Proto-Andem

General Information
Proto-Andem (Andem comes from the Alemarese name for the region, the original speakers may have called their language *Bhaa’ “speech") is the proto-language of the Andem language family, a rather large language family spoken by a large portion of the alien Patronans of the planet Patrona, specifically originating inland from the southwest coast of the largest continent, Chiwar. The homeland of the language family is believed to be near the center of the continent, leading to possible connections with Central and other prominent language families. Andem languages spread along with the Djipirist religion.

Consonants
m, p, b, ph, bh, n, t, d, th, dh, s, ṇ, ṭ, ḍ, ṭh, ḍh, ŋ, k, g, kh, gh, ’


 * /s/ could have been nearly any sibilant, and was almost certainly voiced before voiced consonants.
 * /d/ may have been a flap or trill in some environments, as it's reflexes in many daughter languages.
 * The voiced aspirate series could have been murmured or breathy voiceless aspirates among other possibilities.

Vowels
i, y, a, u

Phonotactics
CV(V)(C)
 * There are no word-initial or word-final consonant clusters. Any potential illegal cluster is broken by an epenthetic /ɨ/.
 * Any two vowels can occur together in a syllable, forming a diphthong or long vowel.
 * Dentialveolar consonants do not begin any native roots, though they may begin syllables otherwise.
 * Legal words have a two-mora minimum, that is, the minimum word is CVV or CVN. An epenthetic /ɨ/ is added to any word which would fall short.

Grammar
Proto-Andem was an agglutinative language built on a system of roots and affixes (which are mostly suffixes). Roots have no innate part of speech and can alternate freely between verbal, nominal, and adjectival meanings, sometimes with no overt marking. Roots can also be combined to form impressive compounds, the primary method of derivation. Though extremely important and comprehensive, distinctions made via affixes are almost all optional, and affixes can be left out if context is enough to clear up ambiguities. The canonical order of affixes is very fluid, with the most salient affixes being last.

Nouns can take markings for: number (singular, dual, plural, collective, singulative), case (including adpositions), determiner (prefixes), tense, diminutive/augmentative, conjunctions

Verbs can take markings for: subject (prefixes), object+definiteness, voice, mood, aspect, tense, diminutive/augmentative, conjunctions

Word order was mostly head-final, though case markings probably made moving words around for focus possible.

Voice
passive I: -ib-

passive II: -ghi-

Aspect
gnomic: -yṇ-

Mood
subjunctive: -id-

negative: -pu-

optative: -a-

Insular Andem

 * 1) [+asp]>[+fric]
 * 2) d/r/V_
 * 3) ɖ/ɻ/V_
 * 4) V//_#/V_
 * 5) t(ɨ)/s/_#
 * 6) ɣ(ɨ)/u/_#
 * 7) ɣ/j/_
 * 8) x/h/_
 * 9) ɸ/w/_
 * 10) ɻ/ɭ/_
 * 11) h//_C
 * 12) S//_C[-j]
 * 13) ɨ/ɐ/_
 * 14) au/o/_
 * 15) ua/o/_
 * 16) ai/e/_
 * 17) ia/e/_
 * 18) V//_²
 * 19) b/ɖ/ɳ_
 * 20) p/ʈ/ɳ_
 * 21) jɐ/i/_
 * 22) ʔɐ//#_C

Miscellaneous
*andy "the homeland"

*muth "person"

*ḍha’a "shape"

*ḍauk "log, trunk"

*phaaḍ "run"

ṭhukma, ’isphuŋa, ḍada, ḍaghdis, khytphis, suŋis, ṭyndy, byghy, kypghy, ḍythu, ’ydam