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{{Infobox/row|Early form(s)|{{{early-forms|Lanesil}}}}}
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{{Infobox/row|Writing system|{{{scripts|Latin<br>Iskelan script}}}}}
{{Infobox/row|Writing system|{{{scripts|<IPA>Latin<br>Iskelan script}}}}}
{{Infobox/header|Official status|style=background:#76ff7a}}
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{{Infobox/row|Spoken in|{{{country|[[Juya Gwaña]]<br>[[Legwa Rina]]}}}}}
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{{Infobox/row|Demonym|{{{demonym|Iskelan}}}}}
{{Infobox/row|Demonym|{{{demonym|Iskelan}}}}}
{{Infobox/row|Endonym|{{{endonym|Ískelam}}}}}
{{Infobox/row|Endonym|{{{endonym|Iskelam}}}}}
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[[File:Iskel flag.png|thumb|262x262px|Iskel's flag]]
[[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).
'''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|Legwa Rrina]] (which means "land of ruin" in Iskel).


== Phonology ==
== Phonology ==

Revision as of 22:31, 23 December 2024

Iskel
Language familylanguage isolate
Early form(s)Lanesil
Writing system<IPA>Latin
Iskelan script
Official status
Spoken inJuya Gwaña
Legwa Rrina
Speaker
DemonymIskelan
EndonymIskelam
Number of speakers0
Technical information
Usagenative language
Language codeISK
Iskel's flag

Iskel (ɪsᴋ: [ískel~ísqel], ᴇɴɢ: /ˈɪskəl/) is Suqi's first conlang (begun in 2018). It has influence from Italian, Spanish, Korean, English, and Latin, 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 Rrina (which means "land of ruin" in Iskel).

Phonology

Iskel's phonology was initially a combination of English and Spanish. That is still reflected, but it was expanded and altered as Suqi learned more about linguistics.

Pitch-Accent

Iskel is a pitch-accent language that centers its stress around two syllables rather than one. The stressed syllable pair can either have a rising (LH) or falling (HL) pitch. All other syllables have no phonemic tone, but phonetically have a mid tone. The acute accent is written on the first syllable of a falling pitch pair. The grave accent is written on the first syllable of a rising pitch pair. Mid tones are not written.

Monosyllabic words mostly do not have tone, with the exception of some words which have a high or low tone that fit with their usage or meaning. For example, the word "no" ʔáʔ always has a high tone to call attention to it.

Monosyllabic affixes are always atonal. Polysyllabic affixes may be atonal, but this is only in situations where an epenthetic vowel has been fossilized onto the affix. When a root word receives a polysyllabic affix, the high tone in the affix is converted to a mid tone, leaving only its low tone. This is referred to as pitch degradation.

Suffixes are split into two tone groups. Tone I suffixes follow the above format of pitch degradation. Tone II suffixes restructure the pitch-accent of the entire word to make the final two syllables have falling pitch, while keeping any prefixes' degraded pitches. It is unclear whether suffixes in specific tone groups have any common pattern between them.

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. While it is considered to occur on a single consonant phonemically, phonetically it tends to last well into the pronunciation of the following sound, whether it's a consonant or a vowel. Narealization will be transcribed in IPA with an asterisk.

Labial Dental Alveolar Palatal Velar/Uvular Glottal
Nasal ɱ n ɲ ŋ
Stop p t t͡ʃ k ʔ
b d͡ʒ g
Fricative f θ s ʃ x h
v ð z ʒ
Lateral l ʎ̥˔ ⟨𝼆~ɬ⟩
Sonorant w ɾ j ʀ
Click ᵏʇ ⟨ʇ⟩ ᵏ!¡ ⟨!⟩ 𐞥ǂ[1] ⟨ǂ⟩
  1. /𐞥ǂ/ is a palatovelar click [𐞥ǂ̈]
Iskel vowel qualities

Vowels

The most frequent vowels are /i ɪ e a u ʊ o/. The other vowel qualities /ə ʌ ɑ/ are rare and appear more often in sound symbolism and names. Any vowel can be lengthened, but this is also rare. Vowel length mainly, but not always, occurs when two identical vowels appear on opposite sides of a stem boundary. Weak, or non-syllabic, vowels occur in polyphthongs and can both precede and follow the primary vowel.

