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[[Nithish/Music]]
[[Riphean/Lexicon]]


Nithish (''niđiske ṛstine'', from the word ''niđja'' "one's own") is an Indo-European language in the Nithic branch, a satem branch in a clade with [[Azalic]]. It's spoken in a parallel-Earth Ukraine, Belarus, and Korea, and is influenced by Uralic languages. It's also spoken in the island of Nōje Ceme (Isle of Man in our timeline), and substantial Nithish-speaking communities exist in parts of parallel-earth Russia, Alaska and Tibet. More recently it has absorbed words and calques from various Mediterranean languages.
'''Riphean''' (''rivška'') is an Indo-European language of [[Verse:Tdūrzů|Tdūrzů]], spoken in our Poland, Prussia, Latvia and Lithuania. It is inspired by Czech and Dutch and contains vocabulary we think of as Balto-Slavic and non-English Germanic.


Nithish has many accents and there is even a creole of Nithish, Korean and a little Nivkh, ''Bamaej-eo'' (literally "mixed language"), with some Korean words and mostly Korean syntax. Bamaej-eo, spoken in parallel Earth Sakhalin, is notable for being the only modern Nithic language which preserves the stop system of Middle Nithish, reinforced by Korean's stop system. Another notable creole is Nithlish, spoken by Nithish people in Anglophone parts of [[Verse:Apple PIE]]. It has Nithish syntax but generally less free word order, influenced by English, and a general reduction in morphology (there is no grammatical case in Nithlish, as in Bulgarian). Nithlish has some peculiar grammatical quirks found in neither Nithish nor English, such as the total avoidance of infinitive forms (believed to be borrowed from Arabic), and a total syncretism of the dative and the genitive, using the apostrophe -'s for both. Some features borrowed from English are besides the more rigid word order, the presence of analytic tenses and a perfect tense construction with the verb ''emi'' "to have" (''aiđi'' in standard Nithish; personal forms use the root ''em-'').
== TODO ==
Split-ergative past tense using a -n- passive participle?
=== UDHR ===
''Wiži dzíni kimeđ walni im lejki in zwem chejn im zwame đejžam.''


Modern Nithish is notable for mostly preserving PIE's syllabic approximants, ḷ and ṛ. However, Nithish consonants display various innovations including Grimm's law taken a step further (as in Dutch in our timeline).
/ˈʋɪ{{ž}}ɪ ˈdziːɲɪ ˈkɪməθ ˈʋalɲɪ ɪm ˈlɛjkɪ ɪn zʋɛm xɛjn ɪm ˈzʋamə ˈðɛjʒɐm/


==Todo==
(im ~ Latin ambō)


''Kīwaiđaza kala in utnė vlōje'' - The living fish swims in water.
hejn ~ τῑμή 'honor', đejše ~ teisė


''lauzme'' - world, from *lewk-mn; stem ''lauzmen-''
== Phonology ==
Riphean has consistent initial stress.


''vrirasti'' - nature
Vowel-initial words get a glottal stop initial, at least in formal speech


''zaurasti'' - nurture
Voiceless stops are not aspirated


''-wite'' - science
w and v as in Dutch


*''vamēzwite'', ''xīmje'' - chemistry
c č ď dz dž ň ř s z š ž h ch as in Czech, ľ as in Slovak, ř devoices word-finally
**''vamēzwitina panta'' - chemical bond
*''sternawite'' - astronomy
*''wistōrje'' - history (later coinage)
''nepalaste'' - anesthesia
*''nepalastwite'' - anesthesiology
''trōkzaiđaste'' - synesthesia


''zaiđna'' - sensory
h devoices to [x]


''trōkna'' - concomitant, ''trōken'' - together
''đ'' = [ð], devoices to [θ]


''yēre, lėđe, azanye, cīme'' - seasons
Stressed ''a e i o u'' = [a ɛ ɪ ɔ u]


''azaniđi'' - to harvest, to earn (semantics influenced by the English cognate)
''á é í ó ů'' = [a{{long}} e{{lowered}}{{long}} i{{long}} o{{lowered}}{{long}} u{{long}}]


''lėđe'' - (poetic) year
''ej ui ou'' = [ɛj œɥ ɔw]


''weđa'' - year
''l'' is velarized, ''r'' is usually an approximant. Both can be syllabic: ''wlch'' 'wolf', ''crn'' 'grain'.


