Vayardyio

Overview

=Setting= Vayardyio is an extra-terrestial language spoken by the humanoid population in the so-called Northwestern quadrant of the Great Continent on the planet called Tolouga (in V.: meaning 'world' or 'living space'). Tolouga circles its sun in more-or-less earthlike circumstances and (mostly due to lack of imagination of their creator) its animate species look and behave quite familiar to us. Vayardyio is the mother tongue of the Vayardi people (they who inhabit the country of Vayardo). Native speakers number approx. 49 mi. It is seen as the sole representative of the Western branch within the Coumrillian language family. Two more branches of this family exist in neighbouring countries: the Northern (or ‘High’) branch, consisting of Tozurian, Chirchian and Gabilian, and the Southern branch, with Avessite, Alemnic and Silmerian. All languages show a strong lexical and syntactical relationship, whereas rather prominent differences occur in the phonology and phonetics. Vayardyio shares with the Northern branch-languages features like a fully active nominal and pronominal declension in three cases, while it still displays rare phenomena other languages have lost, such as the use of a ‘4th person’ (often called: obviative). Also, only Vayardyio retains the original four verbal moods of the Old-Coumrillian root language. Vayardyio languages history tracks back some 2000 years, dating to the westward movement of Coumrillian tribes from the northern plains even before the Classical Civilisation of Coumrillia came to full bloom. Therefore, Vayardyio lexicon displays quite a few words and meanings which differ from words in all other modern Coumrillian languages, more heavily influenced bij the Classical Coumrillian speech. Here is an example of regular language change (incl consonant shifts) in several Coumrillian languages:

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Development of Coumrillian root words in various modern Coumrillian languages: 

Coumr        Gabilian     Tozurian     Vayardyio   Avessitian        Alemnic       (meaning in English)

xεm             heum         him            yémo          jem            jemon          human creature, man 

xεddün        houd          hüd            yo               judij'          jid                 year 

uæxas          auc            ühi            oya              uj              oje                wa­ter   

xuonnas      hanna         heni           ana            ană            ana               woman   

bhæstarau   hestre        hestur         ésiara        festere        feste             to do, make 

phaiger        fegru          fegur          figro           fijere           fejre            blue ___________________________________________________________________________________

Typology
Vayardyio is a typical SOV-language, in which fronting constituents to the 'left' (head) of the sentence marks topicalization. Typically, negation is expressed by fronting the verb, preceded only by the general negation marker yé. The language is inflecting, according to regular patterns: declension of nouns and pronouns, conjugation of verbs, on a nominative-accusative basis. Verbs show four moods and display active and passive voice; nouns are distinguished by gender: -o class (male), -a class (female) while -o class being the default type. An earlier gender distinction in animate - inanimate has left only some remote traces in the language. Vayardyio clearly distinguishes singular from plural

Phonology
Vayardyio phonemic inventory consists of a set of six vowels: a, e, o, i, u and /schwa/; the latter only appears in inflected endings. It is obligatory in V. that all (native) words end vocalic; also words rarely begin with  /i/, /o/ and /ou/. Furthermore, strict rules inhibit the forming of allophones. Diphtongs are non-existant too: between any pair of vowels a pause is always observed.

The consonants are: b, k, ç, d, f, g, j, l, m, n, p, r, s, t, v, z. Of these, /b/, /j/ and /z/ are much less distributed. written represents the dental fricative /as in English or Spanish. The two glides /j/ and /ç/ (palatalized) are expressed gi+(vowel) an y respectively in “terrestial” orthography; whenever g preceding i+(vowel) should not be pronounced /j/, it is written ğ. In scheme, the consonants are distributed like this:

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                  bilabial               labio-            dental      palatal        velar  

                                             dental

 

stop            p       b                                    t        d                          k      γ

 

fricative                                 f        v          s   θ   z           ç

nasal         m                                                   n                               ŋ

 

liquid                                     l         r

glide           w                                                       j

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Several consonant clusters are allowed at the beginning of words but the language as a whole favours syllable formation of the type CV, CVC or VC. Base words mostly have no more than three syllables, however throug inflection and suffixing, strings up to six syllables can exist.

=Basic Grammar=

syntactical matters
=Dictionary=

some important verbs
=Example text= He lay flat on the brown, pine-needled floor of the forest,

Té solio asti rédénou i logisi apprédisto, scaltésata pandame,'

On brown forest floor leaves covered-with, stretched-out he was laying down

his chin on his folded arms,

alta pouta té rémase rédiviste,'

his chin on (at) arms folded,

and high overhead the wind blew in the tops of the pine trees

sé nyo sig’ono é gialvo vi salmisi otrélase velantame.'

and high above him the wind in trees tops it-was-blowing.

The mountainside sloped gently where he lay;

Gie andri réna vé fiğio lama pandame, régantima élése; 

The mountain side [in-place-that] he was lying, gently(mildly) sloped;

But below it was steep and he could see

tasima topa séda riva nie sé giésara sate

but more-remote (yonder) steep it-was and see he-was-able

the dark of the oiled road winding through the pass.

i barnisti vasi alvisso paréči o calisso andanio.

(E. Hemingway; For whom the bell tolls; opening sentence)

Note: of course on Tolougia no pine-trees grow, so neither is the forest floor covered with needles.

Literal translation is added in the third sentences