Kiɓ̰ubu

Setting
Spoken by the strange hunter-gatherer tribes of the northern coasts, Kiɓ̰ubu has always been a dying language. The land is harsh, and people scarce, so the number of Kiɓ̰ubu speakers has always been slim. The language has suffered persecution at the hands of Emedonian colonial authorities, who scornfully categorize it as one of the "savage Barbic tongues" and have repeatedly tried, with moderate success, to eradicate it and "educate" its speakers in Emedonian civilization. However, despite its borrowings from Barbic languages, recent studies have shown that Kiɓ̰ubu is a language isolate.

Word Order
Kiɓ̰ubu is OVS, or Object-Verb-Subject. Quirkily, adjectives follow the nouns in the ergative case and precede those in the absolutive case. Adverbs tend to follow the word being modified (unless modifying an absolutive adjective, in which case they precede). Direct objects will precede indirect objects. Because it is head-initial, dependent clauses follow the verb.

Consonants
Kiɓ̰ubu consonants are by and large rather simple. Perhaps the most difficult to produce are the implosives /ɓ̰/ and /ɗ̰̪/. These two sounds are made when air is forced inwards rather than out. As such, when they are present in a word they tend to have a dominating influence, assimilating other consonants and causing shifts. See the Pronunciation section for more details.

Vowels
Kiɓ̰ubu uses a simple 5-vowel system, as follows:

Pronunciation
Kiɓ̰ubu has two implosives, /ɓ̰/ and /ɗ̰̪/. These consonants, by virtue of their pronunciation, can and will change other letter pronunciations in a word to make it simpler to pronounce.

The change of /n/ to [r̃] will always result in creaky voice, in both consonants and vowels, as can the dropping of post-implosive stops. However, the presence of [r̃] can trigger the change of fricatives, usually /s/ and /z/, to become {r}; it also can cause the change of the stops /p/ or /b/ to /ɓ̰/ and /t/ or /d/ to /ɗ̰̪/. An example would be the pronunciation of /doanɓ̰ar/ as [ɗ̰o̰a̰r̰̃ɓ̰a̰r̰].

Another set of pronunciation changes, sandhi, can be found in Kiɓ̰ubu. When an unvoiced consonant and a voiced consonant occur next to one another, the unvoiced consonant is transformed into its voiced equivalent, if possible. Similarly, if the approximants /ɹ/ or /l/ occur next to the trill /r/, the /r/ will assimilate. If the nasals /n/ or /m/ occur next to /ŋ/, they will assimilate as well.

Orthographic Pronunciation
The appearance of double letters in the orthography of Kiɓ̰ubu means slightly different things depending on whether the doubled letters are consonants or vowels and the dialect of the speaker. Traditionally, doubled consonants and vowels referred to gemination and vowel lengthening, respectively. Thusly, /bb/ wass pronounced [bː] or [bb] and /aa/ was pronounced [aː]. However, in some dialects, especially those of the most isolated islands, doubled vowels were pronounced as two distinct but conjoined instances of the same vowel. There would be a tonal difference between the two vowels, often accompanied by a sort of glide between the two. The double consonants would be pronounced as two seperate consonants with minimal space between. Within the past 150 years, these pronunciations have largely faded into obscurity in lieu of the more classical pronunciation.

Phonotactics
Kiɓ̰ubu can allow for syllables of the following form:

(C)V(C)

Usually, at least one consonant will be present in any Kiɓ̰ubu syllablle with the exception of certain "short words" or words beginning or ending with two adjacent vowels.

Nasals

 * Nasals can precede any stop, but in general they will follow stops located at their own point of articulation.
 * Nasals can precede approximants, a trill, or each other.
 * Nasals can only precede fricatives located at their own point of articulation, and even then only rarely.

Stops

 * Stops can precede nasals, a trill, fricatives, and each other.
 * Stops will almost never be seen preceding approximants.

Fricatives

 * Can appear before stops, approximates, and other fricatives.
 * The antipathy between nasals and fricatives is seen again; the two are rarely adjacent.
 * There are few words which place a trill after a fricative, but it is possible.

Trill

 * Can appear before approximants, stops, and sibilants.
 * Cannot appear before a nasal, except in writing. The pronunciation change will transform it into the approximant /ɹ/

Approximants

 * Approximants can only appear before a stop or a nasal.

Stress
Stress appears on the first syllable of the root of any word, with two exceptions. If there is a double vowel in the word, then the syllable in which is contained receives the primary stress. If there is a syllable with a double consonant, or two consonants that are pronounced as a double consonant, then that syllable receives the primary stress.

