Re: Vardelm's Scratchpad (NP: Devani OVS order)

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Re: Vardelm's Scratchpad (NP: Jin Phonology & Word Order)

Post by Vardelm »

masako wrote: Sun Jul 12, 2020 3:52 pm I have no shame in telling you that some of this will end up in Kala's grammar, which I'm in the process of rewriting.

Specifically the active/stative bits.
I feel seen. :lol:

By all means, take bits & pieces that work for you. "Fair use" and "creative borrowing", right?
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Re: Vardelm's Scratchpad (NP: Jin Word Order)

Post by Vardelm »

Jin: Arguments

Also known as "Pronouns, Determiners, & Content Words (Verbs)".


Pronouns & Determiners
Active
Pronouns
Stative
Pronouns
Active
Determiners
Stative
Determiners
1st - singular
- plural
t’inaya
t’ana
t’anji
t’anjin
t’aya
t’a
t’i
t’an
2nd saqûmbu sundiwa sambu siwa
3rd qasim jida qam ja
Proximal mbundi mbiwa mbi mba
Distal !ntandi !ntiwa !nti !nta

Notes:
  • More pronouns/determiners coming in the future
  • I prefer to think of the "determiners" as "determinative pronouns", which means that are a pronoun that introduces a subordinate clause. Think of them link a pronoun + a relative pronoun wrapped into 1.
  • This structure is nearly identical to the Salishan & Wakashan languages. I will be glossing the "determiners" in the same way as Wikipedia does right now, which is as though they were introducing a subordinate clause, IE "that which...", "you who..." etc.


!ñcadaja qasim
!ñcada-ja
bite-INTRAN
qasim
3P.ACT

It/they bite.

!ñcadaja qam q’alab
!ñcada-ja
bite-INTRAN
qam
that.which.is.3P.ACT.DET
q’alab
dog

That which is a dog bites.
Dogs bite.

!ñcadaja qam q’alab !t’azud
!ñcada-ja
bite-INTRAN
!nti
these.which.are.PROX.ACT.DET
q’alab
dog
!t’azud
black

These that are dogs and are black bite.
These black dogs bite.

!ñcada qam q’alab !t’azud ja ndalu
!ñcada
bite
!nti
these.which.are.PROX.ACT.DET
q’alab
dog
!t’azud
black
ja
that.which.is.3P.STA.DET
ndalu
man

These that are dogs and are black bite that which are men.
These black dogs bite men.

Notes:
  • Pronouns used as stand-alone arguments
  • Determiner always introduce a content word (a "verb")
  • Verbs ("content words") used as arguments must be preceded by a determiner (a "determinative pronoun")
  • All verbs following a determiner refer back to that last determiner
Last edited by Vardelm on Mon Sep 21, 2020 7:48 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Vardelm's Scratchpad (NP: Jin Word Order)

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Jin: Singulative & Plurative Markers


mishati ja ndalu
mishati
thirsty
ja
that.which.is.3P.STA.DET
ndalu
man

Men are thirsty. / Men thirst.

mishati ja ndaluwi
mishati
thirsty
ja
that.which.is.3P.STA.DET
ndalu-wi
man-the.SNG

The man is thirsty.
A (particular) man is thirsty.

mishati ja ndaluma
mishati
thirsty
ja
that.which.is.3P.STA.DET
ndalu-ma
man-the.PLR

The men are thirsty.
Some (particular) men are thirsty.

mishati yod ndalu
mishati
thirsty
yod
one.who.is.DET
ndalu
man

A (non-specific) man is thirsty.


Notes:
  • Verbs that describe a pronoun/determiner (AKA "nouns") are collective by default
  • The singulative suffix based on final phone:
    • -C = -i
    • -i = -wi
    • -u = -wi
    • -a = -hi
  • The plurative suffix based on final phone:
    • -VC = -Vm (final vowel reduplicated)
    • -V = -ma
  • Tone register will eventually play a role in the suffix vowels
  • The articles mark for number and are definite, specific, or both.
  • The pronoun/determiner yod "one" may be used for an indefinite, non-specific argument


mishati mba ndalu
mishati
thirsty
mba
this.who.is.PROX.DET
ndalu
man

These men are thirsty.

mishati mba ndaluwi
mishati
thirsty
mba
this.who.is.PROX.DET
ndalu-wi
man-the.SNG

This man thirsty.

Notes:
  • The demonstrative determiners add specificity/definition to an argument
  • As a result, the plurative marker is not needed to indicate specific/definite groups
  • I might have the plurative still used in a formal register
  • The singulative is still added to indicate the reference of an individual
Last edited by Vardelm on Sat Jul 18, 2020 10:39 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Vardelm's Scratchpad (NP: Jin Word Order)

Post by Vardelm »

Jin: Singulative & Plurative Markers II

Singulative & plurative markers ain't just be used on verb arguments!


