Penginijtung: Difference between revisions

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| ''jix-'' || ''-jix'' || Attributive: turns a noun into an adjective, similar to English "-ish" or "-like" (also achievable by simple apposition || ''xi-jix'' "poetic"
| ''jix-'' || ''-jix'' || Attributive: turns a noun into an adjective, similar to English "-ish" or "-like" (also achievable by simple apposition || ''xi-jix'' "poetic"
|}
|}
Particles preceding a noun are joined by a hyphen to the noun, and aspirate initial vowels--the vocative form of the name ''Ejne'' is ''a-hEjneha''. Particles are never capitalised. Particles are nested logically according to meaning; for example, "my destiny" in the objective form is ''eis-meis dowme'', since "my destiny" is treated as a unit. When the meaning is totally unambiguous, either initial or final, but not both, particles may be omitted.
===Word Order===
The usual word order of Penginijtung is Subject-Object-Verb, as in Latin and Japanese: ''o-Meo e-þuje xinfuhir'' "I love you."
Adjectives precede the noun, except in poetic speech, and particles occur at the beginning and end of noun phrases (cf. ''eis-meis dowme'', above).
===Nouns & Adjectives===
Nouns form their plural in "-iþ", occurring at the end of the noun before the particle. There is no grammatical gender, and the plural suffix can be omitted if the meaning is clear.
===Verbs & Adverbs===
Adverbs are formed by the suffix ''-lij''.
Verbs occur at the end of the sentence. They only inflect for tense, not person or number, and inflect by regularly suffixing the verb stem. Tense suffixes for verbs are:
{| class="wikitable"
|-
|  || '''Present''' || '''Past''' || '''Future'''
|-
| '''Transitive''' || ''-ir'' || ''-di'' || ''-vil''
|-
| '''Intransitive/Passive''' || ''-ot'' || ''-in'' || ''-enij''
|}
(The default past tense is the imperfect.)
Verbs are negated by adding ''-na'' after the tense suffix: ''o-Hirmano e-hirmerhe xinfuhirna'' "He does not love her."
Reflexive verbs are indicated with the suffix ''-sej'': ''o-Hirmano xinfuhirsej'' "He loves himself."
Interrogatives are marked by the suffix ''-ca'', which is added to the part of speech under question, e.g. ''o-hEjneho e-hise hanasdica'' "Did Ejne ''say'' this?" ''o-hEjneho e-hiseca hanasdi'' "Did Ejne say ''this''?" ''o-hEjnehoca e-hise hanasdi'' "Did ''Ejne'' say this?"
The perfect mood is indicated by the infinitive followed by verb "pennejd" (complete, finish) with the appropriate tense suffix.
{| class="wikitable"
|-
|  || '''Present''' || '''Past''' || '''Future'''
|-
| '''Simple''' || ''o-Meo rojir'' "I take" || ''o-Meo rojdi'' "I was taking" || ''o-Meo rojvil'' "I will take"
|-
| '''Perfect''' || ''o-Meo roj pennejdir'' "I take" || ''o-Meo roj pennejddi'' "I was taking" || ''o-Meo roj pennejdvil'' "I will take"
|-
| '''Passive''' || ''o-Meo rojot'' "I am taken" || ''o-Meo rojic'' "I was taken" || ''o-Meo rojenij'' "I will be taken"
|-
| '''Passive Perfect''' || ''o-Meo roj pennejdot'' "I have been taken" || ''o-Meo roj pennejdic'' "I had been taken" || ''o-Meo roj pennejdenij'' "I will have been taken"
|}
The subjunctive mood is indicated by the word ''vismaj'' at the beginning of the clause.
Participles and gerundives are formed by adding the adjective-suffix ''-jix'' to the appropriate form of the verb. Gerunds are formed with the suffix ''-hejd''.
The infinitive (verb without any affixes) is used for the intangible quality of an action, especially in prepositional phrases. ''oit-Txino sem o-juo e-varue xinfuir'' "The person whom you love to hate" (lit: "the person as you the hating love").
    Conjunctions are attached by hyphens between the words they qualify. Two or more words or phrases joined by conjunctions are considered to be one word and thus may (although this is not mandatory) have only one terminal particle. When phrases are joined with a conjunction, no hyphen is used.
    There is no verb in noun-complement phrases, such as "John is big" or "Ceindia is the greatest nation on earth". The former tense by the intransitive/passive verb-tense suffix added to the adjective; the second case, by insertion of the cupola "sem". "o-Dxono mawrot"; "it-Cejnd-gulad sem in it-Bijdin dxujonyst it-gulad."
    There is no single verb "to have" - this construction is expressed by the conjunctive, or locative, or possessive particle with "sem". Thus, "Ejrik has strange taste in languages" - "o-hEjrico sem fyr-tungiþ ha-gajx hofha".
    There is no indefinite article. The definite article is "it-", prefixed to the noun in the phrase. So, "citizens" is "Trevoriþ"; "the citizens" is "it-Trevoriþ"; "the citizens of Ceindia" is "is-Cejndijs it-Trevoriþ"; the objective form is "eit-Trevoriþe". (Note the epithet for Cytung, "the beautiful language" - cejndij it-tung. The objective form is e-cejndij it-tunge.) When the definite article covers a phrase, "it" may be repeated at the end of the phrase to avoid ambiguity.
    The relative clause marker is "sem", which also serves as the "cupola" or "identity marker" in subject/complement constructions, and the "as" in comparative sentences - eg. "sem snaw morwhit", as white as snow. Subordinate clauses are preceded by the particle for the part of speech to which they refer and the marker "sem", and suffixed with the particle, if necessary. Thus: "I want", "o-Meo vilir"; "(the thing) that I want", "it-hun e-sem o-Meo vilir", "you know what I want", "o-þuo e-sem o-Meo vilire canir."


