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{{Infobox|
[[Category:Language]]
{{Infobox/above|{{{name|Iskel}}}|style=background:#76ff7a}}
This page is under rennovation. Significant amounts of information is missing.
{{Infobox/row|Language family|{{{family|language isolate}}}}}
{{Infobox/row|Early form(s)|{{{early-forms|Lanesil}}}}}
{{Infobox/row|Era|{{{era|}}}}}
{{Infobox/row|Writing system|{{{scripts|Latin<br>Iskelan script}}}}}
{{Infobox/header|Official status|style=background:#76ff7a}}
{{Infobox/row|Spoken in|{{{country|[[Juya Gwaña]]<br>[[Legwa Rina]]}}}}}
{{Infobox/row|Regulated by|{{{regulator|}}}}}
{{Infobox/header|Speaker|style=background:#76ff7a}}
{{Infobox/row|Demonym|{{{demonym|Iskelan}}}}}
{{Infobox/row|Endonym|{{{endonym|Ískelam}}}}}
{{Infobox/row|Exonym|{{{exonym|}}}}}
{{Infobox/row|Number of speakers|{{{number|0}}}}}
{{Infobox/header|Technical information|style=background:#76ff7a}}
{{Infobox/row|Usage|{{{usage|native language}}}}}
{{Infobox/row|Language code|{{{lang-code|ISK}}}}}
}}
[[File:Iskel flag.png|thumb|262x262px|Iskel's flag]]
'''Iskel''' (ɪsᴋ: [ískel~ísqel], ᴇɴɢ: /ˈɪskəl/) is [[Suqi|Suqi's]] first conlang (begun in 2018). It has influence from '''I'''talian, '''S'''panish, '''K'''orean, '''E'''nglish, and '''L'''atin, hence the name. It's a non-naturalistic analytic and agglutinative language. It was intended to be a more efficient way of conveying information where English struggles to in terms of nuance, ambiguity, and regularity. In [[Nguhcraft]], it is an official language of Suqi's primary base [[Juya Gwaña]] (which means "ocean cluster" in Iskel) and ŋation [[Legwa Rina]] (which means "land of ruin" in Iskel).


== Phonology ==
== Phonology ==
Iskel's phonology was initially a combination of English and Spanish. That is still reflected, but it was expanded as Suqi learned more about linguistics.
=== Pitch-Accent ===
Iskel is a pitch-accent language. Every polysyllabic stem has a syllable with a high tone. Mid tones also occur, but are not obligatory. If they do appear, they can only occur on one syllable in a stem. Polysyllabic affixes may contain no tones, but this is only in situations where an epenthetic vowel has been fossilized onto the affix. 
When multiple pitch-accented stems combine, only one of the high tones remains. The mid tones become lost and the rest of the high tones become mid tone. This is known as pitch degradation. All other vowels are phonetically low tones. 
Suffixes are split into two accent groups. Accent I suffixes follow the above format of pitch degradation. Accent II suffixes restructure the pitch-accent of the entire word to make the penultimate syllable a high tone and the 2nd syllable before ''it'' have a mid tone. It is unclear whether suffixes in specific accent groups have any common pattern between them.
High tones are written with a back-facing apostrophe prior to the syllable (’), and mid tones are written with a front-facing apostrophe prior to the syllable (‘). In fonts where they look strongly alike, the front-facing apostrophe may be replaced with the latin script ayin (ʿ )


