (to listen/understand) jiqochu (to cause to understand) chaqochu (to listen/understand in generalization) jiahachu (to listen/understand usually) jiehachu (to listen/understand over and over) dachiqechu (to understand much) dacheqechu (to understand more and more) rochiqechu (to understand but not very well) rocheqechu (to understand less and less) jihaíchu (understanding) jiqaja (understanding, enlightenment) chaqechana (scholar) cheqaja (knowledge) Nouns have 6 cases: -(y)a [voluntary agent] -(y)ia [involuntary agent] -(y)e [voluntary experiencer] -(y)ie [involuntary experiencer] -(y)en [genitive] marks alienable posession -(y)ad [locative] marks places/times, inalienable posession For convenience I list nouns in the voluntary agentive, so the root form of "scholar" would actually be *chaqechan-. Also, "voluntary" and "involuntary" are matters of opinion. The people of Qenar often speak of elemental or mystical forces in the voluntary, whereas the people of Avrezin tend to use the involuntary. i.e. kenasa kanazaz (the fire burns--voluntarily) vs. kenasia kanazaz (the fire burns--but has no say in the matter) There are no articles, and no singular/plural distinction is made in the grammar. Pronouns decline irregularly; I won't list the declensions, but they are (voluntary agentive): naí [1st person] sjar [2nd person] vri [impersonal 3rd person] bri [personal 3rd person] The personal is generally used with people or living things, and sometimes with inanimates with personal significance (your sword, maybe). The impersonal is used only insultingly of people, occasionally with living things without personal significance (a random tree in the forest), and often with inanimates. Verbs: Verbs conjugate appallingly regularly, and when conjugated make a distinction between the dynamic and static forms, which have different meanings. I list dynamic meanings first. miharu [infinitive/imperative] (to ask/wonder) miharas/miharaz [present reportive] miharad/miharat [present] miharan/miharam [present probable] mihariq/miharik [participle] miharis/mihariz [past reportive] miharid/miharit [past] miharib/mihariv [past probable] mihariq/miharik iras/irad/iran [present progressive] mihariq/miharik aras/arad/aran [past progressive] The reportive is used of things that the speaker has witnessed, or for "fundamental truths" (religion, philosphy, math)--I think someone told me the latter would be a "gnomic aorist" (?). "Plain" present or past are used when the speaker has reasonable certainty, and the probable is used when there's some doubt. There's no future per se; speakers use the present or present probable (unless they're mystics, in which case they might venture the present reportive). Participles can't be used as pseudo-nouns or adjectives, but are used to construct relative clauses or with the progressive forms. The auxiliaries you see are inu (to come) and asu (to go), which are defective and rather irregular verbs. Adjectives behave like verbs and generally agree with any verbs present. You can just use the adjective sans copula (heck, I don't think Chevraqis *has* a copula). Also, any verb can be nouned by declining it, and any noun can be verbed by conjugating it. This doesn't always make sense semantically. I'm thinking it could be used idiomatically or as a poetic device. So far I've got a couple conjunctions I can't find my notes for, and some postpositions, which tend to be rather specific since they're derived from serial verb constructions in Aragis, the ancestor language. Some examples: baraín (at/during a place/time) jacheq (into a building or dwelling) qajeq (into an object) sjareq (to a person) Word Order: Defaults to SOV but the case marking allows fairly free word order. The subject is often omitted if the listener is presumed to be able to deduce it from context (as in Korean), e.g. Naí chenare michanaz. (I own a knife). Chanaíraz. ((It) is-sharp.) Relative clauses: This is very tentative, but "I visited the man who owns a black horse" would be rendered something like: I black-horse-owning-he man visited, with the resumptive pronoun functioning somewhat like "who" or "that." Alphabet: see website at http://yhl.freeservers.com/conlang/ch-alpha.html It's written up-down, center-left-right, but read up-down, right-left due to the way it's structured around vowels. Astute observers will notice heavy influences from Korean (Hangul) and a little from the Mongolian alphabet (though I'm sure others look similar too). Yoon Ha Lee, out of breath