Predicates without a singulative/plurative suffix


Active Verbs
iquma qam ñgondahi
iquma
limp
qam
3P.ACT.DET
ñgonda-hi
warrior-the.SNG

The warrior limps.

gunshisa qam umbabiwi ja chapitu
gunshisa
sell
qam
3P.ACT.DET
umbabi-wi
merchant-the.SNG
ja
3P.STA.DET
chapitu
fruit

The merchant sells fruit.


Stative Verbs
mbulah t'anji
mbulah
happy
t'anji
1P.STA

I am happy.

halamb t'anji qam muñka
halamb
smell
t'anji
1P.STA
qam
3P.STA.DET
muñka
smoke

I smell smoke.

dambik ja untaqi saqumbu
dambik
behind
ja
3P.STA
untaq-i
camel-the.SNG
saqumbu
2P.ACT

The camel is behind you.

Notes:
  • Active verbs without a singulative or plurative suffix have habitual or gnomic meaning.
  • Stative verbs have their intrinsic, stative meaning.
  • Stative verbs that would be prepositions in other langs may seem odd since they are "backwards". What would usually be the preposition's object is instead cast in the active (more "agentive") role since it is "causing" the stative argument to be behind.


Predicates with a singulative/plurative suffix

Active verbs become episodic
!nlajak qam untaqi
!nlajak
bray
qam
3P.ACT.DET
untaq-i
camel-the.SNG

The camel brays (habitually; he's a grump camel).

!nlajaki qam untaqi
!nlajak-i
bray-SNG
qam
3P.ACT.DET
untaq-i
camel-the.SNG

The camel is braying (now).

Notes:
  • Active verbs WITH a singulative or plurative suffix take on an episodic meaning; they are now a specific instance of an event.


Singulative vs plurative subjects
buch'adi qam sambiwi
buch'ad-i
run-SNG
qam
3P.ACT.DET
sambi-wi
boy-the.SNG

The boy is running.

buch'adam qam sambiwi
buch'ad-am
run-PLR
qam
3P.ACT.DET
sambi-wi
boy-the.SNG

The boy is running and running.

buch'adam qam untaqam
buch'ad-am
run-PLR
qam
3P.ACT.DET
untaq-am
camel-the.PLR

The camels are running (separately).

buch'adi qam untaqam
buch'ad-i
run-SNG
qam
3P.ACT.DET
untaq-am
camel-the.PLR

The camels are running (as one; as a pack).

Notes:
  • A plurative verb suffix for a singulative subject can be used to indicate continuativity (an action of extended time) or spatial distributivity ("running all over").
  • There may be an iterative aspect prefix at some point, and this suffix would be used with that as well.
  • A plurative suffix on a verb for a plurative subject generally means the subjects are doing the activity, but independently of each other.
  • A singulative suffix with a plurative subject means the subjects are acting as one or at least doing the action at the same time and in the same manner.


Singulative objects & distributivity
shipalahi qam t'umbadi ja untaqi
shipala-hi
feed-SNG
qam
3P.ACT.DET
t'umbad-i
servant-the.SNG
ja
3P.STA.DET
untaq-i
camel-the.SNG

The servant is feeding the camel.

shipalahama qam t'umbadi ja untaqi
shipala-ma
feed-PLR
qam
3P.ACT.DET
t'umbad-i
servant-the.SNG
ja
3P.STA.DET
untaq-i
camel-the.SNG

The servant is feeding & feeding the camel.

shipalahi qam t'umbadam ja untaqi
shipala-hi
feed-SNG
qam
3P.ACT.DET
t'umbad-am
servant-the.PLR
ja
3P.STA.DET
untaq-i
camel-the.SNG

The servants are feeding the camel.

shipalahama qam t'umbadam ja untaqi
shipala-ma
feed-PLR
qam
3P.ACT.DET
t'umbad-am
servant-the.PLR
ja
3P.STA.DET
untaq-i
camel-the.SNG

The servants are (each) feeding the camel.

Notes:
  • Transitive, active predicates with a singulative object (stative argument) behave almost identically to intransitives
    • Plurative predicate + singulative subject = continuative or spatial distributive
    • Singulative predicate + plurative subject = unified, coordinated action
  • Example 3 probably means just 1 servant is feeding the camel, but the servants as a whole are taking care of that & other tasks
  • For this predicate, example 4 is a bit ridiculous, unless they are all feeding the camel a small amount for some reason (a ceremonial reward for the camel???)
  • Stative predicates function the same, except the "object" is the agentive argument



Plurative objects & distributivity
shipalahi qam t'umbadi ja untaqam
shipala-hi
feed-SNG
qam
3P.ACT.DET
t'umbad-i
servant-the.SNG
ja
3P.STA.DET
untaq-am
camel-the.PLR

The servant is feeding the camels.

shipalahama qam t'umbadi ja untaqam
shipala-ma
feed-PLR
qam
3P.ACT.DET
t'umbad-i
servant-the.SNG
ja
3P.STA.DET
untaq-am
camel-the.PLR

The servant is feeding each of the camels.

shipalahi qam t'umbadam ja untaqam
shipala-hi
feed-SNG
qam
3P.ACT.DET
t'umbad-am
servant-the.PLR
ja
3P.STA.DET
untaq-am
camel-the.PLR

The servants are feeding the camels.

shipalahama qam t'umbadam ja untaqam
shipala-ma
feed-PLR
qam
3P.ACT.DET
t'umbad-am
servant-the.PLR
ja
3P.STA.DET
untaq-am
camel-the.PLR

The servants are (each?) feeding (each of?) the camels.