=== Consonants ===
=== Consonants ===
One unique feature Iskel has is "narealization", which is essentially the scrunching of the nostrils during a consonant's pronunciation. If emphasized, it may result in nareal frication. This phonemic feature, which can occur on every consonant, is primarily for visual communication, but it can be done strongly enough to be heard if needed. Narealization will be transcribed in IPA with the nasalization diacritic (the tilde) since Iskel does not have nasalization. Rarely, the tilde will be placed below the letter instead of above due to formatting issues, leading it to look like the letter has creaky voice. Iskel does not have creaky voice, so it should not be read as such. Narealized consonants are romanized by doubling their consonant's letter.
Consonants in parentheses currently do not occur in any words, but may appear in the future.
{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable"
!
! colspan="2" rowspan="2" |
!Labial
! colspan="2" rowspan="2" |Labial
!Dental
! colspan="6" |Coronal
!Alveolar
! colspan="2" rowspan="2" |Palatal
!Palatal
! colspan="2" rowspan="2" |Uvular
!Velar/Uvular
! colspan="2" rowspan="2" |Glottal
!Glottal
|-
! colspan="2" |Sibilant
! colspan="2" |Median
! colspan="2" |Lateral
|-
|-
! rowspan="2" |Stop
!Nasal
!Nasal
|ɱ (m)
|m
|'''⟨m⟩'''
|
|
|
|n
|n
(ñ)
|'''⟨n⟩'''
|ŋ
|
|
|'''⟨ñ⟩'''
|'''⟨ng⟩'''
|
|
|
|-
|-
! rowspan="2" |Stop
!Oral
|p
|p b
|'''⟨p b⟩'''
|t͡s d͡z
|'''⟨ds dz⟩'''
|t
|'''⟨t⟩'''
|
|
|
|
|t
|t͡ʃ (c)
|k~q (k)
|-
|b
|
|
|q
|'''⟨q⟩'''
|
|
|d͡ʒ (j)
|g
|
|
|-
|-
! rowspan="2" |Fricative
! colspan="2" |Fricative
|f
|ɸ β
|θ
|'''⟨f v⟩'''
|s
|s z
|ʃ (ṣ)
|'''⟨s z⟩'''
|x
|θ̠ ð̠
|'''⟨sh zh⟩'''
|'''⟨lh⟩'''
|ç ʝ
|'''⟨jx jj⟩'''
|'''⟨x⟩'''
|h
|h
|'''⟨h⟩'''
|-
|-
|v
! colspan="2" |Trill
|ð
|
|z
|
|ʒ (ẓ)
|
|
|r
|'''⟨rr⟩'''
|
|
|
|
|'''⟨gg⟩'''
|
|
|
|
|-
|-
!Lateral
! rowspan="2" |Glide
!Oral
|w
|'''⟨w⟩'''
|
|
|
|
|'''⟨r⟩'''
|l
|l
|ʎ̥˔ (ł)
|'''⟨l⟩'''
|j
|'''⟨y⟩'''
|
|
|
|
|-
!Nasal
|w̃
|'''⟨ẇ⟩'''
|
|
|
|
|l̃
|'''⟨ŀ⟩'''
|j̃
|'''⟨ẏ⟩'''
|
|
|
|
|-
! rowspan="4" |Click
!Nasal
|
|
|ᵑʇ
|'''⟨dn⟩'''
|ᵑǃ¡
|'''⟨cn⟩'''
|(ᵑǁ)
|'''⟨łn⟩'''
|ᵑǂ
|'''⟨jn⟩'''
|
|
|
|
|-
!Aspirated
|
|
|ᵏʇʰ
|'''⟨dh⟩'''
|(ᵏǃ¡ʰ)
|'''⟨ch⟩'''
|(ᵏǁʰ)
|'''⟨łh⟩'''
|(ᵏǂʰ)
|'''⟨jh⟩'''
|
|
|
|
|
|
|-
|-
!Sonorant
!Tenuis
|w
|
|
|ᵏʇ
|'''⟨dk⟩'''
|ᵏǃ¡
|'''⟨ck⟩'''
|ᵏǁ
|'''⟨łk⟩'''
|ᵏǂ
|'''⟨jk⟩'''
|
|
|
|
|ɾ (d)
|j (y)
|ʀ (r)
|
|
|-
|-
!Click
!Glottalized
|
|
|ᵏʇˀ
|'''⟨d'⟩'''
|(ᵏǃ¡ˀ)
|'''⟨c'⟩'''
|(ᵏǁˀ)
|'''⟨ł'⟩'''
|(ᵏǂˀ)
|'''⟨j'⟩'''
|
|
|
|ᵏʇˀ (ç)
|ᵏ!¡ˀ (!)
|𐞥ǂˀ<ref name=":1">/𐞥ǂˀ/ is a palatovelar click [𐞥ǂ̈ˀ]</ref> (q)
|
|
|
|
|}
|}
<references />
 
