Ulele Language

Ulele is a predominantly analytic Khoisan language, with all affixes having actual lexical meanings.

General information
Ulele is a analytic language, head-final, uses postpositions, and has a topic comment structure. Word order is nearly always SOV, but can be VSO to emphasize the action, or OSV as an equivalent to the English passive voice. There is not always a clear distinction between agent and patient, sometimes context determines which is the agent and which is the patient. Additional particles like now or a while ago are used in place of tense, and verbal aspects are mostly realized via reduplification or vowel lengthening. Nouns do not decline for the plural or dual, instead the particle many, lot, or a number must be used alongside the noun, or simply repeating the noun a second time implies plurality. Instead of a dual case, one would say, X with Y. There are no indefinite or relative pronouns, phrases consisting of man or thing together with a particle are used instead of the former, the reduced relative clause The man [I saw yesterday] went home instead of The man that I saw yesterday went home) is used for the latter.

Phonology
Ulele possesses an extremely small sound inventory, like that of Piraha or the more familiar Hawaiian. There is a great deal of varying pronunciation, with many correct ways to utter a word. It is the most innovative of the Khoisan languages in regards to phonology. All click sounds have been replaced with pulmonic consonants. Grammatically however it is the most preservative. The chain of development is-


 * k > tʃ > t


 * k > ʔ


 * ǂ > kʲ > k


 * ǃ > t


 * ǁ > tʃ > t

8ǀ > ts > t


 * [r] is merged with [l].


 * All affricates are reduced to just [ts].


 * [ʃ] merges with [s].


 * Uvular and pharyngeal consonants merge to pharyngeal, then are omitted, leaving behind evidence for their existence in the form of [æ] as the most common vowel.


 * [i] merges with [e], [u] with [o].

Consonants
{| class="wikitable article-table" style="width: 660px; text-align:center;" border="1" cellspacing="1" cellpadding="1" ! style="width: 68px; " | ! style="width: 68px; " |Labial ! style="width: 68px; " |Alveolar ! style="width: 68px; " |Velar ! style="width: 68px; " |Glottal !Nasal !Plosive !Fricative !Approximant
 * m
 * n
 * p
 * t
 * k
 * ʔ
 * s
 * h
 * h
 * h
 * l
 * l


 * There is no distinction between voiceless and voiced consonants. Generally, when plosives are pronounced as voiceless, there is never any aspiration as in English. Between vowels and in clusters with a nasal, they are voiced.
 * k may be pronounced, depending on the speaker, variously as [x], [ɣ], [tʃ], or [dʒ].
 * t before [i], tends to be [ts], [dz], [tʃ], or [dʒ]. Between vowels it may be [ɾ] or [ɽ].
 * Between vowels /p/ may be [v] or [β] instead of [b].
 * The nasals and /l/ may be syllables all by themselves.
 * /n/ is pronounced as [ŋ] before /k/.

Orthography
The orthography of Ulele does not cover the wide range of ways a single phoneme may be pronounced, only the most common and underlying pronunciation.

Phonotactics
The syllable structure has a few restrictions that characterize the language. Namely, no word may have three plosives, or any consonant clusters other than NC, lC, lN, and NN (N=nasal, C=all plosives and /s/). Syllabic consonants do not count as part of a clusters. Hiatus is permitted, but no consonant is allowed to occur at the end of a word except the nasals, [ʔ], /s/, and /l/.

Verbs

 * }

There are two types of verbs, active ones such as run and hit, and stative ones which depict a state of being, such as live. The verbal aspects are the Habitual, Progressive, Inchoative (started to X), Terminative (finished X), Defective (almost X), Pausative (stopped X for a while), Durative, Frequentative, Experiential (have done X many times), Intentional, Accidental, and Intensive. These can all be expressed in a variety of ways, some with particles or extra words, some with reduplication of either the first syllable or the whole word.

Habitual The first vowel is lengthened to express the habitual aspect, along with the first syllable being repeated, which is optional. Or, one may say something like He do X all (the) time.

Progressive Expressed by phrases like She us-with no cease (to) live, which is more understandably said as, She's still living with us.

Inchoative The verbal phrase go into, which translates to begin or start in English, is used.

Terminative The verb to end is used.

Defective Phrases of the structure come near to X are used.

Pausative The verbs stop and pause are used, which have different connotations from using to end, namely they imply a temporary pause to an action.

Durative The phrase to (a) long time is used.

Frequentive Expressed with the phrase again and again.

Experiential Would be expressed as He do X before or He do X many time (before).

Intentional Verbs whose meanings include wish, desire, or want are used.

Accidental Same as the Intentional but with the negative prefixed to the verbs described above.

Intensive The verb is repeated twice.

Deictal Suffixed Statements
Deictal suffixes indicate the relation of a third-person subject to the speaker and are only used in the precense of a third-person subject. Although they could be classed as suffixes, they are really short statements which may fuse with the verb in fast speech.

Nouns
Nouns in Ulele are not inflected, but a lexical root can have a 3rd person pronoun or the word thing attached to the end of it.

Intransitive Sentences
Since Ulele is an active-stative language, the subject of an intransitive sentence may be agent or patient. The patient of an intransitive sentence will appear before the verb, the agent after it. Subjects of verbs, mostly stative ones, like become angry or to be sad, go before the action because they have no control over the action.

Lexical Roots
Technically, the concept of root words is useless for this language, since a root is defined as an isolated word with no affixes or changes. In Ulele, words are always this way, though in fast speech particles and postpositions may fuse with a noun.

Whether a word is a verb or noun, for some words, depends on where it is in a transitive sentence. If a word is sentence finally, its a verb, if its anywhere else, it's a noun. As for an intransitive sentence, the endings signifying definiteness, if present on the word, will render its role as a noun obvious.

Agentive and Patientive Nouns
Agent nouns like boxer and baker form intransitive sentences in Ulele where, for the most part, the subject is in control of the action, save for actions like hunger or love, where the subject isn't. The verb would be reduplicated for the Habitual Aspect, followed by the subject if it is in control, preceded by the subject if it is not.

The word baker would be translated as mamaxili mun, boxer would be papaka mun, whilst the word lover would be mun luluha, because the action cannot be controlled like that of baking or boxing can. This form can also be used to make perpetually patientive nouns like baggage or burden, which can both translate as ta hiahia, which literally means thing carried or carried thing.

Agentive nouns may also be expressed by a simple conjunction like paka mun, hit man.

Possessive
Alienable and inalienable possession are distinguished. For alienable possession a simple postposition like hala, towards, is used, but for inalienable possession the particle kyla is used.

Reflexive pronoun
The reflexive pronoun in Ulele is the word ui which can be translated as self. It takes on the corresponding pronoun and kyla to indicate person, such as ma kyla ui which means myself.

Modifiers
Adjectives directly preceed the noun or verb they modify, as do adverbs the verbs they modify. Comparison is made with the particle luna or iana, which both over. The superlative made by the expression over all other X.

Universal Declaration of Human Rights, article 1
'''kaia mun haxalulu a kaia mun uansa manaxu pampani a ti kyla kas. Utu ti puka hala. Ti kyla man a apaxa a ly impi ta ti hala pal.'''