Notes:
  • Example 1: the servant is feeding the camels as whole, perhaps by just putting out a pile of .... whatever camels eat.
  • Example 2: the servant is feeding each individual camel separately.
  • Example 3: same as example 1 but with plural subjects. Perhaps only 1 or a few are actually performing the task.
  • Example 4: all of the servants are probably involved since the action is plurative. They are feeding the camels, but it is ambiguous whether they are feeding all of the camels at once or individually.
  • Stative predicates function the same, except the "object" is the agentive argument

DONE! (I think...)
Figuring out how to organize those interacting ideas & how to present them was a brain teaser!
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Re: Vardelm's Scratchpad (NP: Jin Voice & Valency I)

Post by Vardelm »

Jin:Voice & Valency I

Voice Active Stative
Intransitive V+ja
C+aj
V+ya
C+iya
Transitive V+nza
C+anza
V+mba
C+imba
Mediopassive V+sh
C+ish
V+la
C+ala
Passive V+qi
C+iq
V+ta
C+at
Reflexive V+jun
C+ajun
V+bu
C+abu
Reciprocal V+nzim
C+unzim
V+bim
C+ubim
Impersonal V+mas
C+umas
V+lah
C+alah


Voice Active Stative
Intransitive VS
!ñcada-ja
bite-INT
qam
3P.DET
qalab-i
dog-the.SNG

The dog bites.
VO
wani-ya
see-INT
ja
3P.STA
ndalu-wi
man-the.SNG

The man sees.
Transitive VSO
!ñcada-nza
bite-TRN
qam
3P.DET
qalab-i
dog-the.SNG
ja
3P.DET
ndalu-wi
man-the.SNG

The dog bites the man.
VOS
wani-mba
see-TRN
ja
3P.STA
ndalu-wi
man-the.SNG
qam
3P.DET
qalab-i
dog-the.SNG

The man sees the dog.
Mediopassive VO
!ñcada-sh
bite-MDP
ja
3P.DET
ndalu-wi
man-the.SNG

The man is bitten.
VS
wani-la
see-MDP
qam
3P.DET
qalab-i
dog-the.SNG

The dog is seen.
Passive VOS
!ñcada-qi
bite-PAS
ja
3P.DET
ndalu-wi
man-the.SNG
qam
3P.DET
qalab-i
dog-the.SNG

The man is bitten by the dog.
VSO
wani-ta
see-PAS
qam
3P.DET
qalab-i
dog-the.SNG
ja
3P.STA
ndalu-wi
man-the.SNG

The dog is seen by the man.
Reflexive VS
!ñcada-jun
bite-REF
qam
3P.DET
qalab-i
dog-the.SNG

The dog bites itself.
VO
wani-bu
see-REF
ja
3P.STA
ndalu-wi
man-the.SNG

The man sees himself.
Reciprocal VS
!ñcada-nzim
bite-REC
qam
3P.DET
qalab-am
dog-the.PLR

The dogs bite each other.
VO
wani-bim
see-REC
ja
3P.STA
ndalu-ma
man-the.PLR

The men see each other.
Impersonal V
!ñcada-mas
bite-IMP

There is biting.
V
wani-lah
see-IMP

There is seeing.


Notes:
  • Voice/valency is marked by suffixes
  • Singulative/plurative is suffixed after voice/valency (root + voice suffix + number suffix)
  • Content words (verbs) will have a default voice that is not marked; other voices are marked by adding the appropriate suffix
  • Each voice defines if an active and/or stative argument is required (which is why I mention "valence")
    • The table shows word orders: VS, VO, VSO, etc. These indicate the required arguments & their order (S = active, O = stative)
  • Voices:
    • Intransitive = basic intransitive voice, roughly unergative for active verbs and unaccusative for stative verbs
    • Transitive = basic transitive voice typical for active & stative; has the basic word orders listed in the 1st post on word order/syntax
    • Mediopassive = can be used as a prototypical mediopassive where the single argument is affected; middle voice where no agent is implied or passive where an agent is implied
    • Passive = not your daddy's passive; this is a transitive voice which has the same roles as the transitive voice, but the order & topicality is reversed
    • Reflexive = prototypical; argument is both agent & patient
    • Reciprocal = prototypical; arguments affect each other
    • Impersonal = no mention of participants
  • As mentioned, the mediopassive & passive are maybe a bit different than usual, mostly in that the passive is not a valency-reducing operation
  • The mediopassive & passive basically "flip" the required arguments & their positions from the intransitive & transitive voices
    • mediopassive corresponds to intransitive
    • passive corresponds to transitive
  • This post is about predicates; the next post will detail the voices within an argument phrase (under a determiner)
  • I plan to tweak the current suffixes a bit from what appears now
Last edited by Vardelm on Mon Sep 21, 2020 7:50 am, edited 2 times in total.
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Re: Vardelm's Scratchpad (NP: Jin Voice & Valency I)

Post by Vardelm »

Jin:Voice & Valency II

Verbs / content words use all of the same voices listed in the post above when they appear in an argument phrase, subordinate to a determiner.


qalab jida
qalab
dog.STA.INT
jida
3P.STA

It's a dog.

ja qalab
ja
3P.STA.DET
qalab
dog.STA.INT

That which is a dog...