[[File:Iskel vowel chart.png|thumb|193x193px|Iskel vowel qualities]]
=== Vowels ===
{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable"
! rowspan="2" |
!
! rowspan="2" |Front
! colspan="2" |Front
! colspan="2" |Central
! colspan="2" |Central
! rowspan="2" |Back
! colspan="2" |Back
|-
|-
!Unround
!Close
!Round
|-
!High
|i
|i
|ɪ (į)
|'''⟨i⟩'''
(ų)
|u
|'''⟨û⟩'''
u
|'''⟨ı u⟩'''
|-
|-
!Mid
!Close-Mid
|e
|e
(ę)
|'''⟨e⟩'''
|
| rowspan="2"
| rowspan="2" |'''⟨ŷ⟩'''
|o
|o
|'''⟨o⟩'''
|-
|-
!Low
!Open-Mid
|'''⟨ê⟩'''
|'''⟨ô⟩'''
|-
!Open
|a
|a
|ɐ (ą)
|'''⟨a⟩'''
|
|
|
(ǫ)
|'''⟨â⟩'''
|}
|}
 
Iskel has syllabic forms for all of its sonorants.
=== Phonotactics ===
Iskel has no consonant gemination and no allophony. Iskel only allows a maximum of 3 consonants in a row, and a maximum of 3 vowels in a row. Any sound can occur near any other sound, although many consontant and vowel clusters are rare, and affixation favors minimizing clusters.
 
* Long vowels and nonsyllabic vowels
 
The minor phonotactical limitations exist to increase vocal flexibility for those who regularly speak the language (and it works).
 
== Morphology ==
 
=== Parts of Speech ===
All nouns end in ''-a'', all verbs end in ''-e'', all adjectives end in ''-o''. In order to turn one into the other, the vowel suffix is changed to its new part of speech. Proper nouns, expletives, adverbs and all other parts of speech may end in any sound. If two nouns placed together modify each other equally (in the semantics), neither are changed to an adjective. Adjectives may be used as adverbs. The only verb that does not end in ''-e'' is the copula ''ix''.
 
=== Cases ===
Iskel only has the dative and genitive cases. The dative marker is an infix ''-ĭĭ-'' placed in the middle of the word, or one phoneme before the middle. If placing it in either location results in the infix being adjacent to 2 or 3 vowels, it is moved to the earliest point where it's only adjacent to one vowel as per the phonotactics.<blockquote>''papa'' (dog) → ''páĭĭpa'' (dog-DAT)
 
''ogyoran'' (homes) → ''ogyĭĭoran'' (homes-DAT)
 
''źiiema'' (Saturn) → ''ĭĭźiiema'' (Saturn-DAT) </blockquote>The genitive case is marked with prefixes that combine with person and number marking, and distinguish between literal ownership and relation. The possessee is marked, not the possessor.
{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable"
! colspan="2" rowspan="2" |
! colspan="2" rowspan="2" |
! rowspan="2" |Basic
! colspan="2" rowspan="2" |Labial
! colspan="2" |Genitive
! colspan="4" |Alveolar
! colspan="2" rowspan="2" |Palatal
! colspan="2" rowspan="2" |Uvular
|-
|-
!Ownership
! colspan="2" |Median
!Relation
! colspan="2" |Lateral
|-
|-
! rowspan="3" |1P
! colspan="2" |Nasal
!SG
|m
|yos / īo
|'''⟨m⟩'''
|mu-
|n
|ñu-
|'''⟨n⟩'''
|
|
|'''⟨ñ⟩'''
|ɴ
|'''⟨ng⟩'''
|-
|-
!PL.INCL
! colspan="2" |Trill
|ítio
|
|áfin-
|
|állin-
|r
|'''⟨rr⟩'''
|
|
|
|
|ʀ
|'''⟨gg⟩'''
|-
|-
!PL.EXCL
! rowspan="2" |Glide
|imos
!Oral
|xe-
|w
|lle-
|'''⟨w⟩'''
|'''⟨r⟩'''
|l
|'''⟨l⟩'''
|j
|'''⟨y⟩'''
|
|
|-
|-
! rowspan="2" |2P
!Nasal
!SG
|
|it
|'''⟨ẇ⟩'''
|mi-
|
|ñi-
|
|-
|
!PL
|'''⟨ŀ⟩'''
|yare
|
|wă-
|'''⟨ẏ⟩'''
|yă-
|
|-
|
! rowspan="2" |3P
!SG
|ime / vul / ksini
|af-
|all-
|-
!PL
|imen / vuln / ksinin
|áfn-
|álln-
|}
|}
To mark absolute possession (i.e. "the cow is <u>mine</u>" instead of "<u>my</u> cow"), the prefix becomes its own word instead and placed after the possessee.


