Difference between revisions of "Archive:Q'eb language"

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The affixes of verbs follow the following order:
The affixes of verbs follow the following order:
* Negation-preverbal subject agreement-preverbal object agreement-causative-(root/stem)-voices-TAM-postverbal object agreement-complementizer/question
* Negation-preverbal subject agreement-preverbal object agreement-causative-(root/stem)-voices-TAM-postverbal object agreement-Dative agreement-complementizer/question


Below are the verbal agreements:
Below are the verbal agreements:
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* 1st pl: dv-/r- + -i
* 1st pl: dv-/r- + -i
* 2nd pl: v- + -i
* 2nd pl: v- + -i
* 3rd pl: -i
Dative:
* 1st sg: -r
* 2nd sg: -v
* 3rd sg: -0
* 1st pl: -ri
* 2nd pl: -vi
* 3rd pl: -i
* 3rd pl: -i


Line 377: Line 385:
*: NEG-3.SG.P-make-SBJV-3.SG.A
*: NEG-3.SG.P-make-SBJV-3.SG.A
*: he did not make it
*: he did not make it
* gdvʁzhmrdan
*: g-dv-ʁ-zh-mrad-an
*: NEG-1.PL.A-3.SG.P-CAUS-make-SBJV
*: we didn't make someone make it.


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Revision as of 15:09, 4 March 2016

Q'eb language
q'eblat
EthnicityQ'eb people
Language family
  • Q'eb language
CWS code

The Q'eb language is a language spoken by the Q'eb people living in the Confederation of Ebo Nganagam and Kema Mi Amo.

Unlike the neighboring Ebo Nganagam language, the Q'eb language has a long writing tradition.

Phonology

Consonants

Bilabial Labio-dental Dental Alveolar Post-alveolar Retroflex Palatal Velar Uvular Pharyngeal Epiglottal Glottal
Nasal m n
Plosive p b t tʼ d k kʼ g q qʼ
Fricative s z ʃ ʒ χ ʁ
Affricate t͡s t͡sʼ d͡z t͡ʃ t͡ʃʼ d͡ʒ
Approximant ʋ j
Trill r
Flap or tap
Lateral fric.
Lateral app. l
Lateral flap

Vowels

Front Near-front Central Near-back Back
Close i u
Near-close
Close-mid
Mid
Open-mid ɛ ɔ
Near-open æ
Open ɑ

Phonotactics

The Q'eb language allows an elaborate possibility of consonant clusters, it is not uncommon to have four or five consonants in an initial cluster, for example, ksmrdans /qʼɑriχs si ksmrdɑns/ "he did not make it" consists of an initial cluster of five consonants.

Orthography

Grammar

The Q'eb language is a highly synthetic agglutinating language, it has both polypersonal agreements and nominal cases.

Morphology

Nouns

Nouns in the Q'eb language inflect for cases and numbers, in the Q'eb language, the number suffixes precede the case suffixes.

There are two major ways to form the plural number of nouns in the Q'eb language: Umlaut and suffix. Only a set of monosyllabic words have umlaut plurals, most of which are nouns indicating people, and all other nouns take the suffix -ed for the plural form, and when using the suffix -ed, in polysyllabic words, the /a/ or /e/ in the last syllable of the stem is frequently dropped when the plural suffix -ed is used. For example:

  • le "person" - li "people" (umlaut plural)
  • galk "tree" - galked "trees"
  • zag "fish(singular)" - zaged "fish(plural)"
  • eshgal "world" - eshgled "worlds"(note the elision of the /a/ in the last syllable)

Nominal Cases are shown below:

  • Nominative: -
  • Ergative-Instrumental: -i
  • Genitive: -a(the /a/ or /e/ in the last syllable of the stem is dropped in polysyllabic words)
  • Dative: -ak(the /a/ or /e/ in the last syllable of the stem is dropped in polysyllabic words)
  • Locative: -ma
  • Ablative: -as(the /a/ or /e/ in the last syllable of the stem is dropped in polysyllabic words)
  • Vocative: -o

For example:

Example 1(zag- "fish"):

  • Nominative: zag
  • Ergative-Instrumental: zagi
  • Genitive: zaga
  • Dative: zagak
  • Locative: zagma
  • Ablative: zagas
  • Vocative: zago

Example 2(eshgal- "world"):

  • Nominative: eshgal
  • Ergative-Instrumental: eshgali
  • Genitive: eshgla
  • Dative: eshglak
  • Locative: eshgalma
  • Ablative: eshglas
  • Vocative: eshgalo

Adjectives

Verbs

The Q'eb language has a complex verbal morphology, the verb has polypersonal agreement and other inflections.

