Difference between revisions of "Archive:Jutean-Garuhish Creole"

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[[Category:Languages]]
[[Category:Jutean]][[Category:Archive]]

Latest revision as of 19:09, 16 October 2021


Jutean-Garuhish Creole
Tavï Öräkiä ör
Pronunciation[tə'vy ɒ'ɾaçja øɾ]
RegionOnakia, Xutra
Language family
Jutean-based creoles
  • Jutean-Garuhish Creole
Early forms:
Middle Jutean
  • Jutean-Garuhish Creole
Writing system(TBA)
Official status
Official language inGarohe
CWS codeJGC

Jutean-Garuhish Creole (Jutean-Garuhish Creole: Tavï Önäkiä ër, IPA: [tə'vy ɒ'ɾaçja øɾ]) is a Jutean-based creole, that arose via the contact between jutean immigrants to the island of Onakia, and the native garuhish population. Most of its vocabulary originates from Jutean, whilst the grammar is mostly that of Garuhish. This creole is a peculiar case, as it is comprised of two {not quite yet} members of the same language family, Saru-Asuran.

It is the native language of the inhabitants of the island of Onakia, where its presence outweighs that of Modern Garuhish. This is the veryday language in literature, schooling, business and entertainment on the island. However, everyone speaks Modern Garuhish as a second language taught in schools, as it is the main language for official documents, and the predominant language on the island of Akuvi, which contains the rest of the country's population.

Much like their jutean counterparts, the inhabitants of the island of Onakia are pacifists and have a more rustic, natural drive and feel to them, compared to the rest of Garohe. They are great writers, especially in areas such as poetry and several genres of literature. They are in favor of technology and scientific advancements, so long as they do not greatly damage the evironment, or destabilize the ecosystem.


Phonology

Consonants

Bilabial Labio-dental Alveolar Post-alveolar Palatal Velar
Nasal m
Plosive t d c [g]*
Fricative f v s ʃ [ç]* ʝ
Affricate ts
Approximant l
Flap or tap ɾ
  • *Allophone of /c/.

Vowels

Front Central Back
Close i y ɯ u
Close-mid e ø
Mid ə
Open a ɑ ɒ


In Jutean-Garuhish Creole, stress is placed on the first syllable with a "long" vowel (ä/ë/ï/ö/ü), if the word has no such vowels, the stress falls on the penultimate syllable.

Phonotactics

Jutean-Garuhish Creole features a (C)V(C) syllable structure, which makes consonant clusters very unlikely to appear, for the most part, as well as a complete lack of diphthongs in its words.

Orthography

{script WIP} Below is a table containing all phonemes present in Jutean-Garuhish Creole, alongside its script correspondence (WIP), and the romanization.

/m/ /t/ /d/ /c/ /g/ /f/ /v/ /s/ /ʃ/ /ç/ /ʝ/ /ts/ /l/ /ɾ/ /i/ /y/ /ɯ/ /u/ /e/ /ø/ /ə/ /a/ /ɑ/ /ɒ/
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
m t d k k(ü/ö) f v s z k(i/e/a) g c l r i ï u ü e ë a ä o ö

Grammar

Morphology

{WIP} It has two definite articles, the definite singular ug, and the definite plural ak.

Verbs

Verbs do not use conjugations to show tense, prepositions are used to show these instead. Jutean-Garuhish Creole uses the following:

  • Past Tense: ---
  • Present Tense: ---
  • Future Tense: ---

Moods are expressed via a vowel attached to the tense postposition. These are all the possible moods:

  • Imperative Mood: ---
  • Subjunctive Mood: ---
  • Conditional Mood: ---
  • Indicative Mood: ---

Cases

Jutean-Garuhish Creole, unlike Garuhish, does not have a case system, it instead has postpositions that replace these case markers, and carry the same meaning. Two exceptions to this are the possessed case and the qualitative case.

The two postpositions used to mark the accusative and the genitive case are --- and ër, respectively.

Syntax

Jutean-Garuhish Creole's word order is VSO, and like Jutean, it is a static word order, with differences in structure used to emphasize or change meaning.