Notes:
  • When a verb/content word is used with a determiner, the 1st argument in its valency requirements is taken by the determiner itself, and so doesn't appear after the verb
  • qalab "to be a dog" is a stative,class membership verb with VO order
  • In example 2 (just an argument phrase) the stative argument O is filled by ja "that.which.3P.STA.DET"


ja qalab
ja
3P.STA.DET
qalab
dog.STA.INT
!t'azud
black.STA.INT

That which is a dog and is black...
The black dog...

Notes:
  • The same rule applies for multiple verbs under a single determiner
  • !t'azud "to be black" is also a stative verb with VO order, so it's O argument is also filled by the determiner

ja qalab !ñcada ja ndalu
ja
3P.STA.DET
qalab
dog.STA.INT
!ñcada
bite.ACT.TRN
ja
3P.STA.DET
ndalu
man

That which is a dog and bites that which is a man...
The dog that bites men...

Notes:
  • Same rule. Yep, even for transitives!
  • !ñkada "to bite" is an active verb that defaults to transitive voice (thus no -nza suffix) with VSO order
  • The S argument is taken by the preceding determiner ja
  • That leaves the O argument, filled by ja ndalu "that which is a man"
Last edited by Vardelm on Mon Sep 21, 2020 7:50 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Vardelm's Scratchpad (NP: Jin Voice & Valency)

Post by Vardelm »

So there's that moment when you have worked on a conlang for quite a while and have a bunch of ideas that seem like they should work, but are just convoluted enough that it's just not working. And then, you make one little change while revamping the language that allows the rest of it to be recast in a way that keeps those original ideas but helps them to actually work. That's kinda cool.


Jin: The Linker

Jin has (so far) only 1 preposition, which I call "the linker". It originates from a grammar of ǂʼAmkoe (ǂHȍã). I should go back & look through it again since I think the usage here is different. I seem to remember a few other languages that have a single adposition referred to as a "linker".

Notes:
  • The linker is al- and is cliticized to the word/phrase that it modifies. The "-" indicates that it's a clitic.
  • The linker essentially creates genitive or oblique phrases and serializes verbs
  • The linker can attached to a pronoun, determiner, or verb
  • If attached to a pronoun or determiner, the phrase is linked to the last determiner in the sentence
  • If attached to a verb, that verb (and associated arguments) are linked to and modify or append a previous predicate verb. Which one is a matter of context & pragmatics, but I think mostly it will be the sentence's main predicate verb.


Genitives & Possession/Ownership
buch'adi t’izh untaqi
buch'ad-i
run-SNG
t’izha
mine.that.is.1P.ACT.POS.DET
untaq-i
camel-the.SNG

Mine which is a camel is running.
My camel is running.

buch'adi qam untaqi al-t'anji
buch'ad-i
run-SNG
qam
3P.ACT.DET
untaq-i
camel-the.SNG
al-t'anji
of.LNK-1P.STA

The camel that is of me is running.

Notes:
  • When used to indicate possession with a linked pronoun, a stative pronoun is used (for now...)
  • This form isn't used as often as example sentence 1. Sentence 1 could be translated as "my camel" while sentence 2 as "the camel that is mine". Sentence 2 might be used for emphasis.

shipalahi qam t'umbadi ja untaqi al-ja ndaluwi
shipala-hi
feed-SNG
qam
3P.ACT.DET
t'umbad-i
servant-SNG
ja
3P.STA.DET
untaq-i
camel-SNG
al-ja
of.LNK-3P.STA.DET
ndalu-wi
man-SNG

The servant is feeding the man’s camel.

Notes:
  • This example shows the linker attached to a determiner (al-ja) which then has the verb ndalu-wi "the man"
  • This argument phrase is linked back to the previous determiner, which is "ja" for ja untaqi "that which is a camel"
  • The link then indicates a genitive relation: in this case, possession/ownership

shipalahi qam t'umbadi ja untaqi al-dambik qam nimbani
shipala-hi
feed-SNG
qam
3P.ACT.DET
t'umbad-i
servant-SNG
ja
3P.STA.DET
untaq-i
camel-SNG
al-dambik
of.LNK-behind
qam
3P.ACT.DET
nimban-i
house-SNG

The servant is feeding the camel behind the house.