Overview

 * Kiɓ̰ubu is an ergative-absolutive language, but it uses an ancillary prepositional case to distinguish such words from those in the default absolutive.
 * Gender distinguishes based on animacy and, to a lesser extent, by familiarity with the speaker. It is intrinsic to nouns and must be indicated in verbs.

Nouns
All nouns have an implicit gender, either animate or inanimate. In the past, there were many more of these "genders", but, with the exception of a few words, mostly abstractions from the extinct "intangible" gender, they have by and large disappeared. Inanimate nouns are a bit unusual because, traditionally, they could never function as the subject of an active transitive verb. Therefore, they would only be seen in the absolutive case when acting as the subject of a passive or deponent transitive verb. As with most languages, however, Kiɓ̰ubu changes over time, and this custom is often eschewed; speakers will either ignore the rule, or, if feeling fastidious, will add an affix for animacy.

Nouns have three cases: Ergative, Absolutive, and Adpositional. The Absolutive form is the default form of the noun. They are declined by gender, case, and definitiveness, not by number.


 * The ergative case functions as the subject of a transitive verb.


 * The absolutive case functions as the subject of an intransitive verb, the object of a transitive verbs, and the subject and complement of a copula.


 * The adpositional case is used with various adpositions to elaborate the function of verbs and nouns.


 * Nouns are always given with two forms listed: the primary root, the absolutive definite, and the secondary root, the absolutive indefinite (the relevant root is this form minus the prefix). Nouns decline based on the secondary root.

Below is the declension of a regular animate noun: xoor, ʔexoor, "dog, hunting hound":

Below is the declension of a regular inanimate noun, keta, neketa, "meat; flesh":

Thusly, the endings for regular nouns of both genders would be:

Unfortunately, not all nouns are regular. Whether borrowed from terms from other languages, or surviving as relics from lost grammatical genders, some nouns decline irregularly. Thankfully, all one needs in order to learn the irregularities is to become familiar with the secondary root. Below are the main groups of irregular nouns:


 * Double-vowel nouns are nouns which begin with two vowels. When declined, they replace their initial vowel with the inherent vowel of the necessary prefix.
 * aornak, neornak, "fog, mist; spray; cloud"
 * iekkerarat, ʔeekkerarat, "ancestral enemy, natural enemy"


 * Monoforms only decline in the Ergative definite. Many of these nouns are recent borrowings. They will be listed with a third root - the ergative definite.
 * feniku, feniku, ifeniku, "palm tree" (from Emedonian)
 * ʔokratsiak, ʔokratsiak, iʔokratsiak, "orator, storyteller"


 * Non-declining nouns do not decline at all. Like Monoforms, a third root will be given. Many of these nouns refer to simple or fundamental concepts, as well as abstracts, but some are borrowings.
 * iske, iske, iske, "power, force, ability; soul"
 * tamma, tamma, tamma, "error"

Those few nouns from the intangible gender that have survived into modern speech decline like animate nouns in the definite, but lack indefinite forms.
 * Stem-changing nouns are the most difficult to remember. Oftentimes, the changes must be learnt along with the noun. Most of these nouns were part of other genders that merged into either the animate or inanimate, taking the prefixes but retaining old patterns of declension, such as the i/u shift (the raising of front e to i and back o to u) as well as front-voicing shift (consonants tend to move from unvoiced to voiced, and from voiced towards the front of the mouth). Still others are unpredictable, the result of inscrutable sound change or arcane merges of two related terms
 * ŋehu, ʔenihu, "nose"
 * ɣeb, ʔekiɓ̰, "mouth" (hence Kiɓ̰ubu from second root)
 * umit, ʔumid, "beard, whiskers"
 * mak, nemixa, "pebble" (in disuse; nemak and nemag are more common)

Verbs
Verbs in Kiɓ̰ubu are conjugated with affixes determined by several factors, such as noun gender, verb tense, and so forth. There are four main types of verbs: -os, -as, -ek, and -ru, named for their thematic endings.

Below is a sample sentence which demonstrates the parsing of an -os type verb, ɹasgos:


 * keta ɹaɹasguzo ixoor


 * meat-ABS.-def. eat-Anim.-3rd.-sing.+sing.-present dog-ERG.-def.


 * The dog eats the meat

Here, the verb ɹasgos has a single animate initiator in the third person that is currently acting on a single target. Therefore, the stem -ɹasg- recieves a reduplicated prefix, ɹa-, indicating an animate initiator in the third person, and a suffix, -uzo, determining that both the initiator and the recipient are singular, and that the action is occurring at this very moment. Here is a table which shows ɹasgos being conjugated in the simple present tense:

* Since ɹasgos is an active, transitive verb, it lacks an inanimate conjugation.

Here is an -as verb, roras: