Proto-Tulameya
To Be Continued... Thedukeofnuke is still working on this article. The contents are incomplete and likely to undergo changes. |
Proto-Tulameya [ˈtu.la.me.ja] | |
Period | c. -2100 YP |
Spoken in | western Lukpanic Coast |
Total speakers | unknown |
Writing system | none |
Classification | Tulameya |
Typology | |
Basic word order | VSO, head-initial |
Morphology | agglutinating, prefixing |
Alignment | nominative-secundative |
Credits | |
Created by | Thedukeofnuke |
The Tulameya languages are a small family spoken in the northwest of Peilaš, originally in the area later known as the western Lukpanic Coast. Around -2000 YP, the Lukpanab, who had become increasingly adapted to the littoral environment, migrated southward along the coast into Tulameya lands. This resulted in the more land-bound Tulameya being either scattered inland or assimilated by the Lukpanab - strongly influencing the newcomers' language in the process.
Proto-Tulameya is the earliest member of the family that can confidently be reconstructed, and the ancestor of all the later Tulameya languages. It was spoken sometime around the end of the 3rd millennium BP. It is notable for having rigorously head-first word order, using nominative-secundative morphosyntax, and making little lexical distinction between parts of speech.
Phonology
Consonant phonemes:
Labial | Alveolar | Palatal | Velar | Glottal | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nasal | m | n | |||
Plosive | p b |
t d |
k g |
||
Fricative | s | h | |||
Approximant | l | y | w |
Vowel phonemes:
Front | Back | |
---|---|---|
High | i | u |
Mid | e | o |
Low | a |
Phonotactics and morphophonology
Syllable structure was (C)V(C).
Coda consonants were restricted to stops and nasals. Coda nasals always assimilated to a following stop, but not to other consonants. Coda stops did not distinguish voicing except allophonically: they were voiced preceding another voiced stop or nasal ([ɡ] occurred in this environment only, as an allophone of k), and were unvoiced elsewhere.
h could not occur in clusters, and was deleted if it occurred adjacent to a consonant.
Any combination of a non-high vowel followed by a high vowel freely diphthongised. In the case of other vowels in hiatus, an epenthetic consonant was inserted between the two, which was y after a front vowel, w after a back vowel, and h after a.
Suprasegmentals
Stress was not contrastive. However, the first syllable of every root word carried a light dynamic stress.
Morphology
Morphology was strongly prefixing and agglutinative.
Nominal morphology
Proto-Tulameya had four cases marked by prefixes: the nominative, used for the subject of a sentence; the primative, used for objects of monotransitive sentences and the indirect objects (themes) or ditransitive sentences; the secundative, used for the direct objects (recipients) of ditransitive sentences; and the genitive, used to mark possession or association. Nouns always took case prefixes; adjectives used as such did not, though they were declined when nominalised.
case | prefix |
---|---|
nominative | Ø– |
primative | lu– |
secundative | ben– |
genitive | da– |
Prepositions were also frequently prefixed to nouns, which took the nominative; some analyses treat this as forming a large (and not necessarily closed) set of locative cases.
Optional quantifiers could be added between the case prefix (or preposition) and the root. Examples are tun "many", ip "none", and tau "what? which?". (As number was not morphologically marked per se, quantifiers were the normal way of indicating it.) Numerals and the demonstrative/definite en could, but did not always, also appear in this position; in some circumstances they appeared as independent words.
Pronouns
Proto-Tulameya's pronouns distinguished first, second, third, and fourth persons, and marked gender and number in all but the last. The third person also had inanimate forms (which were never used for sentient referents; the masculine plural was the default for groups of people). Interestingly these was little regularity within the pronominal system, in contrast with the language's otherwise quite predictable morphology.
The "fourth person" was used for general states of affairs: for example nidaunem tek "it rains a lot".
person | singular | plural | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
masc. | fem. | inan. | masc. | fem. | inan. | |
1st | wa | sep | sito | soto | ||
2nd | bau | hem | nudu | webe | ||
3rd | noi | sap | wok | leki | noko | wapak |
4th | tek |
All of these took case prefixes like nouns, but took quantifiers rarely if at all.
Verbal morphology
Verbs took a number of prefixes, grouped into three slots – starting from the head and working backwards, these roughly encoded tense/aspect, mood, and evidentiality/polarity. These are illustrated here with the example of the dog (meta, with the demonstrative/definite prefix en) eating (nou) some meat (kabnam).