Notes:
  • Here the linker is attached to the verb dambik "to be behind"
  • Because the linker is attached to a verb, it modifies the last predicate, which is shipalahi "to feed"
  • This is how oblique/adjunct phrases are added to a sentence
  • Phrases linked in this manner need to come at the end of the sentence, after the active & stative arguments

----------------------------------------------------------------------

WHEW!!!!

This might be my final post for a short while. These ideas have been floating in my head for several years, but I haven't found a way to make them really work and describe them until now. Most of what I'll be doing for this language from here out will be completely new. I had a verb template sketched out on the last board which will serve as a springboard for the rest of the verbal inflections, but even that will need to be heavily modified.
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Re: Vardelm's Scratchpad (NP: Jin Spam)

Post by Ares Land »

Kudos! That's very interesting, and I do like the inflected pronouns.

I'd be very interested in seeing how those voices work in detail, I confess I have some trouble wrapping them around my head. But all in good time of course.

You probably talked about this on the old board or the new, but I think I missed it: are the latter two languages related in any way? And who speaks them?
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Re: Vardelm's Scratchpad (NP: Jin Spam)

Post by Vardelm »

Ars Lande wrote: Mon Jul 20, 2020 7:07 am Kudos! That's very interesting, and I do like the inflected pronouns.
Thank you. Funny, I actually hadn't thought of them as "inflected", but yeah, obviously you're correct. Might be just because I was comparing to Imralu's Iliaqu (Ngolu) language, which IIRC has a bunch of locational type noun cases on the pronouns as well as the morphosyntactic type cases.


Ars Lande wrote: Mon Jul 20, 2020 7:07 am I'd be very interested in seeing how those voices work in detail, I confess I have some trouble wrapping them around my head. But all in good time of course.
That's not a bad idea for a next post. It wouldn't involve any new design work & could help define that a little better.


Ars Lande wrote: Mon Jul 20, 2020 7:07 am You probably talked about this on the old board or the new, but I think I missed it: are the latter two languages related in any way? And who speaks them?
Actually, all 3 languages are related, but only in that they are set in the same world. The plan is to have 4 demi-human races plus humans. I want to do something similar to how Tolkien took the idea of elves, dwarves, etc. and made a history as though those had been actual cultures rather than just treating them as children's tales. The idea is to also take inspiration from various spirits/mythical beings from around the world, instead of focusing just on European myths. Each race will come from 1 of 4 contients. The 4 demi-human folk are:
  • dwarves (European-ish; northern continent)
  • deva (Indic to SE Asia influence, maybe some Central to South American; eastern continent)
  • jin (from djinn, of course, inspired by African and Middle-eastern cultures; southern continent)
  • yokai (also from yokshini & yakshas, representing a sort of pan-East Asia and some North American; western continent)

The yokai language is the least developed so far and I haven't posted anything about it, but I have some general ideas. I would say that the races might eventually not be recognizable to their real-world inspiration, but those being are a jumping-off point, and we'll see where it goes. I have a few general ideas for the cultures and the world history, but the world right now is mostly about the languages. I have a sort of "stage 1" plan where I make the languages, do ethnographic write-ups of the 4 cultures, develop the magic system, and create a world map. All of this will represent the ancient history of the world, rather than any sort of "modern day" (which would be a Middle-ages type era) in which stories might be set.
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Re: Vardelm's Scratchpad (NP: Jin Word Order)

Post by Vardelm »

So...... bugger. A post I wrote either didn't get posted or got eaten. It was supposed to go right before the post on the linker, which would show why the linker isn't used for phrases like "my camel", etc. I even refered to the possessive pronouns in the linker post. Bleh. Here's another go at that.


Jin: Possessive Pronouns & Determiners

Active
Pronouns
Stative
Pronouns
Active
Determiners
Stative
Determiners
1st Possessive
- singular
- plural

t’inazh
t’anzha

t’izhi
t’anizh

t’izha
t’azha

t’izh
t’azh
2nd Possessive suqanzha sunizh suzha suzh
3rd Possessive qisazh jadizh qizh jazh


dambik ja untaq qam nimbani
dambik
behind
t’azh
our.3P.STA.POS.DET
untaq
camel
qam
3P.ACT.DET
nimban-i
house-SNG

Our camels are behind behind the house.

buch'adi t’inazh
buch'ad-i
run-SNG
suqanzha
yours.2P.ACT.POS

Yours is running.

Notes:
  • The possessive pronouns & determiners work just like the personal & demonstratives, except they denote possession/ownership
  • I don't love the forms of them right now, but meh: 1st draft

I think this is a bit shorter than the original post, but not much since it's fairly straightforward.
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Re: Vardelm's Scratchpad (NP: Jin Spam)

Post by Vardelm »

Ars Lande wrote: Mon Jul 20, 2020 7:07 am I'd be very interested in seeing how those voices work in detail, I confess I have some trouble wrapping them around my head. But all in good time of course.
This comment had me thinking (in a good, creative problem solving way). I did some work to revise the voice system from it's original form on the old board. However, it needs more detail, explanation, & examples. While thinking about examples, I decided the stative vs dynamic distinction needed to be more defined, and the same for causativity or other (de-)transitivitizing effects. I believe I have something that works better now, but I'd love feedback on it.


