User:JiaGbon1234/Velic

Velic (native name: Hētrásaqè) is a fictional conlang.

Classification and Dialects
Velic is a language from the Crystalline family. It is spoken along the river Vel, by the cidafs (Scientific name: Cidafus altus), a fictional species similar to humans, living on the planet EV-635γ.

Tones
* The exact pronunciation varies depending on the word and dialect

Phonotactics
Syllable Structure: (C1)(C2)V(C3)(C4)T

Intrasyllabic rules:


 * V can be any oral or nasal vowel, or a syllabic consonant [ɫ̩] or [ɾ̩]
 * if C2 does not exist, C1 can be any consonant, but [ɫɫ̩] and [ɾɾ̩] are not allowed
 * [wu], [ji], [pʲi] and [pʲ'i], regardless of nasality of the vowel, are not allowed
 * if C1 and C2 both exist, only these combinations are allowed:

Transyllabic rules:
 * The coda can be any onset combination that doesn't end in a semivowel and can also be any reversed onset combination.
 * T can be any of the four tones in the phonology.
 * In a word, a closed syllable cannot be followed by a syllable without onset.
 * The cluster [sz] is not allowed
 * An occlusive cannot be followed by another occlusive of the same place of articulation.



Romanization
The romanization is shown on the phonology tables above.


 * Syllabic consonants are written the same as the unsyllabic counterpart.
 * When two or more letters pronounced separately form a digraph/trigraph, apostrophes are placed in between the letters to indicate that the letters are pronounced separately.
 * Tone diacritics are placed on the first vowel of a vocalic digraph/trigraph

Consonantal roots
Most roots are consonantal roots (having no vowels). Every consonantal has a location to add different vowels to form different stems. There are three stem-forming patterns, marked with numbers in the romanized dictionary. For example, the root h2t (cidaf) can form the stems het (cidaf), hònt (city), húet (body part of cidaf), hrt (to help, to empathize), hànt (cidaf-like), hét (moral (adj.) ), hínt (un-cidaf-like), and haet (immoral, amoral). The number is replaced by a vowel.

Pattern II
Example given above

Vocalic roots
Some roots (mostly loan words) have a vowel. The stems of these roots are irregular and do not follow a pattern.

Nouns
(X and Y refer to something that will be described in the Verbs section)

There are nouns decline by Animacy, Case, Number, Definiteness.

Animacy and Case
The three animacy categories are Rational (intelligent beings), Animate (irrational organisms) and Inanimate (non-living things)

Number
The two grammatical numbers are Singular and Plural.

Singular nouns are unmarked. Plural nouns undergo a process of tone sandhi on every vowel of the stem for the plural:


 * Mid tone -> High tone / Falling tone (depends)
 * Rising tone -> High tone
 * Falling tone -> Mid tone
 * High tone -> Falling tone

Definiteness
Definite nouns are unmarked, indefinite nouns are marked by adding the prefix 'á-'

Verbs
Verb structure

X and Y
There is a hierarchical relationship between noun classes:

inanimate > animate > animate.

For intransitive verbs, X does not exist and Y is the subject. For transitive verbs, X describes the higher noun in the hierarchy, while Y describes the lower one. If X and Y are of the same level, X is the subject, while Y is the object.

Existence
Existence describes whether the verb happens. It is unmarked if the verb happens, and takes a ì- prefix if the verb does not happen.

X stem
This is the stem of X, without any inflectional affixes. This is optional as X can be indicated by a noun before the verb.

Willingness
Willingness describes whether X and Y want the action to happen.

Successfulness
If the action is unsuccessful, add qqè-, otherwise leave it unmarked.

Verb stem + Aspect
The four grammatical aspects are simple, perfective, iterative and perfective iterative. Simple aspect is not marked. The other aspects are marked by changing the tone of the verb stem:


 * Perfective: rising -> high; anything else -> rising
 * Iterative: high -> falling; anything else -> high
 * Perfective iterative: rising -> falling; high -> mid; falling <-> mid

Y person
This is a suffix for the grammatical person of Y. If a third person group has mixed animacy, the highest animacy is the one selected.

Direct/inverse
If the verb is intransitive or X is the subject, this is unmarked. If X is the object, add -zvòe.

X inflection
If and only if X stem is incorporated in the verb, X inflection is in the verb. X inflection is the inflectional affixes of X, not indicated in the X stem. The structure of this is:

Tense
Tense suffixes:

phew

Adjectives
Adjectives agree with the nouns in case and animacy, and uses the same case-animacy suffixes.

Syntax
The default word order is XVY (look into verb section for more detail on X and Y). X can be incorporated into the verb and dropped. Y is dropped if it is a personal pronoun. Free word order is allowed, but they have emphasis on different arguments:


 * ttechwāett sódoyàzvòe vīlvo = I gave him the food.
 * vīlvo ttechwāett sódoyàzvòe = I gave him the food. (emphasis on 'him')
 * sódoyàzvòe vīlvo ttechwāett = I gave him the food. (emphasis on 'give')
 * ttechwāett vīlvo sódoyàzvòe = I gave him the food. (emphasis on 'food')
 * sódoyàzvòe ttechwāett vīlvo = I gave him the food. (less emphasis on 'him')
 * vīlvo sódoyàzvòe ttechwāett = I gave him the food. (less emphasis on 'food')
 * ttechsódozvòeèrchwāettyà vīlvo = I gave him the food. (less emphasis on 'give')