== Syntax ==
=== Stress ===
Iskel has 3 stress levels: primary, secondary, and extra stress, all of which are phonemic. A word can have any number of any type of stress, though words with extra stress have only been observed to have one. If a word does have extra stress, however, it cannot have primary stress. Primary and secondary stress involve increase in syllable pitch and length to a stronger and less strong degree, respectively. Extra stress involves lower pitch, noticeably greater airflow resulting in higher volume, lengthening, and the visible scrunching of the nose during every phone in the syllable. Extra stress has only been observed to occur in syllables beginning with fricatives, and is confirmed to occur in syllables with consonant nuclei.


=== Heads & Dependents ===
Primary stress can be written with ⟨»⟩, secondary stress with ⟨›⟩, and extra stress with ⟨!⟩ after the nucleus. Primary and secondary stress are rarely written, but extra stress is written more often. Word-initial primary stress is not written unless there is another primary stress in the word.
All heads precede their dependents except in some word order variations specified in the following section.


=== Word Orders ===
Some affixes may make otherwise unstressed syllables stressed. When monosyllabic words become polysyllabic through inflection, primary stress is placed on the syllable of the root. This only does not occur in the case of part of speech suffixes, which do not influence the primary stress placement of the words they inflect.
'''SVO''' is used for the indicative mood. To emphasize the indicative mood, one may prefix the verb with ''áxa-''.<blockquote>Imen ixeś atelman españom. / Imen áxàixeś atelman españom.


3-PL COP-FUT person-N-PL Spain-ADJ-ORIGIN / 3-PL IND.COP-FUT person-N-PL Spain-ADJ-ORIGIN
=== Allophony ===
Aside from elisory allophony, discussed in the Phonotactics section, and epenthetic allomorphy, discussed in the Morphology section, Iskel has two allophonic rules.


"They will become Spanish people."</blockquote>'''VOS''' is used for the interrogative mood. Relative pronouns can become interrogative by suffixing ''-ðs''. The resulting question is in '''SVO''' order.<blockquote>Ixeś atelman españom imen
# Bilabial articulation during extra stress becomes labiodental.
# /j/ lowers and retracts from preceding uvulars<sup>[''controversial'']</sup>.


COP-FUT person-PL Spain-ADJ-ORIGIN 3-PL
These rules exist due to biological limitations. All other articulations are identical to their phonemic form. There is no voicing assimilation anywhere, no nasal assimilation, no retraction from click tongue shape, no place assimilation, etc. The /j/ lowering/retracting rule is debated with many prominent opposers claiming failure to produce a true palatal immediately after a uvular is a "skill issue".


"Will they become Spanish people?"
However, the degree of allophonic variation within Iskel exists on a spectrum. More formal speech requires the speaker to make maximum effort to never allow characteristics of one phone to bleed into the articulation of another. More informal speech allows for more lax and natural pronunciations such as plosives including a nasal release when followed by a nasal or nasalized vowels near nasal consonants. Though, even informal speech retains a relatively strict pronunciation. Voicing assimilation in obstruent clusters can create ambiguity since mixed voice obstruent clusters are phonemically distinct from their homogenous counterparts, so it does not occur even in the most informal speech. Similarly, nasal assimilation in approximants will also lead to phonemic ambiguity.


=== Phonotactics ===


==== Clusters ====
Iskel follows a (C)(C)(C)V(V)(V)(C)(C)(C) structure. A consonant cluster and vowel cluster each may only have a maximum of three, regardless of if it exists within the same syllable or across syllables in a word. When affixes are added to a word, violations of this cluster limit involving 4 members of a cluster result in the deletion of one member at the stem boundary from the longer stem. Violations involving 5 members result in the deletion of one member at the stem boundary from each stem. Violations involving 6 members result in the deletion of one member from the shorter stem and two members from the longer stem, again at the stem boundary.


It q!ome ja it aram-o → It q!ome jaðs it aramo.
For example, the prefix ''ang-'' /aŋ/ attaching to the root ''sqwôa'' /sqwɔa̯/ would create the illegal cluster of 4 consonants ''*angsqwôa'' /aŋsqwɔa̯/. Therefore, the longer stem ''sqwôa'' must delete the consonant at the stem boundary, creating the word ''angqwôa'' /aŋˈqwɔa̯/ with a legal cluster of 3 consonants.


