3 This is one of several conlanguages [][@:Rinna] is working on for an
4 eventual Dark Dungeons X (BECMI D&D retroclone) setting.
7 for context: a minimal map of the world in question
9 ![map of an as-yet unnamed world, with three contents and a few
10 islands][https://lyssa-rpg-docs.neocities.org/media/blorb-world-map-minimal.png]
12 Rinna has the following goals for Midekʰ:
14 * it will serve as a proto-language for a number of languages spoken
15 along the west coast and within the temperate interior (mostly the
16 30°-45° zone) of the southeastern continent, possibly plus some
17 further-flung offshoots.
18 * fae wants to build it around a system of biliteral or triliteral
19 consonantal roots (as in Afro-Asiatic languages such as Tamazight,
20 Egyptian, Amharic, Hebrew, Akkadian, etc.)
21 * fae is inclined to include few vowel qualities, but with some
22 additional complication such as pitch accent, vowel length, or
23 extensive use of diphthongs that may develop into a more extensive
24 vowel system in daughter languages.
25 * it should not be too difficult to pronounce for the native US
26 English and Rioplatense Spanish speakers likely to play in the
27 setting, particularly since the most likely places for faese games
28 to start out will have this language prominent.
29 but some such difficulties can be resolved in daughter languages via
31 * the proto-language and descendant languages will mostly but perhaps
32 not exclusively be used for names (of people/places/texts/etc.)
36 To help with approachability for English/Spanish speakers, [][@:Rinna]
37 opted to draw inspiration from
38 [Wikipedia's account of Proto-Indo-European phonology][https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proto-Indo-European_phonology#Vowels]{title="Wikipedia on reconstructed PIE phonology"].
42 | | labial | coronal | p.velar | velar | l.velar | glottal |
43 |-----------|:------:|:-------:|:-------:|:-----:|:-------:|:-------:|
44 | nasal | m | n | | ŋ | | |
45 | voiceless | p | t | kʲ | k | kʷ | |
46 | voiced | b | d | gʲ | g | gʷ | |
47 | aspirated | pʰ | tʰ | kʲʰ | kʰ | kʷʰ | |
48 | fricative | f | s | | | | h |
49 | liquid | | r l | | | | |
52 The language featured three series of stops: voiceless, voiced, and
53 aspirated (voicing was not phonemic in aspirated consonants).
54 Each of these series included a labial stop, a coronal (dental or
55 alveolar) stop, and three variants of a velar stop: a plain variant, a
56 palatalized variant, and a labialized variant.
58 There were three fricatives: a (bi)labial fricative, a coronal
59 fricative, and a glottal fricative.
61 There were three nasal stops: labial, coronal, and velar.
62 There were two coronal approximants: rhotic and lateral.
63 Both the nasals and the approximants could be used as syllable nuclei.
65 There were three vowels: `*e` (mid front), `*o` (mid back), and `*i`
67 Each vowel could be pronounced long or short, which was phonemic.
68 Long vowels are transcribed with a macron.
70 One syllable in each multisyllabic word was emphasized, likely with a
71 raised pitch (marked with an acute accent on the vowel).
72 Long vowels of accented syllables are marked with a circumflex for
75 A syllable begins with a consonant followed by either a vowel, a nasal,
76 or an approximant as a nucleus.
77 A syllable with a short vowel can additionally have a final consonant.
81 Most content words are derived from a "root" (TKTK) consisting of two
82 to four (but usually three) consonants, which are combined with a
83 particular template (TKTK) of surrounding and intervening sounds
84 (mostly vowels) to form a particular word.
88 Adjectives are marked for number, gender, and case to match the noun
95 Nouns are marked for number (singular and plural) and case using a
96 prefix for case and a suffix for number.
97 Each noun also has a gender: either masculine, feminine, or neuter.
99 The cases present in the language were:
101 * Nominative: used for the subject of the verb.
102 * Accusative: used for the object of transitive verbs.
103 * Vocative: used for a party directly addressed by the speaker.
104 * Dative: used for the recipient or beneficiary of an action.
105 * Prepositional: used for the complement of most prepositions, although
106 some prepositions require or allow other cases.
112 Verbs are inflected for tense, aspect, mood, person, and number.
113 Person is first, second, and third.
114 Number is either singular or plural.
116 There are two tenses, which reflect the time at which the action
119 * Non-past: used for events happening now, in the future, in the
120 immediate past, or at an uncertain time.
121 * Past: used for events that started in the past, but not the immediate
124 There are three aspects, although the continuous and habitual are only
125 distinguished in the indicative mood:
127 * Continuous: used to describe an ongoing process.
128 * Habitual: used to describe a recurring or cyclical activity.
129 * Perfective: used to describe an action as a single unit.
131 There are three moods:
133 * Indicative: used for statements of facts.
134 * Optative: used for wishes and hopes, conditional events, and some
136 * Subjunctive: used for hypothetical events, future events, and more
139 Issues such as questions and passive voice are marked elsewhere in a
142 There are three special forms of a verb:
144 * The verbal noun, which functions as a noun and can represent the act
145 of the verb occuring or a object related to the activity described by
147 The gender of a verbal noun is determined by the verb's conjugation
148 group, but they receive affixes for number and case normally.
149 * The active participle, which functions as an adjective or adverb and
150 indicates that the modified word is related to the subject of the
152 * The passive participle, which functions as an adjective or adverb and
153 indicates that the modified word is related to the verb's object.
155 Both participles receive the normal affixes for number, gender, and
158 ## Derivational Morphology
164 As a summary of word order concerns:
166 * Adjectives always follow the noun, but demonstratives and numerals
167 precede it (demonstratives preceding numerals when both are present)
168 * Relative clauses follow the noun.
170 * Typically subject-verb-object, but it may vary
171 * The question particle begins the sentence
172 * Questions do not alter sentence order
173 * Conditional sentences typically places the condition before the
175 * Comparisons are of the form adjective-marker-standard (i.e. the
176 adjective being compared, an analogue to "than", then the standard
177 against which the comparison is being made)
179 ## Semantics and Pragmatics