==External links==
==External links==
*[http://ark.wz.cz/conlangs/vcg.html it-Cejndijtung]- The website of it-Cejndijtung, the constructed language formerly known as it-Penginijtung.
*[http://ark.wz.cz/conlangs/vcg.html it-Cejndijtung]- The website of it-Cejndijtung, the constructed language formerly known as it-Penginijtung.

Revision as of 19:06, 1 October 2014

it-Penginijtung is one of two languages (the other being Pengeálige) created for the Free Commonwealth of Penguinea, though it was originally intended to be a language for the Talossan territory of Péngöpäts, in addition to the Talossan language. Created by Miestrâ Schivâ, Evan Gallagher and Ián Txaglh, Penginijtung was based on Japanese, Icelandic, German and Welsh.

Phonology

Consonants

Bilabial Labio-dental Dental Alveolar Post-alveolar Palatal Labio-velar Velar Glottal
Plosive P /p/ B /b/ T /t/ D /d/ C/K /k/ G /g/
Nasal M /m/ N /n/
Fricative F /f/ V /v/ Þ /θ/ S /s/ Z /z/ X /ʃ/ H /h/
Affricate TX /tʃ/ DX /dʒ/
Approximant R /r/ J /j/ W /w/
Lateral approximant L /l/

C and K may be used interchangeably according to personal preference.

Vowels

The vowels of Penginijtung are short, pure vowels as in most languages:

A /ʌ/
E /ɛ/
I /ɪ/
O /ɒ/
U /ʊ/
Y /ə/

All vowels are pronounced short unless followed by a semivowel, eg. "aw", "ej", "ij", "ow", "uw", or are in a monosyllable. The schwa, "y," can often be omitted if the pronunciation of the resulting consonant cluster is not too difficult. Identical vowels in apposition which are not diphthongs are separated by "j" if "e" or "i", "w" if "o" or "u", "h" if "a."

Stress

Accent is on the last syllable before the final to precede a consonant cluster or contain a diphthong (vowel + "j" or "w"), or failing any the first, not counting particles. Particles are never accented.

Grammar

Penginijtung's grammar is particle-based, much like Japanese. Unlike Japanese, however, the particles may follow the noun (or pronoun), precede it, or both, depending on questions of euphony and practicality.

Particles

Prefixed Suffixed Meaning Examples
a- -(h)a Vocative: person being addressed a-Dafneja "Hey, Daphne!"
o- -(w)o Nominative: agent of transitive verb or argument of intransitive o-meo "I"
e- (j)e Accusative: patient of transitive verb e-meje "me"
is- -(j)is Genitive: denotes the possessor; can be omitted in chains of genitives is-Evanis awje "Evan's eye"
at- -(h)at Locative: shows position (in, at, on) at-Penginijat "in Penguinea"
in- -(h)in Dative: indirect object of a verb; movement towards the noun in-hirin "to it"
ov- -(w)ov Ablative: movement away from the noun ov-hirov "from it"
av -(h)av "concerning..."; equivalent to Latin "dative of advantage" av-hirmerhav "concerning her, for her advantage"
de- -de Instrumentive: manner or means of action de-þude "[done] by you"
fyr- -fyr Example fyr-þuhahirfyr "[intended] for you two"
ha- -ha Conjunctive: "with" ha-Jan "with Jan"
na- -na Partitive: "member of" cij na-hilefaniþ "three of the elephants"
jix- -jix Attributive: turns a noun into an adjective, similar to English "-ish" or "-like" (also achievable by simple apposition xi-jix "poetic"

Particles preceding a noun are joined by a hyphen to the noun, and aspirate initial vowels--the vocative form of the name Ejne is a-hEjneha. Particles are never capitalised. Particles are nested logically according to meaning; for example, "my destiny" in the objective form is eis-meis dowme, since "my destiny" is treated as a unit. When the meaning is totally unambiguous, either initial or final, but not both, particles may be omitted.

