Farmoshi language
Farmoshi | |
---|---|
Rot Pharmuś | |
Region | Milevia (Parshita) |
Language family | Milevic
|
Early forms: | Proto-Milevic
|
Official status | |
Official language in | Farmosh |
CWS code | FMS |
Part of a series on |
Milevians |
---|
Nations |
Non-independent regions
|
Languages |
Religions |
Other |
Farmoshi, also known as Kesrashi, is the national and official language of Farmosh and the first language of a slight majority of its citizens. It is a member of the Southern group of the Milevic language family, itself thought to be part of a larger Shaelic macrofamily. It is an agglutinating language.
The language serves as an important lingua franca within the country.
The Farmoshi language is classified as a descendant of Imperial Milevian, the administrative and religious language of the Milevian Empire. Whilst preserving many grammatical elements, its phonology has undergone major changes, one of its most prominent characteristics being the shifting of glottal fricatives into velar nasals.
Geographic Distribution
Name
The language is known as Rot Pharmuś "language of the many" in official contexts and state media. The language was given this name to contrast with Terminian, which was dubbed Rot Yẹwuś "language of the few" by Balkists prior to the Referendums on Milevian Sovereignty 1876. In informal contexts the language is commonly referred to as Pharmuśrot or Miledrot, and even by its former name Kesraśrot "Kesrashi language."
History
Phonology
Consonants
Farmoshi distinguishes three voice-onset times among plosive and affricate consonants:
- voiced
- tenuis (unvoiced, unaspirated)
- aspirated
Labial | Alveolar | Palatal | Velar | Glottal | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nasal | m | n | ɲ | ŋ | ||
Plosive | voiced | b | d | g* | ||
tenuis | p | t | tɕ | k | ||
aspirated | pʰ | tʰ | tɕʰ | kʰ | ||
Fricative | s | ɕ | h | |||
Approximant | w | l | j | |||
Trill | r |
- * /g/ is only found in certain positions and loan words.
Vowels
Front | Central | Back | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
short | long | short | long | short | long | |
Close | i | i: | ʉ | ʉ: | u | u: |
Close-mid | e | e: | o | o: | ||
Mid | ə | |||||
Open-mid | ɛ | ɛː | ||||
Open | aː |
Phonotactics
Orthography
Grammar
Morphology
Copulas
Farmoshi makes of four affixal copulae, which are suffixed to the predicate if it is an adjective or a noun phrase. The copula used depends on whether the sentence is positive ("to be") or negative ("not to be"), and whether the subject is an animate or inanimate noun (semi-animate nouns use the animate copulae). These copulae are not used when the complement is a prepositional phrase, and cannot exist as independent words; other verbs (such as dẹcen "to lie (positional)) are used instead.
Animate | Inanimate | |
---|---|---|
Positive | -rer | -rī |
Negative | -ñar | -ñī |
- Bowar won wonīrī. "The ship is very big."
- Ṅotlaṅ walś ṅatpharrer. "They are my friends."
- Pharm yadñar. "Many [people] are not happy."
- Ṅekar nalīñī. "The hill[s] is/are not tall."
- *Pharmuś Cisiluś ṅar rer. -> Pharmuś Cisiluś ṅar dẹcen. "Farmosh lies next to Czisilia."
Additional verbal affixes can be added after adding the copula suffix, such as tense suffixes.
- Bowar won wonīrīmi. "The ship was very big." (past)
- Ṅotlaṅ walś ṅatpharreron. "May they be my friends." (subjunctive)
- Pharm yadñarmi. "Many [people] were not happy." (past)
- Ṅekar nalīñīmi. "The hill[s] was/were not tall." (past)