Free/Construct Noun States with unmarked plural

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scorpryan
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Free/Construct Noun States with unmarked plural

Post by scorpryan »

I started toying with my oldest conlang's grammar, and I decided to scrap all of the noun cases and just two "states", which basically end up being the nominative and oblique cases, as I'm making the "construct" state used anytime there is a preposition, number, or genitive construction with the noun. But anyway... the nouns so far end up falling into 3 categories of declension: strong, weak, and mixed. In the strong series, which is very common, it ends up looking like this:

...........................S..............................P
Free.................chani............................chani

Construct...........achani...........................achani


So basically "Strong Nouns" end up having absolutely no distinction between the singular and plural. The ambiguity is solved because in this conlang a noun must ALWAYS be followed by a determiner/article, which includes both definite and indefinite singular, plural, and partitive articles. So since the article always encodes the number, it's technically not a problem. But it still seems weird. From what I know of, usually if a language encodes number mostly by a particle, then it is analytic. But this language is not analytic. It seems like having more than half of the nouns barely even change, especially for number, defeats the purpose of there being declension at all. Or am I being paranoid?

So is this abnormal/awkward? Basically my conlang will end up having up to 50% of its nouns showing no inflection on the word for number, even though it will be declined for state and the other 50 percent give or take will be declined for both. TBH, the "strong" noun paradigm like this mostly came about because of aesthetics; I liked certain words shaped certain ways to retain their sound and didn't like the way they sounded when changed. Should I just think of a better way to do this, or think of a sound change to apply that I will find aesthetically "ok"? I suppose one of the easiest solutions to the weird/unnatural-ness would be to simply switch things: in strong nouns, the change could be in the plural (duplicating initial vowel and adding it as an affix; "achani") and the part that doesn't change in strong nouns could be the construct form. That sounds more believable.
Or can I just leave it the way it is?

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mèþru
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Re: Free/Construct Noun States with unmarked plural

Post by mèþru »

Some languages do without plurals at all, so I'd guess that you're fine.
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Re: Free/Construct Noun States with unmarked plural

Post by vtardif »

I don't think this is abnormal or awkward at all. Lots of languages have ambiguities like this, even without resolving them e.g. in articles. And there's no hard and fast distinction between analytic and inflecting languages - almost all languages use a bit of both strategies, these are just tendencies we use to categorize them.
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Re: Free/Construct Noun States with unmarked plural

Post by Yng »

scorpryan wrote:I started toying with my oldest conlang's grammar, and I decided to scrap all of the noun cases and just two "states", which basically end up being the nominative and oblique cases, as I'm making the "construct" state used anytime there is a preposition, number, or genitive construction with the noun.
This isn't really what 'state' means. I'm pretty sure at least originally 'state' was a term from Semitic linguistics meaning a weird category which encodes definiteness alongside head marking of possessives. 'State' is separate from case and indicates exactly the opposite of what you're suggesting. In Arabic for example you say ʾukht-u r-rajul-i (sister-NOM.CNST DEF-man-GEN.DEF) - here CNST and DEF are indicators of state while NOM and GEN are indicators of case. 'State' has occasionally been used outside Semitic - usually 'construct state' specifically - but then it almost invariably refers to head marking of possessed nouns.
From what I know of, usually if a language encodes number mostly by a particle, then it is analytic. But this language is not analytic. It seems like having more than half of the nouns barely even change, especially for number, defeats the purpose of there being declension at all. Or am I being paranoid?
This makes perfect sense. In fact the first language that leaps to mind when you say 'strong declension' is German, which works exactly like this - an article marked for case number and gender, with many nouns having identical singular and plural forms (and also being largely unspecified for case).
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short texts in Cuhbi

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Chengjiang
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Re: Free/Construct Noun States with unmarked plural

Post by Chengjiang »

French primarily marks noun number on preceding articles and is moderately synthetic. (Most of these nouns still have distinct plural marking in writing, but, well, that's written French for you.)
[ʈʂʰɤŋtɕjɑŋ], or whatever you can comfortably pronounce that's close to that

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