2.SG eat-V when 2.SG hunger-ADJ → 2.SG eat-V when-INT 2.SG hunger-ADJ
==== Syllabic Consonants ====
A nucleus with a syllabic consonant can never contain another syllabic consonant or vowel. Syllabic consonants cannot occur next to vowels. Affixes that pair a vowel and syllabic consonant result in the consonant becoming nonsyllabic. Syllabic consonants have never been observed to have more than one consonant in their syllable's coda or nucleus. Nasalized approximants have never been observed to be syllabic.


"You eat when you're hungry." → "You eat ''when'' you're hungry?"</blockquote>'''V↗OS''' (rising intonation on the object) is used for the hypothetical mood.<blockquote>Ixeś atelman españom imen.
== Morphology ==


COP-FUT person-N-PL Spain-ADJ-ORIGIN 3-PL
=== Affixes ===


"They could become Spanish people."</blockquote>'''↗VSO''' (rising intonation on the verb) is used for the imperative/jussive mood. Alternatively, one may prefix the verb in an '''SVO''' structure with ''híre-'' instead.<blockquote>Ixeś imen atelman españom. / Imen hírèixeś atelman españom.
=== Particles ===


COP-FUT 3-PL person-N-PL Spain-ADJ-ORIGIN / 3-PL IMP.COP-FUT person-N-PL Spain-ADJ-ORIGIN
== Syntax ==
 
"They ought to become Spanish people."</blockquote>'''↗OVS''' (rising intonation on the object) is used for the optative mood. Alternatively, one may prefix the verb in an '''SVO''' structure with ''kwel-'' instead.<blockquote>Atelman españom imen ixeś. / Imen kwelixeś atelman españom.
 
person-N-PL Spain-ADJ-ORIGIN 3-PL COP-FUT / 3-PL OPT-COP-FUT person-N-PL Spain-ADJ-ORIGIN
 
"I hope they will become Spanish people."</blockquote>
 
=== Emotion Markers ===
Iskel has optional particles placed before a clause that mark the speaker's emotion resulting from what is said.
 
* ''gwĕʔ'' - positive
* ''xwĕʔ'' - angry
* ''t!wĕʔ'' - bummed-out
* ''q!wĕʔ'' - excited
* ''twĕʔ'' - firm
* ''hwĕʔ'' - sad
 
'''Ĕ''' is replaced with '''Ą''' if the speaker's emotion is weak.
 
* ''gwąʔ'' - content
* ''xwąʔ'' - irked
* ''t!wąʔ'' - disappointed
* ''q!wąʔ'' - expectant
* ''twąʔ'' - serious
* ''hwąʔ'' - feeling down
 