The verbal negation requires the subjunctive mood

The affixes of verbs follow the following order:

  • Negation-preverbal subject agreement-preverbal object agreement-causative-(root/stem)-voices-TAM-postverbal object agreement-Dative agreement-complementizer/question

Below are the verbal agreements:

  • Negation: k-/g-

Agreements:

Subject:

  • 1st sg: t-/d-/s-/z-
  • 2nd sg: m-/b-
  • 3rd sg: -s/-z/-0
  • 1st pl: t-/d-/s-/z- + -i
  • 2nd pl: m- + -i
  • 3rd pl: -si/-zi/-i

Object:

  • 1st sg: r-
  • 2nd sg: v-
  • 3rd sg: χ-/ʁ-/s-(before or after velars)/0-
  • 1st pl: dv-/r- + -i
  • 2nd pl: v- + -i
  • 3rd pl: -i

Dative:

  • 1st sg: -r
  • 2nd sg: -v
  • 3rd sg: -0
  • 1st pl: -ri
  • 2nd pl: -vi
  • 3rd pl: -i

Voices:

  • passive: -p/-b/-v/-uv
  • reflexive/middle: -t/-d/-it

Causative: sh-/zh-(before voiced consonants)/shi-(before silibants)

TAM:

  • imperfective: -a(with the the Stem Vowel Alternation)
  • subjunctive: -an(with the the Stem Vowel Alternation)
  • desiderative(want to...): -ke
  • necessitative(should/must...): -o(with the the Stem Vowel Alternation)
  • potential(can/may): -me

Complementizer: -ka/-ga

Question: -m/-em

Some verb forms require the umlaut or elision of stem vowels, which is called the Stem Vowel Alternation. Below is the rule of the Stem Vowel Alternation:

  • /a/ > 0
  • /æ/ > /i/
  • /ɛ/ > 0 or /i/, depending on the stem
  • /i/ > /i/
  • /ɔ/ > /u/
  • /u/ > /u/

For example:

  • χmradz
    χ-mrad-z
    3.SG.P-make-3.SG.A
    he made it
  • χmradmes
    χ-mrad-me-s
    3.SG.P-make-POT-3.SG.A
    he can/could made it
  • ksmrdans
    k-s-mrad-an-s
    NEG-3.SG.P-make-SBJV-3.SG.A
    he did not make it
  • gdvʁzhmrdan
    g-dv-ʁ-zh-mrad-an
    NEG-1.PL.A-3.SG.P-CAUS-make-SBJV
    we didn't make someone make it.


Syntax

Word Order

  • Basic Word Order: Subject-Object-Verb(SOV)
    • However, the word order is flexible, and under the influence of the Ebo Nganagam language, the use of the Subject-Verb-Object(SVO) order is not uncommon nowadays.
  • Adpositions are postpositions.
  • Adjectives, demonstratives, numerals, possessors precede the nouns they modify.
  • Negations precede the words they negate.

Alignments

There's a split ergativity in the nominal alignment pattern of the Q'eb language, it is triggered by the aspect of the sentence. In the Q'eb language the perfective aspect triggers an ergative-absolutive alignment pattern in nouns, and the imperfective aspect triggers an nominative-accusative alignment pattern:

  • le zag χtas
    le zag χ-at-a-s
    person fish 3.SG.P-eat-IPFV-3.SG.A
    the person eats/is eating the fish(imperfective)
  • leyi zag χats
    le-i zag χ-at-s
    person-ERG/INSTR fish 3.SG.P-eat.PFV-3.SG.A
    the person ate the fish(perfective)