Nomidian

General Informaiton
This is a romlang is set in the old Roman province of "Pannonia." It is characterized with very innovative sound changes due to its relative isolation and backwoods-y-ness.

'''Constantly in development. It may change significantly. '''

JUST REDO, REDO IT ALLLLLLLLL ;-;-;-;-;-;-;-;-;

History and Explination
Nomidian retains two cases: the subject and the genitive. Towards the middle ages, irregularities within most noun paradigms began regularizing to where the stem took over (pater would be patrus). Eventually, all cases became obsolete with only the genitive case remaining: the genitive in fact gained more use becoming the case for: possessive, compounds, honorifics / modifier nouns, and other relationships between two or more nouns (other than those determined by conjunctions).

Grammatical gender began simplifying early on. The masculine and neuter genders merged with the neuter being completely taken over by the masculine (with some exceptions to feminine). The difference therebetween also began simplifying to be more clear.

Grammatical number disapeared with the introduction of mandatory articles (as they tell number).

Verbs

History and Introduction
Like nouns, verbs have been mainly standardized. The conjugation thereof has also changed dramatically. The perfect tenses and the passive tense have been dropped completely in terms of morphology (being replaced with paraphrastic phrases): instead, the perfect tenses were shown with the construction of  HABEŌ + infinitive ( HABEŌ in the given perfect tense); the passive was replaced with a syntactical construction (explained later under Passive). The imperfect tense fell out of use being replaced with the regular perfect tense which had changed meanings to the general past. The future tense had been replaced with the construction of infinitive + HABEŌ  (present tense). The conditional tense had been created with the construction of infinitive + HABEŌ  (imperfect tense).

The imperitive split into two tenses: the hortative and the imperitive. The imperitive only exists in the present within the second person: it means a command, a demand (not a suggestion). The hortative represents a whole tense which means suggestion which was formed by the construction verb + ĪRE . The jussive was also developed which is formed by an artificial construction based of the actual subjunctive which was add in later.

The subjunctive was expanded however. The subjunctive grew to mean an interrogative, potential, or optative depending on context (explained more under Subjunctive in Syntax).

Sound Changes
Legend: C = consonant | V = vowel | ´ = stressed | ˝ = near-stress/secondary stress | ` = unstressed | % = intertonic vowel | ¯ = long vowel | L = {l r j w} | O = open syllable | Ɵ = closed syllable | $ = syllable | J = {i i: ɪ j e e:} | P = plosive | G = {j w} | ˆ = secondary stress

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Apud Helvētios longē plus nobilis fuit et ditissimus Orgetorix



























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