''ōster'' - morning
Auslautverhärtung


''uđrni'' - noon
Unstressed a = [ɐ] (like Portuguese)


''sletuđrni'' - afternoon
== Morphology ==
=== Nouns and adjectives ===
==== Masculine animate ====
The dative singular has replaced the regular accusative singular for masculine animate nouns (cf. ''a'' in Spanish).


''wespra'' - evening
manč "man"
* nom. manč, manči
* gen. mančez, manču
* dat. manče, mančem
* acc. manče, mančuz
* ins. manču, mančiz


''naiđ'' - night
==== Masculine inanimate ====
Dialectally, these nouns may merge with neuter nouns: ''tam, tama''


''skīye'' - shadow
''tam'' "house"
* nom. tam, tami
* gen. tamez, tamu
* dat. tame, tamem
* acc. tam, tamuz
* ins. tamu, tamiz


''skēwiđi'' - to walk
==== Feminine -a ====
kena "woman"
* nom. kena, kenaz
* gen. kenaz, kenu
* dat. kene, kenam
* acc. kenou, kenouz
* ins. kenam, kenami


''wart'' - plant
==== Other feminine ====
váni (< vađni < potnih2) "lady, Mrs."
* nom. váni, vániz
* gen. vániz, váňu
* dat. váni, vánim
* acc. váni, vániz
* ins. vánim, vánimi


''cweri'' - animal
nacht "night"
* nom. nacht, nachtiz
* gen. nachtiz, nachťu
* dat. nachti, nachtim
* acc. nachti, nachtiz
* ins. nachtim, nachtmi


''sēne'' - fungus
==== Neuter ====
céđ "child" (<- ģenh1tom, ~ Kind)
* nom. céđ, céđa
* gen. céđez, céđu
* dat. céđe, céđem
* acc. céđ, céđa
* ins. céđu, céđiz


''vratānik'' - prokaryote
==== Adjectives ====
Indefinite and definite declensions


''zōtānik'' - eukaryote
=== Verbs ===
etež "to eat"


===Bamaej-eo===
ec etem, ji eteđ, ež eteđ, đam etar, jíľud eteđ, í eteđ
Kioneun kala unneo-in blon-ada. - The living fish swims in water (-neun, -ada and syntax from Korean, the rest is Nithic)


Three numeral systems - Nithic, Korean and Sinitic
(Polite pronoun?)


Tons of deictics as in Nivkh
negative ne


==Numbers==
==== ''buiž'' 'to be' ====
aina, twā, δriye, xeδure, vaixe, zes, zevu, astu, , teγu
ec em, ji eđ, ež es, đam ér, jiľud eđ, í zouđ


==Grammar==
Negative ec nem, ji neđ, ež nes, đam nér, jiľud neđ, í nezouđ
Nithish has three noun genders, termed animate, inanimate and collective by native grammarians. These correspond to masculine, neuter and feminine genders in other Indo-European languages. The correlation between grammatical gender and biological gender is much less in Nithish than in other IE languages, due to the influence of Uralic languages.


As in Latin and Greek, Nithish has various declension paradigms for nouns. Some common ones are:
==== Reflexive verbs ====
*first declension nouns - inanimate suffixless, animate ''-a'', collective ''-e''
ouchiž ze "to learn"
*second declension nouns - ''-i'', independent of gender
*third declension nouns - ''-u'', independent of gender


Gender has been almost completely regularized in Nithish, again due to Uralic influence -- it is correlated with morphology, so all nouns ending in ''-e'' are collective, even nouns like ''aste'' (bone), which derives from the Old Nithish neuter noun ''haste''. Most notably, Nithish pronouns do not inflect for gender, as in Armenian and Persian, but adjectives do; adjective genders follow lexical animacy when the noun is second or third declension and they follow nominal morphology for first declension nouns. There is also a distinction between attributive and predicative adjectives, with predicative adjectives never taking suffixes:
ec ouchim ze, ji ouchiđ ze, ež ouchiđ ze, đam ouchir ze, jiľud ouchiđ ze, í ouchiđ ze
* En sive atvėziδe. "It is a good document".
* Ene atvėziδe siv. "That document is good".


