Day 2: Islet: "chikâfumbâ"
chikâfumbâ: islet, holm, skerry, rock (in the sea), uninhabited small island
This is just last day's word with the diminutive prefix che(k)-/chi(k)-. The allomorphs are due to vowel harmony and historical sound changes that turned all syllables into CV.
- che- for consonant-initial words with low/-ATR vowels a, e, o
- chi- for consonant-initial words with high/+ATR vowel â [ə], i, u
- chek- for vowel-initial words with low/-ATR vowels
- chik- for vowel-initial words with high/+ATR vowel
Most words are consonant-initial. My plan is for the historical k coda to disappear leaving a high tone, but I haven't finished the tone system yet.
Example
- [ˌtɕikəˈɸuᵐbə ˌʔunuˈkiɾʑu ˈʔix̞ʷi ˌⁿtsi.ku ˈⁿtsi.ku ˈkaka ˈtɕax̞a]
- Chikâfumbâ unukirhu, ihwi nsiku-nsiku kaka chaha.
- chik-âfumbâ unukirhu ihwi nsiku~nsiku kaka cha=HA
- DIM-island be_white because bird~PL poo.PFV on=3SG.IN
- The islet is white because the birds pooed on it.
The rh can be pronounced as the Czech fricative trill "ř" [r̝], as a flap with fricative release [ɾʑ] or as a voiced alveolo-palatal fricative [ʑ].
When s is prenazalised to ns, it's pronounced with an affricate [ⁿts].
Adjectives function as (static) verbs. When used predicatively they go where the a verb would normally go in a clause. When used attributively they are prefixed with the attributive particle/genitive preposition/relativizer n- and are indistinguishable from relative clauses.
Kwanyani nouns are not marked for gender or case, but may optionally be marked as plural using full reduplication.
#lexember #conlang