Jin: More Voice & Valency


Default Voices
Active Stative
Intransitive VS
ikinsu "mourn"
nzabulu "relax"
VO
marah "red"
mimut "dead"
Transitive VSO
k'alis "cut"
nd'api "write"
VOS
!nlabun "know"
wind'a "inside"

Notes:
  • Verbs all have a default voice that is either active or stative and either intransitive or transitive
  • Verbs in their default voice do not have a voice suffix
  • The voice suffixes straddle the line of inflection & derivation



Example: mimut "dead"
Active Stative
Intransitive VS
mimutaji qam untaqi
mimut-aj-i
dead-ACT.INT-SNG
qam
3P.ACT.DET
untaq-i
camel-SNG

"The camel is dying."
VO
mimut ja untaqi
mimut
dead
ja
3P.STA.DET
untaq-i
camel-SNG

"The camel is dead."
Transitive VSO
mimutanzahi qam ndaluwi ja untaqi
mimut-anza-hi
die-ACT.TRN-SNG
qam
3P.ACT.DET
ndalu-wi
man-SNG
ja
3P.STA.DET
untaq-i
camel-SNG

"The man killed the camel."
(not worry about tense right now)

Notes:
  • In the intransitive stative, mimut "dead" appears with no voice suffix because this is its default voice
  • For the intransitive active, the suffix -aj is added. Adding active voice suffixes to statives generally (always?) makes them dynamic
    • I actually don't know that I love this. I would almost rather add the stative intransitive suffix -iya and use the ja stative determiner to indicate the change from stative to dynamic. Not sure what the change to active would be, though.
  • The transitive voice adds -anza, and of course adds a second argument. Verbs that go from default intransitive to taking a transitive voice suffix will often add causativity ("to die" -> "to kill"), at least on the active side.


Active Stative
Intransitive VS
mimutaji qam untaqi
mimut-aj-i
dead-ACT.INT-SNG
qam
3P.ACT.DET
untaq-i
camel-SNG

"The camel is dying."
VO
mimut ja untaqi
mimut
dead
ja
3P.STA.DET
untaq-i
camel-SNG

"The camel is dead."
Transitive VSO
mimutanzahi qam ndaluwi ja untaqi
mimut-anza-hi
die-ACT.TRN-SNG
qam
3P.ACT.DET
ndalu-wi
man-SNG
ja
3P.STA.DET
untaq-i
camel-SNG

"The man killed the camel."
Antipassive VS
mimutiñguwi qam ndaluwi
mimut-iñgu-hi
die-ACT.ANP-SNG
qam
3P.ACT.DET
ndalu-wi
man-SNG

"The man killed (something)."
Mediopassive VO
mimutishi ja untaqi
mimut-ish-i
die-ACT.MDP-SNG
ja
3P.STA.DET
untaq-i
camel-SNG

"The camel was killed (by something)."
Passive VOS
mimutishi ja untaqi qam ndaluwi
mimut-iq-i
die-ACT.PAS-SNG
ja
3P.STA.DET
untaq-i
camel-SNG
qam
3P.ACT.DET
ndalu-wi
man-SNG

"The camel was killed by the man."
Reflexive VS
mimutajuni qam ndaluwi
mimut-ajun-i
die-ACT.REF-SNG
qam
3P.ACT.DET
ndalu-wi
man-SNG

"The man killed himself."
Reciprocal VS
mimutunzimi qam ndaluma
mimut-unzim-im
die-ACT.REC-PLR
qam
3P.ACT.DET
ndalu-ma
man-PLR

"The men killed each other."

Notes:
  • One major-ish change I made from posts above was to add the antipassive voice. This was so that there could be a clear distinction between the "intransitive" voices, which don't imply any sort of 2nd actor, and all of the transitive & *passive voices, all of which do imply a 2nd actor. Adding the antipassive allows the transitive passive voices to have VSO, VS, VO, VOS variants.
  • All of the voices in the transitive range (transitive, antipassive, mediopassive, passive, reflexive, & reciprocal) will have the same semantics in terms of causativity or whatever makes them transitive. The stative side won't ever have causativity.
  • Not every verb will use every voice. Here, the stative transitive voices aren't used at all.

-----

I'm going to cut this post short here & provide more examples in a another post.
Last edited by Vardelm on Wed Jul 22, 2020 8:11 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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Re: Vardelm's Scratchpad (NP: Jin More Voice & Valency)

Post by bradrn »

I’m not too sure I understand how this system works. Are you saying that there are four affixes to derive active/stative transitive/intransitive verbs — and if so, then where do the various intransitive/transitive/antipassive/mediopassive/etc. affixes fit in?