An example animate noun: kala "fish"
=== Numerals ===
*Nominative: kala, kalė
ejn, tů, đrí, cheđur, véch, zest, zevouđ, astuđ, ňouđ, tezou
*Accusative: kalu, kalė/kalō
*Genitive: kalas, kalō
*Dative: kalė, kalām
*Instrumental: kalam, kalėm


An example collective noun: pluze "flea"
ejnľez, twejľez, đríľez, cheđurľez, véľez, zesľez, zevaľez, astľez, ňouľez, twejcouđi
*Nominative: pluze, pluzė
*Accusative: pluzai, pluzė/pluzō
*Genitive: pluzes, pluzō
*Dative: pluzēvi, pluzēm
*Instrumental: pluzai, pluzėm


A neuter noun: tėđ "child"
đrícouđi, cheđurcouđi, vécouđi, zescouđi, zevacouđi, ascouđi, ňucouđi, stou? (random change from kmtom -> ktom, influenced by the ordinal stouđe <- ktm-tos)
*Nominative: tėđ, tėđe
*Accusative: tėđ, tėđe/tėđō
*Genitive: tėđas, tėđō
*Dative: tėđė, tėđām
*Instrumental: tėđam, tėđėm


===Adjectives===
đouzuđ
While Nithish doesn't have definite articles, Nithish adjectives inflect for definiteness. There are generally two forms for adjectives, the indefinite form and the definite form formed by postposing a clitic -za, -ze or -δa. The rules are as follows:
*-za after animate singular nominative nouns
*-ze after collective singular nominative and accusative nouns
*-δa elsewhere


===Verbs===
ejn "1" declines as follows:
* nom. ejn, ejna, ejn


Verbs in Nithish do not inflect for aspect but there are lexical aspects, formed from prefixes (analogous to phrasal verbs in English), root extensions and sometimes suppletion. There are three tenses in Nithish: nonpast, direct past and inferential past, the latter deriving from an Old Nithish pluperfect tense.
tů "2" declines as follows:
* nom. tů, twí, twej
* gen. tweju
* dat. twím
* acc. tů, twí, twej
* ins. twími


==Syntax==
đrí "3" declines as follows:
* nom. đrí
* gen. đríu
* dat. đrím
* acc. đrí
* ins. đrími


Syntax in Nithish is quite free.
== Syntax ==
German-like?
 
== Swadesh list ==
<poem>
I: ec
thou: ji
he/she/it: ež/já/it
we: đam (originally a dummy word used with the impersonal, from đám "there")
ye: jíľud
they: í/jáz/đá
this: siđe
that: đađe
here: sím
there: đám
</poem>
 
== Texts ==
=== Schleicher's fable ===
Ra oucha um ri dzrki
 
Oucha, čá wlnou ne [had], [saw] dzrkuz

Latest revision as of 19:22, 18 February 2026

Riphean/Lexicon

Riphean (rivška) is an Indo-European language of Tdūrzů, spoken in our Poland, Prussia, Latvia and Lithuania. It is inspired by Czech and Dutch and contains vocabulary we think of as Balto-Slavic and non-English Germanic.

TODO

Split-ergative past tense using a -n- passive participle?

UDHR

Wiži dzíni kimeđ walni im lejki in zwem chejn im zwame đejžam.

/ˈʋɪʒɪ ˈdziːɲɪ ˈkɪməθ ˈʋalɲɪ ɪm ˈlɛjkɪ ɪn zʋɛm xɛjn ɪm ˈzʋamə ˈðɛjʒɐm/

(im ~ Latin ambō)

hejn ~ τῑμή 'honor', đejše ~ teisė

Phonology

Riphean has consistent initial stress.

