Angos

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razlem
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Angos

Post by razlem »

Anya! Hello!

Angos is an IAL-type worldlang I've been developing for a few years. Here's a fairly thorough overview. Comments/criticisms are greatly appreciated. :)

Orthography and Phonology
Alphabet = IPA unless otherwise noted, allophones in brackets
a, b, c (tʃ), d, e [ɛ], f, g, h, i, y (j), k, m, n ([ŋ] when succeeded by k or g), o [ɔ], p, l [r/l], s, t, u, v, w, /ʔ/ (see phonotactics below)

Diphthongs
au (final), aw /aʊ/
eu (final), ew /ɛʊ/
ou (final), ow /oʊ/
ai (final), ae, ay /aɪ/
ei (final), ey /ɛɪ/
oi (final), oy /oɪ/

Syllable structures and phonotactics
Syllable structures with examples (S = semivowel):
(C)(S)V(S)(C)

/l/ can not be adjacent to another C; S or V must precede/follow it.

For compound words, the uninflected roots must be looked at individually. If they do not belong in any of the above structures, then an 'e' sound is placed between the boundary.
Examples of 'e' usage:
aksal-pulof - /ʔak.sa.le.pu.lof/
yang-seson - /jan.ge.se.son/
aksal-ipos - /ʔak.sa.le.ʔi.pos/ (see below)

Root-initial vowels will always have /ʔ/
mek-omo - /mek.ʔo.mo/
dawa-omo - /da.wa.ʔo.mo/
kino-omo - /ki.no.ʔo.mo/

Consonant gemination may occur if the boundaries are identical:
ays-seson - /ays:eson/

Grammar and Morphology
Angos uses vowel part-of-speech markers as in Esperanto. It is necessary to note that verbs, adjectives, and adverbs of manner are derived from nouns.

-o = noun
-a = noun action (any action you do to or with the noun in context)
-i = noun quality (shares a quality with the noun)
-u = noun manner (does in the manner of the noun)
The roots can be further inflected with -s to denote a man-made/artificial quality:
leiso = natural shelter (cave, canopy, den)
leisos = man-made shelter (house, bunker)

All particles (prepositions, conjunctions, interjections) end in -e, and all numbers end in -n. Numbers and prepositional particles may be inflected.

Nouns in Angos are static; they do not change for definitiveness, number, or case.
leisos - a/the house
le leisos - houses (the particle le signals plurality)
de leisos - to a/the house (where de signals direction towards something)
Articles (a/an, the) are not present in Angos. Instead, determiner radicals can be used to indicate definitiveness.

Following the use of the noun ending -o and the plural particle le, pronouns have the following configuration:
wo I, me
to you
lo he/she/it, him/her/it
le wo we, us
le to you all
le lo they, them

Verbs in Angos are ambitransitive; they can act transitively or intransitively depending on the presence of an object or prepositional phrase. Verbs do not conjugate for person, number, tense, aspect, or mood.
Wo ala. - I eat / I am eating.
Wo ala tofao. - I eat an apple.
Wo sona. - I sleep.
Wo sona lo. - I cause him/her to fall asleep

Reflexivity can be expressed or emphasized with the adverb idu
Wo idu sona. - I cause myself to fall asleep (I fall asleep).

Because there are no inherent verb roots in Angos, the meaning of a word with the verb ending is dependent on the context of the noun root used. For example, ota, from the root ot- meaning "fire", does not inherently mean "burn". It is instead any action related to the use of "fire" in context.
Vao ota. - The tree is burning.
Wo ota momos. - I light the candle. (in this sense, applying fire to something)

Present Tense is unmarked. General past tense is denoted by the particle me and general future by the particle ke. These markers are not obligatory and may be omitted if it can be understood by context. There are no perfect, imperfect, continuous, conditional, imperative, or subjunctive forms.

The agent, patient, object, and subject are all unmarked. Angos uses Subject-Verb-Object word order, with direct modifiers preceding what they modify.
Mao ala nesumo.
[The] cat eats [the] mouse.

Thus a sentence with modifiers would follow the pattern [subject adjective]-Subject-[adverb]-Verb-[object adjective]-Object.
Bali mao hilosu ala lavi nesumo.
[The] big cat quickly eats [the] small mouse.

For modal verbs such as bisaa "can" or desa "want", the secondary verb (if there is one), is placed after the modal.
Lo bisaa aksala.
He/She can write.

Descriptors will still precede each of the verbs.
Lo bisaa hilosu aksala
He/She can write quickly.

The passive voice in Angos is formed with the particle te, placed immediately in front of the verb.
Kalimo te aksala dave ipos
[The] word is written on [the] paper.
Vindawgos me te tayla ve wo
[The] window was broken by me.