(And also, wouldn’t an active vs stative contrast be a distinction of aspect rather than voice?)
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Re: Vardelm's Scratchpad (NP: Jin More Voice & Valency)

Post by Vardelm »

bradrn wrote: Wed Jul 22, 2020 7:48 pm I’m not too sure I understand how this system works. Are you saying that there are four affixes to derive active/stative transitive/intransitive verbs — and if so, then where do the various intransitive/transitive/antipassive/mediopassive/etc. affixes fit in?
There are a total of 16 "voice" affixes:
  • active intransitive
  • active transitive
  • active antipassive
  • active mediopassive
  • active passive
  • active reflexive
  • active reciprocal
  • active impersonal
  • ------------------------
  • stative intransitive
  • stative transitive
  • stative antipassive
  • stative mediopassive
  • stative passive
  • stative reflexive
  • stative reciprocal
  • stative impersonal

The "voice" affixes actually do the derivation; there aren't any other affixes to "derive active/stative transitive/intransitive verbs". These "voice" affixes ride the line between derivation & inflection. They change the verb's default active/stative status as well as it's voice & valency, and in doing so can change the semantics a bit in terms of causativity, forming resultatives, etc.


bradrn wrote: Wed Jul 22, 2020 7:48 pm (And also, wouldn’t an active vs stative contrast be a distinction of aspect rather than voice?)
Probably?

The thing here is that there's not 1 "active voice" and 1 "stative voice". Instead, there are 8 voices that happen to work on active verbs or derive an active verb from a stative, and there are 8 voices that happen to work on stative verbs or derive an stative verb from an active.

Does this make more sense?
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Re: Vardelm's Scratchpad (NP: Jin More Voice & Valency)

Post by bradrn »

That makes a lot more sense now, thank you!

And I think I found a typo: in a couple of places a sentence has ja but it’s glossed as qam.
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Re: Vardelm's Scratchpad (NP: Jin More Voice & Valency)

Post by Vardelm »

bradrn wrote: Wed Jul 22, 2020 8:07 pm That makes a lot more sense now, thank you!
Excellent! As I develop this more, stating at the outset that there are 16 voices might be worthwhile. :)

bradrn wrote: Wed Jul 22, 2020 8:07 pm And I think I found a typo: in a couple of places a sentence has ja but it’s glossed as qam.
Commencing repairs.
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Re: Vardelm's Scratchpad (NP: Jin More Voice & Valency)

Post by Ares Land »

Well, that's really a great system!

I just have a few remarks/quibbles:

What is the impersonal voice? I suppose it's used for forms akin to 'it rains'?
Vardelm wrote: Wed Jul 22, 2020 8:05 pm and there are 8 voices that happen to work on stative verbs or derive an stative verb from an active.
I'm not sure I understand the stative voices. I thought maybe a stative transitive changed a stative into an active transitive, but that doesn't seem to be the case?

As far as I can see from your example, the mediopassive is really a passive. Mediopassive is a difficult label, but the medio- part implies that the agent is benefitted, or somewhat affected by the action. (Some ideas: for 'I kill for my benefit' ie. 'I hunt', 'I kill myself for my benefit', ie. 'I work hard').

Oh, and in such a system with lots of productive morphological categories, there tends to be a lot of 'defective' verbs. So for instance, a given verb may only use 4 out of the 8 voices given, for obvious or less obvious reasons. So don't be unduly bothered if you can't figure what the mediopassive or the antipassive should be for a given verb, or if you find that a verb is going to be always mediopassive.
You're problably already aware of this already (and in this case you can just dismiss that comment) but I had trouble figuring this out myself so maybe it'll help.
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Re: Vardelm's Scratchpad (NP: Jin More Voice & Valency)

Post by Vardelm »

Ars Lande wrote: Thu Jul 23, 2020 5:58 am Well, that's really a great system!
Thanks, glad you like it, and I'm happy the added information was useful for understanding it.

It came about by wanting a system of verbal endings like person agreement, but wanting to stay away from any sort of person agreement: nothing for person, gender, or number.


Ars Lande wrote: Thu Jul 23, 2020 5:58 am What is the impersonal voice? I suppose it's used for forms akin to 'it rains'?
Yep, exactly. I think it may be used to form the equivalent of gerunds & infinitives as well, possibly through a new pronoun/determiner instead of qam/ja. I think one used for subordinate clauses would work. (I'm blanking on the term for such clauses right now, meaning "a full clause that could stand on it's own as a complete sentence but is used as a subject or object. Maybe "subordinate" is correct?)



Ars Lande wrote: Thu Jul 23, 2020 5:58 am I'm not sure I understand the stative voices. I thought maybe a stative transitive changed a stative into an active transitive, but that doesn't seem to be the case?
Nope. I'll work on getting a couple more examples posted that use the stative transitives, so maybe that will help. Stative transitives would be examples like "I see her" or "I know English". They don't have a dynamic component. Adpositions from other languages would be stative transitives in Jin, as another quick example.