== Script ==


== Lexicon ==
== Lexicon ==
=== Copulae ===
There are four copulae: the qualitative, similative, identical, and exact identical.
* The qualitative copula, ''ix'', is used when the predicate demonstrates a quality of the predicand. For example, "I am a mistake" is ''Yos ix era''. It is frequently omitted.
* The similative copula, ''en'', is used when the predicate is merely something similar to the predicand. For example, "I am similar to you" is ''Yos en it''. 
* The identical copula, ''taʔ'', is used when the predicate is apparently identical to the predicand, but still its own thing or person. For example, "The color here is the same as the color there" is ''Kilita akeno taʔ kilita ekyo''.
* The exact identical copula, ''al'', is used when the predicate and predicand are completely indistinguishable from each other to the point that they potentially refer to the exact same thing or person. For example, "She is Mrs. Green" is ''Imen al Gdīnðu''.
=== States of Being ===
The word ''kse'' (to exist) may be used to mean "there is", and can be used to denote a static relationship where motion would otherwise be assumed. This happens by ''kse'' being placed before the main verb and the main verb becoming an adverb. For example, when the preposition ''bo’xat'', meaning "under/beneath", is turned into a verb, ''bo’xa‘te'', it means "to go down". However, the verb ''kse'' can be added to mean "to be under/beneath": ''kse bo’xa‘to''.
=== Determiners ===
Iskel has no indefinite article and one definite article, ''ĕŋk'', which is only used in cases where the speaker's meaning cannot come across without it.
There are 4 declensions for the demonstrative determiner ''eost''. It can be interpreted as a proximal demonstrative, but is used for topical proximity not physical proximity. Likewise, its distal counterpart ''eostĕ'' is only for topical distance. Both can be inflected for plurality as ''eosn'' and ''éoskĕn'', respectively.
=== Pronouns ===
''Yos'' and ''īo'' are interchangeable as the first-person singular pronoun. Typically ''īo'' is used for emphasis. In cases when the pronoun is repeated in an utterance, speakers prefer to avoid saying ''yos'' or ''īo'' twice in a row, so they alternate between the two. The third-person pronouns come in three forms: common gender, neuter gender, and inanimate. Common gender is used for referring to a specific person or a group of a certain gender. Neuter gender is used for general people, mixed-gender groups, and animals. Inanimate is used for dead people and everything else.
{| class="wikitable"
! colspan="2" rowspan="2" |
! colspan="2" |Singular
! colspan="3" |Plural
|-
!Basic
!Reflexive
!Basic
!Reciprocal
!Reflexive
|-
! rowspan="2" |1P
!INCL
| rowspan="2" |yos / īo
| rowspan="2" |yosoi
|ítio
|ítioyan
|ítiosòi
|-
!EXCL
|imos
|ímosyan
|ímosòi
|-
! colspan="2" |2P
|it
|itsoi
|yare
|yáreyan
|yáresòi
|-
! colspan="2" |3P.COM
|ime
| rowspan="3" |''noun-''soi
|imen
| rowspan="3" |yan
| rowspan="3" |''noun-''nsoi
|-
! colspan="2" |3P.NEU
|vul
|vuln
|-
! colspan="2" |3P.INAN
|ksini
|ksinin
|}
"Someone" and "some people" are ''atelma'' (person) and ''atelman'' (people) if they refer to someone in particular, but ''atelña'' and ''atelñan'' if they refer to no one in particular, which covers some instances of "anyone". "Other" and "others" are ''otes'' and ''otésn''. Iskel cannot directly express the concept of "no one"/"nobody".
{| class="wikitable"
! rowspan="2" |Relative/Interrogative
! colspan="2" |Relative
! colspan="2" |Interrogative
|-
!Pronoun
!Sentence
!Pronoun
!Sentence
|-
!who
|ji
|Atelma '''ji''' béibe métia.
person-N '''who''' drink-V medicine-N
"The person who drinks medicine."
|jiðs
|'''Jiðs''' béibe métia.
'''who-INT''' drink-V medicine-N
"Who drinks medicine?"
|-
!what
|ke
|Llekarefan taét '''ke''' plòksevéteñasi.
1.EXCL.GEN-food-N-PL all '''what''' explode-V.PST-PRS
"All our food that has been exploding."
|keðs
|Plòksevéteñasi '''keðs'''.
explode-PST-PRS '''what-INT'''
"What has been exploding?"
|-
!why
|je
|Q!oma '''je''' yos guse ʔunevan.
eat-N '''why''' 1.SG like-V egg-N-PL
"The meal that I like eggs due to."
|jeðs
|Yos guse '''jeðs''' ʔunevan.
1.SG like-V '''why-INT''' egg-N-PL
"Why do I like eggs?"
|-
!when
|ju
|Ĭnsena '''ju''' ime avéña.
show-N '''when''' 3.SG.COM fun-V.PST
"The show when/where she had fun."
|juðs
|Ime áveña '''juðs'''.
3.SG.COM fun-V-PST '''when-INT'''
"When did she have fun?"
|-
!where
|jo
|Gáisa '''jo''' sótia oksétesi.
air-N '''where''' sound-N exist-V-PRS
"The air where the sound is."
|joðs
|Sótia oksétesi '''joðs'''.
sound-N exist-V-PRS '''where-INT'''
"Where is the sound?"
|-
!how
|kamái
|Vézira '''kamái''' ksinin vwale.
speed-N '''how''' 3.INAN-PL fly-V
"The speed that they fly due to."
|kamáiðs
|Ksinin vwale '''kamáiðs'''.
3.INAN-PL fly-V '''how-INT'''
"How do they fly?"
|-
!which/what kind
|ja
|Ax'inan '''ja''' it neguse.
nightmate-N-PL '''which''' 2.SG NEG-like-V
"Nightmares which you dislike."
|jaðs
|It neguse '''jaðs'''.
2.SG NEG-like-V '''which-INT'''
"Which (dreams) do you dislike?"
|-
!how much
|ją
|Ki '''ją''' memseś.
five '''amount''' mind-V-FUT
"Five that will be thought of."
|jąðs
|Memseś '''jąðs''' .
mind-V-FUT '''amount-INT'''
"How many will be thought of?"
|-
!what result
|ka
|Mugusa '''ka''' selátoþa.
1.SG.GEN-like-N '''what_result''' salt-ADJ-QUAL
"My appreciation that results from saltiness."
|kaðs
|Selátoþa '''kaðs''' .
salt-ADJ-QUAL '''what_result-INT'''
"What results from saltiness?"
|-
!catch-all + disbelief
|kă
|Vulkĕn '''kă''' aŋoksete!
Vulcan '''REL.MIR''' NEG-exist-V
"Vulcan, which ''apparently'' doen't exist!"
|kăðs
|Aŋoksete '''kăðs'''!
NEG-exist-V '''REL.MIR-INT'''
"Huh?! Doesn't exist?"
|}
=== Numerals ===
Iskel uses base-12, excluding zero. It does have a numeral for zero, but it is not used in any other numerals.
{| class="wikitable"
!Arabic
!Iskel
|-
!mysterious number i dont remember making
|ca
|-
!Ø (no numeric value)
|áŋkivol
|-
!0
|ʔiv
|-
!1
|ʔu
|-
!2
|to
|-
!3
|ðe
|-
!4
|skwą
|-
!5
|ki
|-
!6
|śe
|-
!7
|ze
|-
!8
|kho
|-
!9
|na
|-
!10
|ye
|-
!11
|ha
|-
!12
|lu
|-
!13
|ʔuʔu
|-
!14
|ʔuto
|-
!15
|ʔuðe
|-
!16
|ʔuskwą
|}
[[Category:Language]]

