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Revision as of 05:24, 10 November 2016

The creator of Ahoreni, Olive11224, has put this Conlang on hiatus.
Dumping Chinese on Finnish does not a language make.


Oheooreoni
오허오러니
Type Agglutinative
Alignment Nominative - Accusative
Head direction Head Final
Tonal No
Declensions Yes
Conjugations Yes
Genders No
Nouns decline according to...
Case Number
Definiteness Gender
Verbs conjugate according to...
Voice Mood
Person Number
Tense Aspect
Meta-information
Progress 1%
Statistics
Nouns 4%
Verbs 0%
Adjectives 0%
Syntax 0%
Words 10 of 1500
Creator Olive11224

General Information

Ahoreni (Honzeu: 魂语,Oheooreozeu: 오허오러니 IPA: /oxɤorɤni/) is an agglutinative language spoken around the Changbai mountains. It is considered stable, with a population of about ~2,275,000 speakers. The language is vastly innovative, with much assimilation from middle Chinese and Korean.


The Ahoro People

The Ahoro people have historically occupied much territory, from Primorsky Krai to Shandong. 

Since the formation of North Korea, it is likely that the population in North Korea has assimilated with North Korean culture and philosophy. Thus, the population may no longer speak Ahoreni.

Phonology

Consonants

Non phonemic consonants and vowels are in brackets.

Bilabial Alveolar Alveolo-Palatal Palatal Velar
Nasal m n ŋ
Plosive unaspirated p t
aspirated

Fricative

s ɕ x
Affricate unaspirated ts
aspirated tsʰ tɕʰ
Trill r
Approximant l j, ɥ w
  • [r] may shorten to [ɾ], as long as [r] is not the initial consonant.
  • The retroflex series does not occur before the vowel /i/.
  • Coda nasals differs depending on the initial consonant of the next syllable.
    • Before bilabial consonants: /m/
    • Before coronal consonants, glottal consonants, and if the consonant is absent : /n/
    • Before velar consonants: /ŋ/

Vowels

Front Near-front Central Back
Close i, y ɯ*, u
Near-close
Close-mid e o, ɤ
Mid
Open-mid
Near-open
Open a
  • Ahoreni does not employ phonemic vowel or consonant length.

Vowel Clusters

In Ahoreni, many vowel clusters may consist of a Pure Vowel/Diphthong and a glide.

Main Vowel Dim. Vowel Glides
Ø j w ɥ
a Ø a ja wa ɥa
ɪ jaɪ waɪ
ʊ jaʊ waʊ

ɤ

Ø ɤ
i Ø i wi
o Ø o jo wo ɥo
e Ø e je we ɥɪ
u Ø u ju
y Ø y
ɯ Ø ɯ
  • /ɥ/ may only succeed an Alveolo-Palatal consonant.
  • Bilabial consonant can not occur before /ɥ/ or /w/.

This is a list showing the possible vowel-final combinations.

Vowel Final
n m ŋ
a /an/ /am/ /ɑŋ/
i /in/ /im/ /iŋ/
e /e/ /em/ /eŋ/
ɤ [ən] /ɤm/ /ɤŋ
o /on/ /om/ /oŋ/
u /un/ /um/ /uŋ/
y /yn/ /ym/ /yŋ/
ɯ /n̩/ /m̩/ /ŋ̍/


Phonotactics

  •  The language's main syllable structure is (C)(v)V(v)(C)

Writing System

This language usually uses the Korean alphabet.

Grammar

The language is SOV. Ahoreni is traditionally suffixing.

Gender Cases Numbers Tenses Persons Moods Voices Aspects
Verb No No No Yes No Yes Yes Yes
Nouns No Yes No No No No No No
Adjectives No No No No No No No No
Numbers No No No No No No No No
Participles No No No No No No No No
Adverb No No No No No No No No
Pronouns Yes Yes No No Yes No No No
Adpositions No No No No No No No No
Article No No No No No No No No
Particle No No No No No No No No


Noun Phrases

Postpositions

Hwayi uses postpositional particles to mark grammatical features such as cases, locative, and spatial relations.


Use                       Particle                       

Subjective

Ø
Topical gwa

Accusative

jin

Dative-Instrumental

ye

Genitive

zei

Vocative

o

Subessive

hio

Superessive

oseuli

Inessive

pareu

Exessive

moo

Ablative

son

Lative

beun

Ahoreni also uses postpositions to show spatial relations.


Demonstratives

Ahoreni has a three-way distinction between demonstratives, similar to the Northern Sami languages. (Proximal, Mesioproximal, Mesiodistal and Distal.)

Demonstrative Definition

English Equivalent

Sweo Proximal This
Nani

Medial

That (near you)
Jan Distal That (far away)

Classifiers

Classifiers, or counter words, work similarly to Chinese, and must be bound to a noun if one were to describe number or definiteness. Here is a list of the classifiers which are commonly used.

Pronunciation Example
Yiukeo ~~

Numbers

English Sino-Xenic Traditional
One Yin Yuci
Two Ni Za
Three San Twe
Four Si Keunai
Five Ngo Liu
Six Lyung Co
Seven Tsin Siba
Eight Ban Hai
Nine Kyu Nwa
Ten Jim Doseu
Hundred Bang Ungu
Thousand Cen ~
Ten Thousand Yiuan Seuha
Million ~ Eotweo
Hundred Million Ying Qyo
Billion ~ Pyiun
Trillion Ryo Mao

Numbers

Pronouns

Formal pronouns usually descend from words of Chinese origin. The first person formal pronouns are formed from a first person formal pronoun and the suffix -yaowa (lit. under). Informal pronouns are usually native in origin.


Reflexives Reflexives are formed by attaching the suffix -ki to the respective pronoun.

Adjectives

Adjectives must occur before a noun. 

Verbs

The verb system of Ahoreni is somewhat complex.

Mood Polarity Voice Aspect Tense
-
indicative
-
affirmative
-
active
-
simple
-
present
-keon, ken-
conditional
-abe, bi-
negative
-be, iba-
passive
-zeon, zen-
progressive
-can-
past
-kyo, ki-
jussive
-wan-
perfective
-ho, hiu-
future
-hwa-
imperative
-han-
inchoative
-yi, eu-
inferential
-jiu, du-
subjunctive

-kywai, kwau-epistemic

Mood

  1. Indicative - States a fact witnessed by the speaker, in some direct form. -"I feel/hear/see/etc. him running"
  2. Conditional - Indicates that an action depends on another event -"If the motion of his legs is propelling him forward, he is running"
  3. Jussive - Indicates a desire -"I want to run"
  4. Imperative - Indicates a command -"You must run"
  5. Inferrential - Indicates a fact not witnessed directly by the speaker. -"John Doe told me he was running"
  6. Subjunctive - Indicates a thought -"I am thinking that he is running"
  7. Epistemic- Indicates a statement deemed possible

Aspect

Particles

The particle "ie" is used to form yes/no questions.

Syntax

Lexicon

Example text

All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights. They are endowed with reason and conscience and should act towards one another in a spirit of brotherhood.