I posted a few sentences over at the "Short pithy phrases" thread, which I'll repost here:
"All visitors bring joy: some when they arrive, and some when they leave."
Al seþer þringn win - sen hwaþa' hwanen, sen hwaþa' gangn
Phonetic: [al tsɛθɛr θrɪŋn̩ wɪn tsɛn ʍaθaʔ ʍann̩ tsɛn ʍaθaʔ xaŋn̩]
Gloss: All traveler.PL-AGT.PL bring-3PL joy some.PL when.REL come-3PL, some.PL when.REL leave-3PL
Nothing really of note here except some strong noun plurals (
sen [some, plural] is the plural off
son [someone, something]), and the unusual pluralization of
seþar. It's based off the verb
soþa (to travel, journey, visit), and the nominal agent suffix
-ar. However, Lowan not only pluralizes the agent suffix, but also mutates the vowel of the verb as well, if it falls into a strong-plural paradigm.
Speaking of strong-plural paradigms.... here they are!
Strong noun/adjectives (those with plurals marked by vowel mutation):
Code: Select all
Singular Vowel Plural Vowel
a ē
ā e
e i
i ē
o e
u ē
Anything which doesn't have one of the above core vowels in the singular, simply pluralizes as a weak noun. There are very few words which have 'strong vowels' but pluralize as weak nouns (or vice versa) -- the Lowan language has strengthened its strong paradigms and made almost all 'possibly strong' words into 'actually strong'.
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"Speak your mind -- even if your voice shakes."
Sagi þēn þog(þ) -- sam hwaþa' sgo' þn stēn
Phonetic: [tsaɣi θeːn θox(θ) tsam ʍaθaʔ sxoʔ θn̩ sten]
Gloss: Say-IMP your.SG belief even when.REL shake.3SG your.SG voice
Again, nothing really fancy here. You have an example of both the 'stressed' (unreduced) possessive pronoun
þēn and its unstressed (reduced) counterpart,
þn, as well as the V2 order in the subordinate clause (
hwaþa' sgo' þn stēn instead of
hwaþa' þn stēn sgo'). The optional
þ on
þogþ is supposed to be present (it's a marker of an abstract noun, from Proto-Germanic
-iþo), but sometimes it is dropped when occurring after another fricative.
Also perhaps worth mentioning here is Lowan's three-way vowel length contrast: long (ē), short (e), and super-short (e'). The difference between long vowels and short vowels is actually qualitative rather than quantitative: <ē> [e] vs. <e> [ɛ]. The 'super-short' vowel is a shorter version of the short vowel, cut short by a glottal stop: <e'> [ɛ?] The glottal stop is not recognized as an actual phoneme in the language, and super-short vowels only occur at the end of words.
(Note: I suspect the 'proper' words for these are actually 'long', 'half-long', and 'short'. Anyone confirm?)
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"Beware of half-truths: you may have the wrong half."
Wari þē hēlh-sēþem: hafþ wēlig þa ung halh
Phonetic: [wari θe helx tseðm̩ hafθ welɪx θa uŋ halx]
Gloss: beware-IMP you.ACC/DAT half.PL-truth.PL-DAT have.2SG possible the wrong half
And... nothing special! The only thing of note here is that
wēlig, although morphologically an adjective, is used as an adverb. Like many other modern Germanic languages, Lowan does not, as a general rule, distinguish between adverbs and adjectives.