Word Order

The usual word order of Penginijtung is Subject-Object-Verb, as in Latin and Japanese: o-Meo e-þuje xinfuhir "I love you." Adjectives precede the noun, except in poetic speech, and particles occur at the beginning and end of noun phrases (cf. eis-meis dowme, above).

Nouns & Adjectives

Nouns form their plural in "-iþ", occurring at the end of the noun before the particle. There is no grammatical gender, and the plural suffix can be omitted if the meaning is clear.

Verbs & Adverbs

Adverbs are formed by the suffix -lij.

Verbs occur at the end of the sentence. They only inflect for tense, not person or number, and inflect by regularly suffixing the verb stem. Tense suffixes for verbs are:

Present Past Future
Transitive -ir -di -vil
Intransitive/Passive -ot -in -enij

(The default past tense is the imperfect.)

Verbs are negated by adding -na after the tense suffix: o-Hirmano e-hirmerhe xinfuhirna "He does not love her." Reflexive verbs are indicated with the suffix -sej: o-Hirmano xinfuhirsej "He loves himself." Interrogatives are marked by the suffix -ca, which is added to the part of speech under question, e.g. o-hEjneho e-hise hanasdica "Did Ejne say this?" o-hEjneho e-hiseca hanasdi "Did Ejne say this?" o-hEjnehoca e-hise hanasdi "Did Ejne say this?" The perfect mood is indicated by the infinitive followed by verb "pennejd" (complete, finish) with the appropriate tense suffix.

Present Past Future
Simple o-Meo rojir "I take" o-Meo rojdi "I was taking" o-Meo rojvil "I will take"
Perfect o-Meo roj pennejdir "I take" o-Meo roj pennejddi "I was taking" o-Meo roj pennejdvil "I will take"
Passive o-Meo rojot "I am taken" o-Meo rojic "I was taken" o-Meo rojenij "I will be taken"
Passive Perfect o-Meo roj pennejdot "I have been taken" o-Meo roj pennejdic "I had been taken" o-Meo roj pennejdenij "I will have been taken"

The subjunctive mood is indicated by the word vismaj at the beginning of the clause.

Participles and gerundives are formed by adding the adjective-suffix -jix to the appropriate form of the verb. Gerunds are formed with the suffix -hejd. The infinitive (verb without any affixes) is used for the intangible quality of an action, especially in prepositional phrases. oit-Txino sem o-juo e-varue xinfuir "The person whom you love to hate" (lit: "the person as you the hating love").

    Conjunctions are attached by hyphens between the words they qualify. Two or more words or phrases joined by conjunctions are considered to be one word and thus may (although this is not mandatory) have only one terminal particle. When phrases are joined with a conjunction, no hyphen is used.
    There is no verb in noun-complement phrases, such as "John is big" or "Ceindia is the greatest nation on earth". The former tense by the intransitive/passive verb-tense suffix added to the adjective; the second case, by insertion of the cupola "sem". "o-Dxono mawrot"; "it-Cejnd-gulad sem in it-Bijdin dxujonyst it-gulad."
    There is no single verb "to have" - this construction is expressed by the conjunctive, or locative, or possessive particle with "sem". Thus, "Ejrik has strange taste in languages" - "o-hEjrico sem fyr-tungiþ ha-gajx hofha".
    There is no indefinite article. The definite article is "it-", prefixed to the noun in the phrase. So, "citizens" is "Trevoriþ"; "the citizens" is "it-Trevoriþ"; "the citizens of Ceindia" is "is-Cejndijs it-Trevoriþ"; the objective form is "eit-Trevoriþe". (Note the epithet for Cytung, "the beautiful language" - cejndij it-tung. The objective form is e-cejndij it-tunge.) When the definite article covers a phrase, "it" may be repeated at the end of the phrase to avoid ambiguity.
    The relative clause marker is "sem", which also serves as the "cupola" or "identity marker" in subject/complement constructions, and the "as" in comparative sentences - eg. "sem snaw morwhit", as white as snow. Subordinate clauses are preceded by the particle for the part of speech to which they refer and the marker "sem", and suffixed with the particle, if necessary. Thus: "I want", "o-Meo vilir"; "(the thing) that I want", "it-hun e-sem o-Meo vilir", "you know what I want", "o-þuo e-sem o-Meo vilire canir."

External links

  • it-Cejndijtung- The website of it-Cejndijtung, the constructed language formerly known as it-Penginijtung.