Prepositional phrases are formed with a preposition, modifiers of the object, then the object(s) of the preposition.
Los ine leisos
It [is] in [the] house
Mao ala nesumo ine leisos.
The cat eats the mouse in the house. (describes the position of the action)

To construct relative clauses, the particle lae is used.
Na-omo lae wo me via - The man who I saw
Oyo lae me cea - The place where it happened
Leisos lae (lis) vindawgos tayli - The house whose (its) windows are broken

Angos uses a set of radicals that are inflected with the vowel classifiers to create determiners.
k - what
f - this
d - that
m - some
y - any
fet - few
val - many
os - every
ne - no

For example, when the k radical is inflected:
ko - what
ki - which
ka - do what
ku - how

Compounds in Angos are formed by the junction of two roots, separated by a hyphen, and a final vowel classifier.

Sample Text
Has-ku-bavelo me aolaa, lo sefe makti. Yango me sukoba, tave makto kinoa kulameo. "Le wo ke hadaya", te ansa ve Yango. Wase le lo, na-omo safala davale ofidi hodos. Lo me ba ays-seson-volos. "Kinoa makt-hadayo", te ansa ve Yango, "Le wo sevame atempa wesa volos ve di na-omo". "Wo ke vakalu da, isoma lo wesa li le volos," te ansa ve Bavelo. Bavelo sefe isomu me bavela. Le cilo panha de le vao, ye ealo te mena mwe hauco ye ipo. Mice, hie ceo lae lo isomu bavela de hodos, na-omo he sele isomu me ba li volos. Hie di ceo, yango idu me wesa ve mego. Lo me tepula ealo ye aysi nehaso. Na-omo dave hodos wes-botaa li le volos. Yango sipotu sele otu lusa. Na-omo me sensa tepulo ye sayu wesa li le volos ye idu esa yase vao. "To ku me da?", te cimuna ve Bavelo. "Wo me vakalu da," te ansa ve Yango, "Wo me lusa hio. Wo me kinoa kulameo liana."

The North Wind boasted of great strength. The Sun argued that there was great power in gentleness. "We shall have a contest," said the Sun. Far below, a man traveled a winding road. He was wearing a warm winter coat. "As a test of strength," said the Sun, "Let us see which of us can take the coat off of that man." "It will be quite simple for me to force him to remove his coat," bragged the Wind. The Wind blew so hard, the birds clung to the trees. The world was filled with dust and leaves. But the harder the wind blew down the road, the tighter the shivering man clung to his coat. Then, the Sun came out from behind a cloud. Sun warmed the air and the frosty ground. The man on the road unbuttoned his coat. The sun grew slowly brighter and brighter. Soon the man felt so hot, he took off his coat and sat down in a shady spot. "How did you do that?" said the Wind. "It was easy," said the Sun, "I lit the day. Through gentleness I got my way."
Last edited by razlem on Thu Aug 22, 2013 8:31 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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Re: Angos

Post by rr »

Did you borrow wo (I, me) from Chinese?

Corundum
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Re: Angos

Post by Corundum »

razlem wrote:Orthography and Phonology
Alphabet = IPA unless otherwise noted, allophones in brackets
a, b, c (tʃ), d, e [ɛ], f, g, h, i, y (j), k, m, n ([ŋ] when succeeded by k or g), o [ɔ], p, l [r/l], s, t, u, v, w
It seems it has /ʔ/ too, unwritten at the beginning of words and written with a hyphen elsewhere.

razlem wrote:Syllable structures with examples (S = semivowel):
V - a.ma.o
VC - ak.sa.lo
VS - aw.ke.lo
VSC - ayn
SV - yu.tu.so
SVS - wey.-on.do (see below)
SVC - was.no
CV - is.ka
CVC - pan.ho
CVS - kay.so
CSV - mwe
CSVC - syen
CSVS - (no example)
Given those, I would expect SVSC, CVSC, and CSVSC as well, and describe the syllable structure as (C)(S)V(S)(C).

razlem wrote:Because there are no inherent verb roots in Angos, the meaning of a word with the verb ending is dependent on the context of the noun root used. For example, ota, from the root ot- meaning "fire", does not inherently mean "burn". It is instead any action related to the use of "fire" in context.
Vao ota. - The tree is burning.
Wo ota momos. - I light the candle. (in this sense, applying fire to something)
What do "ala", "sona", "bisaa", "desa", and "aksala" mean, if they are verbalized nouns?


Does it have long vowels, or what is "aa" in "bisaa"?

