Vesenian: Difference between revisions

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*m > n / word-finally
*m > n / word-finally
==Morphology==
==Morphology==
===Pronouns===
{| class=wikitable style="text-align:center"
|+ Vesenian personal pronouns
<!--
! rowspan="2" |Person/ Number !! rowspan="2" | Subject !! rowspan="2" | Object !! colspan="2"| Clitic object !! colspan="2" |Possessive
|-
! Direct || Indirect || Weak || Strong
|-
! 1S
| ja || me || me(n) || me(d/G) || mo(n) || mexxo
|-
! 2S
| tu || te || te(n) || te(d/G) || to(n) || texxo
|-
! 3SM
| gio || gio || gio(n) || gio(d/G) || gio(n) || gioxxo
|-
! 3SF
| gia || gia || gia(n) || gia(d/G) || gia(n) || giaxxo
|-
! 3R
| su || se || se(n) || se(d/G) || so(n) || siaxxo
|-
! 1P
| nox || nox || nox || nox || nox || nuastro
|-
! 2P
| gox || gox || gox || gox || gox || guastro
|-
! 3PM
| giox || giox || giox || giox || giox || gioro
|-
! 3PF
| giax || giax || giax || giax || giax || giaro
|-
-->
|}
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<!-- How do the words in your language look? How do you derive words from others? Do you have cases? Are verbs inflected? Do nouns differ from adjectives? Do adjectives differ from verbs? Etc. -->
<!-- Here are some example subcategories:
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Nouns
Nouns
Adjectives
Adjectives
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Particles
Particles
Derivational morphology
Derivational morphology
-->
-->



Revision as of 13:23, 23 January 2025

Vesenian (native: vesenesko /veseˈnesko/) is a Slavic language.

Introduction

Vesenian is an attempt to create a "Spanish-sounding" Slavic language.

Phonology

Orthography

Consonants

Vesenian consonant phonemes
Labial Dental Alveolar Postalveolar/
Palatal
Velar/
Guttural
Nasal m n ɲ (ŋ)
Stop voiceless p t c ~ tʃ k
voiced b d ɡ
Fricative voiceless f θ s x
voiced v ð z ʝ
Approximant (β̞) (ð̞) (j) (w), (ɣ˕)
Lateral l ʎ
Trill r
Tap ɾ

Vowels

Prosody

Stress

Intonation

Phonotactics

Morphophonology

Phonological history

From Proto-Slavic (with original vowel length preserved) to Proto-Vesenian

Vowels

  • *oRC > *oRъC
  • *eRC > *eRьC
  • *ъRC > *ъRъC
  • *ьRC > *ьRьC
  • Weakening of yers:
    • Yers were considered weak (and were likely shortened to some extent but were not completely dropped) when final, and when followed by a syllable in the same word that did not contain a weak yer.
    • Yers followed by a syllable containing a weak yer were considered strong.
    • Weak yers could not carry an accent. Therefore, any accent they had was shifted to the previous vowel, resulting in the neoacute.
  • All final-syllable accents were shifted to the previous syllable (or the syllable before that if the penultimate syllable contained a weak yer), forming more cases of the neoacute.
  • Neoacute vowels (including yers) were lengthened.

Consonants

  • *šč > *sc / adjacent to front vowels
  • *č > *c / adjacent to front vowels
  • *č > *ť / otherwise
  • *ždž > *zdz / adjacent to front vowels
  • *ždž > *žď / otherwise
  • *ž > *z / adjacent to front vowels
  • *š > *s / adjacent to front vowels
  • *ś > *s / everywhere

Proto-Venesian prounciation notes

  • Preserved *š = /ç/
  • Preserved *ž = /ʝ/
  • *ť = /c/
  • *ď = /ɟ/
  • *ь = /ɪ/
  • *ъ = /ʊ/

From Proto-Vesenian to Early Old Vesenian

Vowels

  • Reformulation of strong and weak yers (only applies to short yers):
    • The earlier distinction between strong and weak yers was lost.
    • Final yers were preserved except when part of a polysyllabic inflectional ending and in some other exceptional cases.
    • Elsewhere, yers were dropped whenever phonotactically feasible (with the second of a sequence of two yers being dropped when possible), lengthening the preceding vowel. This process was highly susceptible to analogy.
    • Yers were also added to break impermissible consonant clusters. The quality of the yer was in accordance with the vowel of the syllable that it split.
    • A front yer was also added word-initially before clusters of a sibilant + consonant.
  • *ь̄ > e
  • *ъ̄ > o
  • *e > ь / before palatal consonants (j, ž, š, ť, ď)
  • *o > vъ / initially before palatal consonants (j, ž, š, ť, ď)
  • *o > ъ / non-initially before palatal consonants (j, ž, š, ť, ď)

From Early Old Vesenian to Late Old Vesenian

Vowels

  • ь, ъ > i / adjacent to j, ž, š
  • ь, ъ > e / adjacent to ť, ď
  • ь > e / otherwise
  • ъ > o / otherwise
  • ě > ē
  • ę > ēN / before a consonant (N = homorganic nasal to following consonant)
  • ę > ē / otherwise
  • ǫ > ōN / before a consonant
  • ǫ > ō / otherwise


Consonants

  • šť > ť / initially
  • šť > jť / otherwise
  • žď > ď / initially
  • žď > jď / otherwise
  • ť > č /c/ (purely transcription change)
  • ď > ž /ʝ/
  • j > ∅ / #_i

Transcription Notes

  • Long vowels are consistently marked with macrons.

From Late Old Vesenian to Modern Vesenian

Vowels (vowel length marked)

  • Non-final posttonic short vowels were often dropped where phonotactically feasible.
  • Posttonic long vowels were shortened.
  • ē > ië (note: ë = /ə/)
  • ō > uë
  • ā > a
  • ī > i
  • ū > u
  • ȳ > ë
  • ë > e
  • CjV, CijV > CiV (i.e. became an opening diphthong)
  • uej > ui /u̯i/
    • This occurred after gC > jC and resulted in Old Vesenian ōgC becoming uiC.
  • Cuie > Cui
    • This (and the change below) occurred after CvV > CuV
  • Cui > Cuj / before non-front vowels

Consonants

  • š /ç/ > x
  • c > ť /θ/
  • j > j /ʝ/ / except when before a consonant (i.e. in a closing diphthong) or after /i/, in which case it is pronounced /j/
  • ž > j /ʝ/
  • dz > ď /ð/
  • dl > gl
  • tl > kl
  • g > j / before consonants
  • x > f / before consonants
  • fv > f
  • v > u /w/ / adjacent to consonants and word-finally
  • r > r /ɾ/
  • ř > ř /r/
  • m > n / word-finally

Morphology

Pronouns

Vesenian personal pronouns


Syntax

Constituent order

Noun phrase

Verb phrase

Sentence phrase

Dependent clauses

Example texts

Other resources