Conlang
Tag: Visual edit
Tag: Visual edit
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Vowel reduction is a very present phenomena in Astinian. The first vowel reduction is called the akanye, which defines the reduction of the vowels /a/ and /ɔ/ to /ɐ/, when unstressed, e.g. : в<u>о</u>ґз'''а'''ль /v<u>ɐ</u>gz'''a'''ʎ/ (''=train station''). The second vowel reduction is called the ikanye, which is the reduction of the vowel /ɛ/ to /ɨ/, when unstressed, e.g. : стр'''е'''гн<u>е</u>циë /str<sup>j</sup>'''ɛ'''gɲ<u>ɨ</u>c<sup>j</sup>ijɐ/ (''=decision''). The ikanye can only apply, if there are already two /ɛ/-vowels in the words stem. The first /ɛ/ will always be the stressed vowel and the other /ɛ/-vowels will follow the ikanye rule. However, the ikanye does not apply for grammatical endings (''e.g. : for nouns, the /ɛ/-vowel stays even if unstressed and for verbs, it stays too or follows a new vowel reduction, the okanye, which will be discussed when talking about conjugations'').
 
Vowel reduction is a very present phenomena in Astinian. The first vowel reduction is called the akanye, which defines the reduction of the vowels /a/ and /ɔ/ to /ɐ/, when unstressed, e.g. : в<u>о</u>ґз'''а'''ль /v<u>ɐ</u>gz'''a'''ʎ/ (''=train station''). The second vowel reduction is called the ikanye, which is the reduction of the vowel /ɛ/ to /ɨ/, when unstressed, e.g. : стр'''е'''гн<u>е</u>циë /str<sup>j</sup>'''ɛ'''gɲ<u>ɨ</u>c<sup>j</sup>ijɐ/ (''=decision''). The ikanye can only apply, if there are already two /ɛ/-vowels in the words stem. The first /ɛ/ will always be the stressed vowel and the other /ɛ/-vowels will follow the ikanye rule. However, the ikanye does not apply for grammatical endings (''e.g. : for nouns, the /ɛ/-vowel stays even if unstressed and for verbs, it stays too or follows a new vowel reduction, the okanye, which will be discussed when talking about conjugations'').
   
Two non-iotified vowels, whether stressed or unstressed, induce palatalization, notably /ɛ/~/ɨ/ represented by the letter е and /i/ represented by the letter i. Mostly the palatalization resumes by adding a /<sup>j</sup>/ to the consonant followed by e or i, but the more advanced the iotations are :
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Two non-iotified vowels, whether stressed or unstressed, induce palatalization, notably /ɛ/~/ɨ/ represented by the letter е and /i/ represented by the letter i. Mostly the palatalization resumes by adding a /<sup>j</sup>/ to the consonant followed by e or i, but the more advanced iotations are :
   
 
==Writing System==
 
==Writing System==

Revision as of 11:49, 16 April 2021

Astinian
Type Fusional
Alignment Nominative-Accusative
Head direction Initial
Tonal No
Declensions Yes
Conjugations Yes
Genders 3
Nouns decline according to...
Case Number
Definiteness Gender
Verbs conjugate according to...
Voice Mood
Person Number
Tense Aspect
Meta-information
Progress 0%
Statistics
Nouns 0%
Verbs 0%
Adjectives 0%
Syntax 0%
Words of 1500
Creator gjordanoff


Classification and Dialects

Being spoken in the Astinian Commonwealth as the official language, Astinian is an Eastern Germanic language, heavily influenced by its Slavic neighboring languages, Polish, Belarusian, Ukrainian and Russian. It is a fusional and highly inflected language with a case system and a complex verb system. Furthermore, it is the only Germanic language which uses the Cyrillic script. As in Belarusian and Russian, vowel reduction (especially the akanye and the ikanye) is present in Astinian.

Phonology

Consonants

Labial Dental, alveolar Dental Alveolar Post-alveolar Retroflex Palatal Velar Glottal
Nasal m mj n ɲ
Stop p pj

b bj

t tj

d dj

c

ɟ

k

g

Affricate ts tsj
Fricative f fj

v vj

s sj

z zj

ʃ

ʒ

ɕ

ʑ

ç

x h
Approximant l j
Trill r rj
Lateral app. ʎ

Vowels

Front Central Back
High i ɨ u
Mid ɛ ɔ
Near-low æ ɐ
Low a

Vowel reduction is a very present phenomena in Astinian. The first vowel reduction is called the akanye, which defines the reduction of the vowels /a/ and /ɔ/ to /ɐ/, when unstressed, e.g. : воґзаль /vɐgzaʎ/ (=train station). The second vowel reduction is called the ikanye, which is the reduction of the vowel /ɛ/ to /ɨ/, when unstressed, e.g. : стрегнециë /strjɛɨcjijɐ/ (=decision). The ikanye can only apply, if there are already two /ɛ/-vowels in the words stem. The first /ɛ/ will always be the stressed vowel and the other /ɛ/-vowels will follow the ikanye rule. However, the ikanye does not apply for grammatical endings (e.g. : for nouns, the /ɛ/-vowel stays even if unstressed and for verbs, it stays too or follows a new vowel reduction, the okanye, which will be discussed when talking about conjugations).

Two non-iotified vowels, whether stressed or unstressed, induce palatalization, notably /ɛ/~/ɨ/ represented by the letter е and /i/ represented by the letter i. Mostly the palatalization resumes by adding a /j/ to the consonant followed by e or i, but the more advanced iotations are :

Writing System

Letter
Sound
Letter
Sound
Letter
Sound

Grammar

Nouns

Verbs

Syntax

Lexicon

Example text