Tense and aspect
- The unmarked form was used for continuous actions: nou enmeta "the dog is eating". When preceded by another prefix (except the bare imperative), it took the form e-.
- ni- marked a habitual aspect: ninou enmeta lukabnam "the dog generally eats meat".
- an- was used to express an undivided, completed action, prototypically in the past, and is usually referred to as the aorist: annou enmeta lukabnam "the dog ate some meat".
- hep- was the perfect or past continuous: hebnou enmeta "the dog was eating; the dog has been eating".
- sok- was the future tense: sognou enmeta "the dog will eat".
Mood
- The unmarked form was the indicative.
- o- marked the optative, which expressed that the speaker considered that the action should happen: owenou enmeta "the dog should be eating"; owannou enmeta lukabnam "the dog should have eaten meat".
- yam- was used to express the ability to do something, sometimes referred to as the potential mood: yamenou enmeta "the dog can eat; the dog could be eating". When used with the future tense it seems to have expressed the ability to prepare for an action: yamsognou enmeta "the dog can get something to eat".
- ku- formed imperatives. It was often used without an explicit tense/aspect prefix: kunou "eat!". However, such prefixes could be used to express a different meaning, for example with the future (kusognou "get ready to eat!") or habitual (kuninou "eat properly!").
Evidentiality and polarity
- The unmarked form implied reasonable surety.
- mu- indicated absolute certainty, generally from direct participation or sensory evidence: muwenou enmeta "the dog is definitely eating; I can see the dog eating". In some dialects it might have been used as an intensive.
- ip- formed negatives: ipenou enmeta "the dog isn't eating"; ipyamebnou enmeta "the dog wasn't able to eat".
- le- marked doubt: leyenou enmeta "maybe the dog is eating".
Compounding and derivation
Compounding was quite productive, although compounds with more than two elements were very rare. All attested compounds were head-initial.
Syntax
Proto-Tulameya was strongly head-initial, and VSO was the default sentence order; in transitive sentences, the recipient (secundative) followed the theme (primative). Case marking allowed a relatively free sentence order, but within a nominal phrase the head noun was always first.
- Toi
- Ø-toi
- PRS-be
- tek
- Ø-tek
- NOM-4
- noba.
- noba
- hot
- Ampednou
- an-pednou
- AOR-give
- noi
- Ø-noi
- NOM-3M.SG
- lukabnam
- lu-kabnam
- PRI-meat
- benenmeta.
- ben-en-meta
- SEC-DEF-dog
- Ninakso
- ni-nakso
- HAB-want
- desahanso
- Ø-desa-anso
- NOM-all-god
- dauwa.
- da-uwa
- GEN-fire
- Muwesayi
- mu-e-sayi
- VER-PRS-be
- mau
- Ø-mau
- NOM-mother
- dasep
- da-sep
- GEN-1F.SG
- lulinyeTulameya.
- lu-linye-tula-meya
- PRI-person-sun-down
Lexicon
Note that in many cases, a word could act as more than one part of speech (for instance, a verb or adjective could easily function as a noun and take case prefixes), and transitivity was expressed through the case system rather than being intrinsic to the verb. As a result the "parts of speech" listed should be considered more like guidelines.
