AM01 said:...most Aslan words are an entire phrase of meaning...
Some preliminary syntax.
HIGHLY SYNTHETIC. Aslan "words" as written represent entire phrases. So for example, if a sentence has a subject phrase, an object phrase , an indirect object phrase, and a verb phrase, then each of those is written as one word.
Sounds messy, so keep it in mind that the more web we spin, the more we're caught.
Vowel Mashing. Prefix vowels may change to adapt to a stem's vowel:
A + A => EA
I + I => EI
I + IY => IY
O + O => O
NOUN CLASS. Each class of noun uses a certain set of prefixes to indicate number and relate the noun to its verb and auxiliary clitics.
Format: Class ?: (SINGULAR PREFIX/PLURAL PREFIX) Classname. Notes.
Class I: [A]-/LA- Female. Technology and business/industry roles. Nouns with no obvious class prefix are considered female.
Class II: AO-/WAO- Male. Martial and exploratory/SAR roles. EKA- is a less common prefix for martial ships.
Class III: YA-/KTI- Prey and Parts. Things falling outside of male and female classes. Also body parts and components of things.
Class IV: TRAU. This is a class with only one word: Land.
Class V: E'-/FE'-. A "leftovers" class of gathered imports, loans, archaics, and so on.
Class VI: TR-. Not to be confused with TRAU. Languages.
COMPOUND NOUNS. E.g. Using Genitive and possessive words links nouns together into compound nouns.
Genitives are great for ship names, and okay for people names, too. So, how are genitives constructed in Trokh?
A Kzin stereotypical example would be "Traitor's Claw". This is a genitive construction, where Traitor describes Claw. Claw of the traitor. Claw of A traitor, any traitor. Some particular claw that's associated with treason. You get the idea.
Wikipedia tells me that English modifies the descriptive noun: so "traitor" becomes "traitor's", so we know it's modifying "claw". Fine.
Afro-Asiatic languages modify the HEAD noun; in other words, they'd morph to the word "claw" and leave "traitor" alone. It's called "putting the head noun into construct state." (And sometimes even the modifying noun is altered too.) That sounds sufficiently foreign to me that I'd like to go down that path and see if it looks nice and Aslan-y.
VOCABULARY
/ya-faoraea/, dewclaw.
/ao-uoauye/, traitor.
Adding a /-yrh'/ to the end of a noun (or converting a final vowel to a /-yrh'/ if that looks better), puts the head noun in "construct" state. So for example, CLAW-ryh' TRAITOR is Traitor's Claw or "yafaoraeyrh' aouoauye". Let's drop the AO- prefix for traitor, since it's directly attached to the head noun, for "yafaoraeyrh' uoauye".
And don't forget that Trokh, being synthetic, would write those as one word[FONT=arial,helvetica]:[/FONT] yafaoeaeuyh'uoauye.[FONT=arial,helvetica]
[/FONT]
But since this is a martial ship, its prefix changes from YA- to the masculine AO-:
aofaoeaeuyh'uoauye.
VERBS. Verbs have prefixes for tense and subject noun class. Tenses:
Code:
Verb Initial Letter
C V
past e- ekh-
future wa- ahf-
active* - -
eternal** ui- yt-
perfect oi- et-
* present progressive
** indefinite present
ao-e-ktyul, it pounced
ao-wa-ktyul, it will pounce
ao-0-ktyul, it is pouncing, it pounces
ao-ui-ktyul, it pounces [for a living]
ao-oi-ktyul (conflated to aoiktyul), it pounced
Full sentence:
Aofaoeaeuyh'uoauye aouiktyuil. The Traitor's Claw is a Pouncer.
Person. To inflect a verb for person, rather than noun class, follow this guide:
Code:
ra- I, me
fi- I, me (negative)
ua- you
urh- you (negative)
raktyul, ra-0-ktyul: I pounce.
fiktyul, fi-0-ktyul: I do not pounce.
uaktul, ua-0-ktyul: you pounce.
With other tense modifiers:
raektyul, I pounced.
rawaktyul, I will pounce.
rauiktyul, I pounce [for a living].
raoiktyul, I pounced.
Pronoun Suffixes
Good for direct and indirect objects.
Code:
-0 3rd person (it/him/her/them)
-fiya reflexive (me/myself/ourselves)
-fere 2nd person
Indirect Object Prefixes
Code:
hweha- around/near/to/towards (indefinite location and movement)
htaa- at (definite location)
hwehi- containment (within/in/inside)
[/FONT]
aea little (adj - remember to inflect to agree with head noun!)
[FONT=arial,helvetica][FONT=arial,helvetica]aieaeyeye [/FONT][FONT=arial,helvetica]No[/FONT][FONT=arial,helvetica]
[/FONT]eya And
toieaiyea Attack
ftiai But[/FONT]
[FONT=arial,helvetica][FONT=arial,helvetica]htuiiya Yes
[/FONT]kharl Understand
***ryukhioi Planet (But what's its noun class?!)
tailaoue Pardon me
(tr)arlaaya Anglic
(tra)warliiya Vargr [any Vargr language]
[/FONT][FONT=arial,helvetica]A[/FONT][FONT=arial,helvetica]ofaoeaeuyh'uoauye aoe'toieaiyea hweha'ryukhioi. The Traitor's Claw attacked [it] near the planet.
Rakharl trokh. I understand Trokh.
Eya rakharl trawarliiya. And I understand "Vargr" (probably Gvegh).
Ftiai fikharl trarlaaya. But I do not understand Anglic.
QUESTIONS
Emphasis is used for questions and emotional content. When transcribing question sentences, just stick a question mark at the end. Trokh speakers will know what to do with it.
Tailaoue uakharl trokh? Pardon me, do you understand Trokh?
Aieaeyeye urhkharl. No, I don't understand [it].
Htuiiya uakharl trokh tr'aea. Yes, I understand Trokh a little.
RELATIVE CLAUSES
yeiae- relative pronoun or relativizer (that/which)[/FONT][FONT=arial,helvetica]
[/FONT]
[FONT=arial,helvetica][FONT=arial,helvetica]A[/FONT][FONT=arial,helvetica]ofaoeaeuyh'uoauye hweha'fere. The Traitor's Claw [is] near you.
[/FONT][/FONT][FONT=arial,helvetica][FONT=arial,helvetica][FONT=arial,helvetica][FONT=arial,helvetica]A[/FONT][FONT=arial,helvetica]ofaoeaeuyh'uoauye yeiae'hweha'fere [/FONT][/FONT][/FONT][/FONT][FONT=arial,helvetica][FONT=arial,helvetica][FONT=arial,helvetica][FONT=arial,helvetica][FONT=arial,helvetica]aoe'toieaiyea. [/FONT][FONT=arial,helvetica]The Traitor's Claw, which is near you, is attacking.[/FONT][/FONT][/FONT]
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