Latest revision as of 18:33, 26 February 2026

This page is under rennovation. Significant amounts of information is missing.

Phonology

Consonants

Consonants in parentheses currently do not occur in any words, but may appear in the future.

Labial Coronal Palatal Uvular Glottal
Sibilant Median Lateral
Stop Nasal m ⟨m⟩ n ⟨n⟩ ɲ ⟨ñ⟩ ɴ ⟨ng⟩
Oral p b ⟨p b⟩ t͡s d͡z ⟨ds dz⟩ t ⟨t⟩ q ⟨q⟩
Fricative ɸ β ⟨f v⟩ s z ⟨s z⟩ θ̠ ð̠ ⟨sh zh⟩ ɬ ⟨lh⟩ ç ʝ ⟨jx jj⟩ χ ⟨x⟩ h ⟨h⟩
Trill r ⟨rr⟩ ʀ ⟨gg⟩
Glide Oral w ⟨w⟩ ɾ ⟨r⟩ l ⟨l⟩ j ⟨y⟩
Nasal ⟨ẇ⟩ ⟨ŀ⟩ ⟨ẏ⟩
Click Nasal ᵑʇ ⟨dn⟩ ᵑǃ¡ ⟨cn⟩ (ᵑǁ) ⟨łn⟩ ᵑǂ ⟨jn⟩
Aspirated ᵏʇʰ ⟨dh⟩ (ᵏǃ¡ʰ) ⟨ch⟩ (ᵏǁʰ) ⟨łh⟩ (ᵏǂʰ) ⟨jh⟩
Tenuis ᵏʇ ⟨dk⟩ ᵏǃ¡ ⟨ck⟩ ᵏǁ ⟨łk⟩ ᵏǂ ⟨jk⟩
Glottalized ᵏʇˀ ⟨d'⟩ (ᵏǃ¡ˀ) ⟨c'⟩ (ᵏǁˀ) ⟨ł'⟩ (ᵏǂˀ) ⟨j'⟩

Vowels

Front Central Back
Close i ⟨i⟩ ʊ ⟨û⟩ ɯ u ⟨ı u⟩
Close-Mid e ⟨e⟩ ə ⟨ŷ⟩ o ⟨o⟩
Open-Mid ɛ ⟨ê⟩ ɔ ⟨ô⟩
Open a ⟨a⟩ ɑ ⟨â⟩

Iskel has syllabic forms for all of its sonorants.