Vowel-initial words get a glottal stop initial, at least in formal speech

Voiceless stops are not aspirated

w and v as in Dutch

c č ď dz dž ň ř s z š ž h ch as in Czech, ľ as in Slovak, ř devoices word-finally

h devoices to [x]

đ = [ð], devoices to [θ]

Stressed a e i o u = [a ɛ ɪ ɔ u]

á é í ó ů = [aː e̞ː iː o̞ː uː]

ej ui ou = [ɛj œɥ ɔw]

l is velarized, r is usually an approximant. Both can be syllabic: wlch 'wolf', crn 'grain'.

Auslautverhärtung

Unstressed a = [ɐ] (like Portuguese)

Morphology

Nouns and adjectives

Masculine animate

The dative singular has replaced the regular accusative singular for masculine animate nouns (cf. a in Spanish).

manč "man"

  • nom. manč, manči
  • gen. mančez, manču
  • dat. manče, mančem
  • acc. manče, mančuz
  • ins. manču, mančiz

Masculine inanimate

Dialectally, these nouns may merge with neuter nouns: tam, tama

tam "house"

  • nom. tam, tami
  • gen. tamez, tamu
  • dat. tame, tamem
  • acc. tam, tamuz
  • ins. tamu, tamiz

Feminine -a

kena "woman"

  • nom. kena, kenaz
  • gen. kenaz, kenu
  • dat. kene, kenam
  • acc. kenou, kenouz
  • ins. kenam, kenami

Other feminine

váni (< vađni < potnih2) "lady, Mrs."

  • nom. váni, vániz
  • gen. vániz, váňu
  • dat. váni, vánim
  • acc. váni, vániz
  • ins. vánim, vánimi

nacht "night"

  • nom. nacht, nachtiz
  • gen. nachtiz, nachťu
  • dat. nachti, nachtim
  • acc. nachti, nachtiz
  • ins. nachtim, nachtmi

Neuter

céđ "child" (<- ģenh1tom, ~ Kind)

  • nom. céđ, céđa
  • gen. céđez, céđu
  • dat. céđe, céđem
  • acc. céđ, céđa
  • ins. céđu, céđiz

Adjectives

Indefinite and definite declensions

Verbs

etež "to eat"

ec etem, ji eteđ, ež eteđ, đam etar, jíľud eteđ, í eteđ

(Polite pronoun?)

negative ne

buiž 'to be'

ec em, ji eđ, ež es, đam ér, jiľud eđ, í zouđ

Negative ec nem, ji neđ, ež nes, đam nér, jiľud neđ, í nezouđ

Reflexive verbs

ouchiž ze "to learn"

ec ouchim ze, ji ouchiđ ze, ež ouchiđ ze, đam ouchir ze, jiľud ouchiđ ze, í ouchiđ ze

Numerals

ejn, tů, đrí, cheđur, véch, zest, zevouđ, astuđ, ňouđ, tezou

ejnľez, twejľez, đríľez, cheđurľez, véľez, zesľez, zevaľez, astľez, ňouľez, twejcouđi

đrícouđi, cheđurcouđi, vécouđi, zescouđi, zevacouđi, ascouđi, ňucouđi, stou? (random change from kmtom -> ktom, influenced by the ordinal stouđe <- ktm-tos)

đouzuđ

ejn "1" declines as follows:

  • nom. ejn, ejna, ejn

tů "2" declines as follows:

  • nom. tů, twí, twej
  • gen. tweju
  • dat. twím
  • acc. tů, twí, twej
  • ins. twími

đrí "3" declines as follows:

  • nom. đrí
  • gen. đríu
  • dat. đrím
  • acc. đrí
  • ins. đrími

Syntax

German-like?

Swadesh list

I: ec
thou: ji
he/she/it: ež/já/it
we: đam (originally a dummy word used with the impersonal, from đám "there")
ye: jíľud
they: í/jáz/đá
this: siđe
that: đađe
here: sím
there: đám

Texts

Schleicher's fable

Ra oucha um ri dzrki

Oucha, čá wlnou ne [had], [saw] dzrkuz