Ars Lande wrote: Thu Jul 23, 2020 5:58 am As far as I can see from your example, the mediopassive is really a passive. Mediopassive is a difficult label, but the medio- part implies that the agent is benefitted, or somewhat affected by the action. (Some ideas: for 'I kill for my benefit' ie. 'I hunt', 'I kill myself for my benefit', ie. 'I work hard').
Basically, yes. I just needed some kind of label, and I'm already using "passive" voice for the 2nd fully transitive voice (VOS for active and VSO for stative). "Mediopassive" seemed like an acceptable fit, but admittedly it might be be exactly what people think of as "mediopassive". I would note that mediopassives tend to vary from language to language, correct? I figured since mediopassives are sometimes used as a passive, and the "medio" part of it points to there not being a separate, specificed agent lent itself well here. Perhaps something like "semi-passive" might work? Basically, it's a passive without an agent mentioned.


Ars Lande wrote: Thu Jul 23, 2020 5:58 am Oh, and in such a system with lots of productive morphological categories, there tends to be a lot of 'defective' verbs. So for instance, a given verb may only use 4 out of the 8 voices given, for obvious or less obvious reasons. So don't be unduly bothered if you can't figure what the mediopassive or the antipassive should be for a given verb, or if you find that a verb is going to be always mediopassive.
You're problably already aware of this already (and in this case you can just dismiss that comment) but I had trouble figuring this out myself so maybe it'll help.
Yep, I'm not concerned with many verbs not using all of the voices, but it's good to see this affirmed. I'm perhaps more concerned about each verb using what voices it does in a more-or-less correct manner and eventually trying to make sure I'm not just duplicating English verbs (although that will largely be the case at the moment since I'm making up words on the fly).
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Re: Vardelm's Scratchpad (NP: Jin More Voice & Valency)

Post by cedh »

Vardelm wrote: Thu Jul 23, 2020 7:16 am
Ars Lande wrote: Thu Jul 23, 2020 5:58 am As far as I can see from your example, the mediopassive is really a passive. Mediopassive is a difficult label, but the medio- part implies that the agent is benefitted, or somewhat affected by the action. (Some ideas: for 'I kill for my benefit' ie. 'I hunt', 'I kill myself for my benefit', ie. 'I work hard').
Basically, yes. I just needed some kind of label, and I'm already using "passive" voice for the 2nd fully transitive voice (VOS for active and VSO for stative). "Mediopassive" seemed like an acceptable fit, but admittedly it might be be exactly what people think of as "mediopassive". I would note that mediopassives tend to vary from language to language, correct? I figured since mediopassives are sometimes used as a passive, and the "medio" part of it points to there not being a separate, specificed agent lent itself well here. Perhaps something like "semi-passive" might work? Basically, it's a passive without an agent mentioned.
A prototypical "passive voice" is intransitive, i.e. it usually doesn't have an agent as a syntactic core argument, and if there is an overt agent, it is typically marked as oblique in some way. And a symmetrical transitive voice, where the agent swaps roles with the patient but still retains its core status, is generally not called "passive voice" but rather "inverse voice" or similar. Therefore, maybe you could re-label your "passive" as "inverse", and your "mediopassive" as "passive". Although I suppose the relative frequency of usage might also play a role in finding the best terms...
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Re: Vardelm's Scratchpad (NP: Jin More Voice & Valency)

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cedh wrote: Thu Jul 23, 2020 7:44 am And a symmetrical transitive voice, where the agent swaps roles with the patient but still retains its core status, is generally not called "passive voice" but rather "inverse voice" or similar. Therefore, maybe you could re-label your "passive" as "inverse", and your "mediopassive" as "passive".
I rather like this suggestion.

Wouldn't systems like that usually call the usual transitive voice "direct"? Or, are there systems where "inverse" is used, but not "direct"? This is definitely not the typical "direct-inverse" system that I'm familiar with, which is based on hierarchy, IE Ojibwe, Cree, etc.

EDIT: Using the label "symmetric voice" for the current "passive voice" might be an option as well.
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Re: Vardelm's Scratchpad (NP: Jin More Voice & Valency)

Post by cedh »

Vardelm wrote: Thu Jul 23, 2020 7:54 am
cedh wrote: Thu Jul 23, 2020 7:44 am And a symmetrical transitive voice, where the agent swaps roles with the patient but still retains its core status, is generally not called "passive voice" but rather "inverse voice" or similar. Therefore, maybe you could re-label your "passive" as "inverse", and your "mediopassive" as "passive".
I rather like this suggestion.

Wouldn't systems like that usually call the usual transitive voice "direct"? Or, are there systems where "inverse" is used, but not "direct"? This is definitely not the typical "direct-inverse" system that I'm familiar with, which is based on hierarchy, IE Ojibwe, Cree, etc.

EDIT: Using the label "symmetric voice" for the current "passive voice" might be an option as well.
You're right that this is not quite a "direct-inverse" system. But natlangs with symmetrical "passives" can have a variety of very different voice systems. For instance, one of the defining characteristics of Austronesian alignment is that these languages have several symmetrical transitive voices. There, they are often called "agentive voice" and "patientive voice", and I think these terms should be quite suitable for your conlang too. (I'm also using them in my current project Lerudųrunį.)
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