word | p.o.s. | definition | notes |
---|---|---|---|
aisim | v. | die | |
aisu | adj. | good | |
anken | n. | wind | |
anso | n. | god, spirit | |
apken | v. | know | |
aplek | n. | root | |
aptain | n. | beach | |
apu | det. | 1 | |
asep | n. | smoke | |
ayo | v. | stand | |
baket | v. | kill | |
baya | pp. | between, in the middle | |
benki | n. | head | |
betau | v. | drink | |
betka | n. | tooth | |
bo | pp. | on (top of) | |
buksek | adj. | full | |
buni | n. | bee | |
dahe | v. | hear | |
dakmo | n. | spear | |
dasa | n. | father | |
daulau | adj. | long | |
daunem | n. | rain | |
dayat | v. | cook | |
dendu | n. | wall | |
desa | det. | all | |
dilen | n. | ear | |
dimlu | n. | child | |
doip | adj. | big | |
donya | n. | world | |
dupki | adj. | new | |
egnit | n. | heron | |
eipki | v. | sit | |
ekya | v. | burn | |
elak | n. | dust | |
emba | n. | dream | |
en | det. | this, that; definite | |
etsi | n. | ice | |
haignu | v. | walk | |
halak | n. | (land) animal | |
hebu | n. | nose | |
heke | det. | 4 | |
hena | n. | wife | |
henka | n. | hill | |
het | det. | 2 | |
hipta | n. | liver | |
hita | pp. | (made) of | |
hode | pp. | through | |
hoson | n. | tree | |
i | conj. | and | |
idmum | n. | canoe | possibly related to PPL |
ilim | n. | moon | |
imbak | n. | goat | |
inte | n. | star | |
ip | det. | not; none | |
kabnam | n. | meat, flesh | |
kalat | n. | forest | |
kam | pp. | up, above | |
katlam | n. | fruit | |
kaumni | adj. | green | |
kayo | n. | wood | |
kedno | n. | seed | |
kenam | n. | milk | |
kenop | n. | knee | |
kentom | n. | village | |
keseu | v. | hunt | |
kesu | n. | feather | |
ketye | n. | grape | |
kikla | n. | year | |
kinai | adj. | dry | |
koile | v. | come | |
kuboi | v. | bite | |
kupli | n. | flower | |
kute | n. | night | |
kuya | n. | bird | |
lagno | n. | arm | |
lam | v. | exist | |
lasop | n. | grass | |
lautop | n. | sea, ocean | |
lem | det. | 3 | |
lewet | n. | neck | |
liham | n. | tongue | |
linye | n. | person | |
lisat | n. | sand | |
lomet | n. | mouth | |
lubde | n. | heart | |
lun | det. | some | |
mau | n. | mother | |
mauka | v. | lie (down) | |
meklo | n. | earth, soil | |
meta | n. | dog; wolf | possibly related to PPL |
metsu | n. | husband | |
meya | pp. | down, below | |
min | pp. | with, together | |
mun | n. | buckwheat | possibly related to PPL |
munnap | n. | hair | |
muwe | n. | breast | |
nadip | adj. | yellow | |
nadne | n. | insect, bug | |
nakso | v. | want, desire | |
naubbin | v. | take (by force) | |
nayido | n. | chief, leader | |
nebda | n. | baby | |
nei | adj. | white | |
noba | adj. | hot | |
nou | v. | eat | |
nouda | adj. | round | |
nukau | n. | snow | |
nukya | n. | man | |
ohoi | pp. | around | |
oma | adj. | red | |
padop | n. | belly, stomach | |
pata | n. | roof | |
pednou | v. | give | |
pente | n. | skin | |
petup | n. | door | |
peupe | v. | swim | |
pewu | n. | own | |
peyo | n. | leaf | |
pil | det. | 5 | |
pilen | n. | hand | |
puka | n. | nail (of finger or toe) | |
pukwa | n. | wine | possibly related to PPL |
puwu | n. | road | possibly related to PPL |
sabda | n. | crab | |
saip | n. | wing | |
salik | n. | foot | |
samik | n. | hair | |
sau | n. | cloud | |
sauk | v. | see | |
sayi | v. | be (by nature) | |
sepun | n. | egg | |
sibi | n. | eye | |
sipya | n. | throat | |
so | conj. | relativiser | |
sotlok | n. | horn | |
subat | v. | get, acquire | |
sulai | n. | blood | |
sumat | n. | day | |
taksep | n. | bean | |
takto | n. | sign; symbol | |
tamsep | v. | make | |
tanla | n. | lake | |
tau | det. | what? | |
tehi | n. | cow | |
teppo | n. | leg | |
tetwo | n. | back | |
time | adj. | small | |
togdu | n. | stone | |
toi | v. | be (currently) | |
tula | n. | sun | |
tun | det. | many | |
tuyon | v. | fly | |
ubim | n. | knife | possibly related to PPL |
udam | n. | fish | |
udin | adj. | black | |
ugdo | n. | mountain | |
uso | n. | bone | |
uwa | n. | fire | |
wabak | n. | onion | |
waku | n. | house | possibly related to PPL |
wek | pp. | with, using | |
wenta | n. | woman | |
wudai | n. | fig | possibly related to PPL |
yabnu | v. | sleep | |
yalin | n. | salt | |
yatkam | n. | tribe | |
yau | det. | who? | |
yelem | n. | garden, field | |
yepe | adj. | cold | |
yihe | n. | water | |
yikket | v. | say | |
yotye | v. | hold | |
yulu | n. | name |
173 words.