Packilvanian language

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Packilvanian
luTamuk aluBakilfania
  • Packilvanian
Language codes
ISO 639-3

The Packilvanian language is the official language of Packilvania. It belongs to the Yastero-Auroran language family.

History

Phonology

Vowels

Front Central Back
Close i u
Mid ɛ ɔ
Open a

Consonants

Labial Labiodental Dental Alveolar Postalveolar Velar Glottal Uvular
Nasal m n ŋ
Plosive Voiced b d g
Voiceless p t k
Affricate Sibilant ts
Fricative Voiced v dh z
Voiceless f th s h ch
Approximant l j w
Trill r

Orthography

Packilvanian is written in the Packilvanian Script which comes in two official forms: the Cursive and Regular versions. The Regular version is an alphabet as every glyph represents either a consonant or a vowel. In contrast, the Cursive version is an hybrid abjad which uses diacritics to mark for vowels in the middle of words. Vowels are only written when they appear as the first letter of a word. Vowels can be omitted altogether in Cursive as is regularly the case in most settings as the vowels can be inferred by the reader. The letter "I" is technically not represented at all and must be inferred in some texts. Languages that use Packilvanian Script can adapt it to suit their needs. For instance languages that have diphthongs can use multiple diacritics on top of each other to represent those sounds. Languages that devoice or prenasalise sounds can use appropriate diacritics. Thus, Packilvanian can act as a universal phonetic-based writing style for any language in the world. Cursive Packilvanian can be written without lifting the hand except to add diacritics making it highly efficient for languages that are typically written on paper or parchement.

Grammar

Nouns

Nouns are marked for class, case and number. Packilvanian nouns are built as follows:

(Negation)-Definiteness-Case-class-number-root.

Definiteness

Definiteness is marked by the tone of the first syllable of the word.

  • Indefiniteness: High tone
  • Definiteness: Low tone

Negation

Negation is marked with a 'g' (or a ge if the word starts with a consonant) and always occurs at the start of a word.

Cases

Case Prefix
Nominative none
Accusative o-
Genitive a-
Instrumental ye-
Locative we-

Classes

Classes or genders go after cases and before number.

Class Infix
Abstract -l-
Inanimate -n-
Animate -v-
Sapient -b-

Number

Number goes after the class and before the root.

Number Infix
Singular -u-
Plural -e-
Uncountable -o-

Verbs

Verbs are inflected with the same affixes as the noun they relate to. Verbs are inflected for time as follows:

Tense
Non-past Past
Aspect Perfect none -ev or -v
Imperfective Habitual none -er or -r
Continuous none -eg - or -g

Demonstrative

  • Distal: -qa
  • Proximate: -arud

Pronouns

This page (or section) is a work in progress by its author(s) and should not be considered final.

Pronouns are inflected for case and class where applicable:

  • First person: in the nominative case, the first person singular root is Min. It is used together with lu- in the singular and with le-in the plural (I.e., the equivalent of We in Staynish). In the accusative it is mino, in the locative it is minwe, and in the instrumental it is minye.
  • Second person: in the nominative case, the first person singular root is Du (equivalent of Thou in Middle Codexian). When in the accusative case it is duo, in the genitive it is dua, in the instrumental it is duye and in the locative it is duwe. In a sentence, it is used with the lu- prefix unless used in plural form in which case it is used with the le- prefix.
  • Third person is the most complex. Similarly to the previous others it is inflected for case and number. However,