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razlem
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Re: Angos

Post by razlem »

Tarannar wrote:Did you borrow wo (I, me) from Chinese?
Yep :)
Corundum wrote:It seems it has /ʔ/ too, unwritten at the beginning of words and written with a hyphen elsewhere.
Correct, I'll add that to the list.
Given those, I would expect SVSC, CVSC, and CSVSC as well, and describe the syllable structure as (C)(S)V(S)(C).
You're right, they're certainly possible. Probably would be easier to just write it that way :)
What do "ala", "sona", "bisaa", "desa", and "aksala" mean, if they are verbalized nouns?
ala (food) - to eat
sona (sleep) - to sleep
bisaa (ability) - to be able to
desa (desire) - to want
aksala (letter/character) - to write, spell
Does it have long vowels, or what is "aa" in "bisaa"?
Yes, elongation can occur if two of the same letter are next to each other. Though this only happens with final vowel classifiers and compounds (ex. you won't see "XaaXeeX").

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Re: Angos

Post by rr »

What other natlangs did you borrow from?

One of my conlangs, Kutorenian, borrows from Spanish and Japanese.

Examples:
tener (verb) to have
This is directly borrowed from Spanish tener
tasuketer (verb) to help
Borrowed from Japanese tasukete "help me"
edn (article) indefinite masculine plural article, like Spanish unos
As you can see, this is an original word, but is still related to Spanish.

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razlem
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Re: Angos

Post by razlem »

Tarannar wrote:What other natlangs did you borrow from?
I actually had this list on hand...

Germanic (English, German, Swedish, Dutch)
buk - Ger. "Buch"
find - Ger. "finden"
makt - Ger. "Macht"
ans - Eng. "answer"
dot - Eng. "dot"
el - Eng. "ear"
eg - Eng. "egg"
fel - Eng. "fear"
sag - Ice. "saga"

Latinate (Spanish, French, Latin, Romanian, Italian)
osk - Sp. "oscuro"
man - Lat. "manus"
ide - Lat. "idea"
lus - Sp. "luz"
level - Lat. "level"
gen - Lat. "genus"

Slavic (Russian, Polish, Czech)
kost - Ru. "кость"
most - Ru. "мост"
tel - Ru. "тело"
pokas - Ru. "показ"
odvolan - Cz. "odvolání"

Greek
mek - "μηχανή"
amit - "αμέθυστος"
aluk - "ιεραρχία"
hip - "ίππος"

Indo-Iranian (Hindi/Urdu, Persian)
vayask - Hin. "वयस्क"
pani - Hin. "पानी"
gasal - Per. "گزر"
hiyal - Per. "خیار"

Altaic (Korean, Turkish, Japanese)
mame - Jap. "豆"
yume - Jap. "夢"
kino - Jap. "機能"
aig - Jap. "映画"
cimun - Kor. "질문"
yocen - Kor. "요청"
bimil - Kor. "비밀"
yuli - Kor. "유리"
ot - Turkmen "ot"
sel - Turkish "sel"
bicak - Turkish "bıçak"
bulun - Turkish "burun"
yamul - Uyghur "يامغۇر"

Uralic (Finnish, Hungarian, Estonian)
tapy - Fin. "tappio"
oleta - Fin. "olettaa"
hawsk - Fin. "hauska"
neste - Fin. "neste"
nalu - Fin. "naru"
cel - Hung. "cel"
lend - Hung. "rend"
mag - Hung. "mag"
yeve - Hung. "jövő"

Chinese
na - Man. "男"
ni - Man. "女"
may - Man. "买卖"

Semitic (Arabic, Hebrew)
kalim - Ar. "كلمة"
isal - Ar. "أشار"
dail - Ar. "دائرة"
laks - Ar. "الرقص"
dawa - Ar. "دواء"
ikal - Heb. " עקרון"
metim - Heb. "מתים"
mafte - Heb. "מפתח"

North American Languages
akis - Navajo "akʼis"
netan - Navajo "naatʼáanii"
nehas - Navajo "nahasdzáán"
wey - Cherokee "ᎤᏪᏴ"
way - Cherokee "ᏩᏯ"
noy - Cherokee "ᏃᏯ"
unole - Cherokee "ᎤᏃᎴ"
nenok - Greenlandic "nanoq"
aluvek - Inuktitut "ᐊᕐᕕᒃ"

Basque
leis - "leize"
hili - "hiria"
kemen - "kemena"
hauc - "hautsa"
awkel - "aukeratu"

Austronesian Languages
itik - Malay "itik"
naga - Malay "naga"
lat - Indonesian "lalat"
ikan - Indonesian "ikan"
hwa - Māori "hua"
Last edited by razlem on Tue Sep 03, 2013 9:37 am, edited 1 time in total.

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Re: Angos

Post by rr »

Your conlang seems to be full of diversity, something most of my conlangs lack.

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Re: Angos

Post by legolasean »

Nice conlang!
Proto-lang and sister-langs por favore!
languages I speak Hebrew, English, Welsh, Russian
languages I learn Latin, Arabic

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Re: Angos

Post by razlem »

legolasean wrote:Nice conlang!
Proto-lang and sister-langs por favore!
Thanks! Being in the style of an IAL, it'd be hard to develop a protolanguage. But eventually I could do descendants.

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