Chyaparathi

This is the language of the Elf and Orc race.  

Natively known as: taunt /tau̯nt/

  ...and he stood holding his hat and turned his wet face to the wind...
ben gruw lwy gruw lif lai ben gruw fast sif dwwrth wi dy
Pronunciation: /beːn grɨu̯ lʊɨ̯ grɨu̯ lɪv lai̯ beːn grɨu̯ vast siv dwʊrθ wɪ də/
Chaparathi word order: and he stood hat his holding and his face wet turned the wind to  

Spelling & Phonology

  Consonant inventory: b d g h j k l m n n̥ p r r̥ s t v w ð ŋ ɬ ʃ θ χ  
↓Manner/Place→BilabialLabiodentalDentalAlveolarPalato-alveolarPalatalVelarUvularGlottal
Nasal m n n̥ ŋ
Stop b p d t k g
Fricative v ð θ s ʃ χ h
Approximant j
Trill r̥ r
Lateral fricative ɬ
Lateral approximant l
Co-articulated phonemes    
↓Manner/Place→Labial-velar
Approximant w
Vowel inventory: a ai̯ au̯ aɨ̯ aː ei̯ eɨ̯ eː i iː oː u uː ɔ ɔi̯ ɔɨ̯ ə əu̯ ɛ ɛu̯ ɨ ɨu̯ ɨː ɪ ɪu̯ ʊ ʊɨ̯   Diphthongs: ai̯ au̯ aɨ̯ ei̯ eɨ̯ ɔi̯ ɔɨ̯ əu̯ ɛu̯ ɨu̯ ɪu̯ ʊɨ̯ ?  
FrontCentralBack
High iː i ɨ ɨː u uː
Near-high ɪ ʊ
High-mid
Mid ə
Low-mid ɛ ɔ
Low a aː
Syllable structure: Custom defined ?
Stress pattern: Ultimate — stress is on the last syllable ?   Spelling rules:  
PronunciationSpelling
f ph
v f
k c
ŋ ng
χ ch
θ th
rh
ɬ ll
ð dd
ɪu̯ iw
ɨu̯ uw
ʊɨ̯ wy
ɛu̯ ew
ɔi̯ oi
əu̯ yw
eɨ̯ ey
a
ɔ o
o
i
ɪ i
e
ɛ e
w
ʊ w
j i
ɨː y
ɨ y
ə y
ʃ si
n
̯

Grammar

  Main word order: Subject Object Verb (Prepositional phrase). “Mary opened the door with a key” turns into Mary the door opened with a key.
Adjective order: Adjectives are positioned after the noun.
Adposition: postpositions ?  

Nouns

  Nouns have two cases:
  • Nominative is the doer of a verb: dog bites man.
  • Accusative is the done-to of a verb: man bites dog.
  Nouns form plural with separate plural word:
Plural Particle before the noun: meː -
me gww /meː gwʊ/ dogs
 
Nominative No affix
gww /gwʊ/ dog (doing the verb)
Accusative If ends with vowel: Suffix -l
Else: Suffix -ɔɨ̯l
gwwl /gwʊl/ (verb done to) dog

Articles

   
Definite bof /bɔv/ the
Indefinite da /da/ a, some
Uses of definite article that differ from English:
  • Not used for mass (uncountable) nouns: ‘Walking in the mud’ would always translate to ‘Walking in mud’.
  Uses of indefinite article that differ from English:
  • Not used for non-specific mass (uncountable) nouns: non-specific means ‘Would you like some (any) tea?’ whereas specific means ‘Some tea (a specific amount) fell off the truck’
 

Pronouns

NominativeAccusative
1st singular dwoi /dwɔi̯/ I sti /sti/ me
2nd singular dudd /duð/ you treyt /treɨ̯t/ you
3rd singular gruw /grɨu̯/ he, she, it de /dɛ/ his, her, it
1st plural as /aːs/ we clay /klaɨ̯/ us
2nd plural miwl /mɪu̯l/ you all cym /kɨm/ you all
3rd plural bla /bla/ they o /oː/ them

Possessive determiners

Possessive
1st singular dwoi /dwɔi̯/ my
2nd singular dudd /duð/ your
3rd singular gruw /grɨu̯/ his, her, its
1st plural as /aːs/ our
2nd plural miwl /mɪu̯l/ your (pl)
3rd plural bla /bla/ their

Verbs

Present No affix
rhyd /r̥ɨd/ learn
Past Suffix -ɔ
rhydo /r̥ɨˈdɔ/ learned
Remote past If ends with vowel: Suffix -ð
Else: Suffix -að
rhydadd /r̥ɨˈdað/ learned (long ago)
Future Suffix -ʊɨ̯g
rhydwyg /r̥ɨˈdʊɨ̯g/ will learn

Progressive aspect

  The ‘progressive’ aspect refers to actions that are happening at the time of speaking, such as I am learning.
Chaparathi uses a standalone particle word for progressive:  
Progressive Particle before the verb: χɨ -
chy rhyd /χɨ r̥ɨd/ is learning

Habitual aspect

  The ‘habitual’ aspect refers to actions that happen habitually, such as I learn (something new every day), as opposed to actions that happen once (I learned something).
Chaparathi uses an affix for habitual:
Habitual Suffix -aː
rhyda /r̥ɨˈdaː/ learns

Numbers

  Chaparathi has a base-10 number system:   1 - cers
2 - ei
3 - gesg
4 - bo
5 - the
6 - ddyw
7 - sbull
8 - hy
9 - triw
10 - pau
100 - cy
1000 - steill
 

Derivational morphology

  Adjective → adverb = If ends with vowel: Suffix -ɬ
Else: Suffix -aɨ̯ɬ
Adjective → noun (the quality of being [adj]) = If ends with vowel: Suffix -g
Else: Suffix -ag
Adjective → verb (to make something [adj]) = If ends with vowel: Suffix -n
Else: Suffix -ɔn
Noun → adjective (having the quality of [noun]) = If ends with vowel: Suffix -rθeɨ̯
Else: Suffix -ərθeɨ̯
Noun → adjective relating to noun (e.g. economy → economic) = Suffix -ɛrs
Noun to verb = Suffix -ɪ
Verb → adjective (result of doing [verb]) = If ends with vowel: Suffix -rð
Else: Suffix -irð
Tending to = If ends with vowel: Suffix -bə
Else: Suffix -ai̯bə
Verb → noun (the act of [verb]) = Suffix -au̯
Verb → noun that verb produces (e.g. know → knowledge) = Suffix -irs
One who [verb]s (e.g. paint → painter) = Suffix -ɔ
Place of (e.g. wine → winery) = If ends with vowel: Suffix -tblɪ
Else: Suffix -ei̯tblɪ
Diminutive = If ends with vowel: Suffix -s
Else: Suffix -us
Augmentative = If ends with vowel: Suffix -ba
Else: Suffix -əu̯ba

Dictionary

3036 Words.


Cover image: by Lady Wynter

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