Labial Alveolar Palatal Uvular
Median Lateral
Nasal m ⟨m⟩ n ⟨n⟩ ɲ ⟨ñ⟩ ɴ ⟨ng⟩
Trill r ⟨rr⟩ ʀ ⟨gg⟩
Glide Oral w ⟨w⟩ ɾ ⟨r⟩ l ⟨l⟩ j ⟨y⟩
Nasal ⟨ẇ⟩ ⟨ŀ⟩ ⟨ẏ⟩

Stress

Iskel has 3 stress levels: primary, secondary, and extra stress, all of which are phonemic. A word can have any number of any type of stress, though words with extra stress have only been observed to have one. If a word does have extra stress, however, it cannot have primary stress. Primary and secondary stress involve increase in syllable pitch and length to a stronger and less strong degree, respectively. Extra stress involves lower pitch, noticeably greater airflow resulting in higher volume, lengthening, and the visible scrunching of the nose during every phone in the syllable. Extra stress has only been observed to occur in syllables beginning with fricatives, and is confirmed to occur in syllables with consonant nuclei.

Primary stress can be written with ⟨»⟩, secondary stress with ⟨›⟩, and extra stress with ⟨!⟩ after the nucleus. Primary and secondary stress are rarely written, but extra stress is written more often. Word-initial primary stress is not written unless there is another primary stress in the word.

Some affixes may make otherwise unstressed syllables stressed. When monosyllabic words become polysyllabic through inflection, primary stress is placed on the syllable of the root. This only does not occur in the case of part of speech suffixes, which do not influence the primary stress placement of the words they inflect.

Allophony

Aside from elisory allophony, discussed in the Phonotactics section, and epenthetic allomorphy, discussed in the Morphology section, Iskel has two allophonic rules.

  1. Bilabial articulation during extra stress becomes labiodental.
  2. /j/ lowers and retracts from preceding uvulars[controversial].

These rules exist due to biological limitations. All other articulations are identical to their phonemic form. There is no voicing assimilation anywhere, no nasal assimilation, no retraction from click tongue shape, no place assimilation, etc. The /j/ lowering/retracting rule is debated with many prominent opposers claiming failure to produce a true palatal immediately after a uvular is a "skill issue".

However, the degree of allophonic variation within Iskel exists on a spectrum. More formal speech requires the speaker to make maximum effort to never allow characteristics of one phone to bleed into the articulation of another. More informal speech allows for more lax and natural pronunciations such as plosives including a nasal release when followed by a nasal or nasalized vowels near nasal consonants. Though, even informal speech retains a relatively strict pronunciation. Voicing assimilation in obstruent clusters can create ambiguity since mixed voice obstruent clusters are phonemically distinct from their homogenous counterparts, so it does not occur even in the most informal speech. Similarly, nasal assimilation in approximants will also lead to phonemic ambiguity.

Phonotactics

Clusters

Iskel follows a (C)(C)(C)V(V)(V)(C)(C)(C) structure. A consonant cluster and vowel cluster each may only have a maximum of three, regardless of if it exists within the same syllable or across syllables in a word. When affixes are added to a word, violations of this cluster limit involving 4 members of a cluster result in the deletion of one member at the stem boundary from the longer stem. Violations involving 5 members result in the deletion of one member at the stem boundary from each stem. Violations involving 6 members result in the deletion of one member from the shorter stem and two members from the longer stem, again at the stem boundary.

For example, the prefix ang- /aŋ/ attaching to the root sqwôa /sqwɔa̯/ would create the illegal cluster of 4 consonants *angsqwôa /aŋsqwɔa̯/. Therefore, the longer stem sqwôa must delete the consonant at the stem boundary, creating the word angqwôa /aŋˈqwɔa̯/ with a legal cluster of 3 consonants.

Syllabic Consonants

A nucleus with a syllabic consonant can never contain another syllabic consonant or vowel. Syllabic consonants cannot occur next to vowels. Affixes that pair a vowel and syllabic consonant result in the consonant becoming nonsyllabic. Syllabic consonants have never been observed to have more than one consonant in their syllable's coda or nucleus. Nasalized approximants have never been observed to be syllabic.

Morphology

Affixes

Particles

Syntax

Lexicon