Front Back
Short Long Weak Back Long Weak
High Close i u
Near-Close ɪ ɪː ɪ̯ ʊ ʊː ʊ̯
Close-Mid e o
Low Mid ə əː ə̯ ʌ ʌː ʌ̯
Open a ɑ ɑː ɑ̯

Iskel also has syllabic /ɱ̩ n̩ ɾ̩/, which do not have long or weak versions.

Phonotactics

Iskel has no allophony. It only allows a maximum of 3 consonants in a row, and a maximum of 3 vowels in a row (long vowels count as two vowels). Any sound can occur near any other sound, although most consontant and vowel clusters are rare, and affixation tends to favor minimizing clusters. If a syllable pair with falling pitch has two syllabic vowels next to each other, the second becomes non-syllabic. The minor phonotactical limitations exist to increase vocal flexibility for those who regularly speak the language (And it works!).

Sỳblamána

Iskel is primarily transcribed in IPA, but with the removal of some diacritics. One system of romanization Iskel can use is known as Sỳblamána [sɪ̄blaɱána], which means Letter-Less. However, it does not accurately show several phonemic features, so it is only used for fonts with poor IPA support and titles.

Consonants
Sỳblamána m n ñ ng p b t ch j k g ʔ f v th d s z sh x h l lh w r j rr cz cr cq
IPA ɱ n ɲ ŋ ng p b t t͡ʃ d͡ʒ ʒ k g ʔ f v θ th ð s z ʃ sh x h l ʎ̥˔ lh w ɾ y ʀ ɾɾ ᵏʇ ᵏ!¡ 𐞥ǂ *
Vowels High tone is not written if it's on the first syllable.

Tones are sometimes not written on syllabic consonants.

Sỳblamána i y e a u w o m n r ◌◌ ◌́ ◌̀
IPA i ɪ e ə a ʌ u ʊ o ɑ ɱ̩ ɾ̩ ◌ː ◌̆ ◌́ ◌̀

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 -ɪː- 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.

pápa (dog) → páɪːpa (dog-DAT)

ògjoɾan (homes) → ògjoɪːɾan (homes-DAT)

ʒiːéɱa (Saturn) → ɪːʒiːéɱa (Saturn-DAT)

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.

Basic Genitive
Ownership Relation
1P SG jos / íːo ɱʊ- ɲʊ-
PL.INCL ítio áfin áɬin-
PL.EXCL íɱos xe- ɬe-
2P SG it ɱi- ɲi-
PL jáɾe wɑ- jɑ-
3P SG íɱe / vʊl / ksíni af- aɬ-
PL íɱen / vʊln / ksínin áfn̩ áɬn̩-

To mark absolute possession (i.e. "the cow is mine" instead of "my cow"), the prefix becomes its own word instead and placed after the possessee.

below this line is outdated sample texts

Syntax

Heads & Dependents

All heads precede their dependents except in some word order variations specified in the following section.

Word Orders

SVO is used for the indicative mood. To emphasize the indicative mood, one may prefix the verb with áxa-.

Imen ixeṣ a’telman es’pañom. / Imen axa‘ixeṣ a’telman es’pañom.

3-PL COP-FUT person-N-PL Spain-ADJ-ORIGIN / 3-PL IND.COP-FUT person-N-PL Spain-ADJ-ORIGIN

"They will become Spanish people."

VOS is used for the interrogative mood. Relative pronouns can become interrogative by suffixing -ðs. The resulting question is in SVO order.

Ixeṣ a’telman es’pañom imen

COP-FUT person-PL Spain-ADJ-ORIGIN 3-PL

"Will they become Spanish people?"


It qome ja it a’damo → It qome jaðs it a’damo.

2.SG eat-V when 2.SG hunger-ADJ → 2.SG eat-V when-INT 2.SG hunger-ADJ

"You eat when you're hungry." → "You eat when you're hungry?"

V↗OS (rising intonation on the object) is used for the hypothetical mood.

Ixeṣ a’telman es’pañom imen.

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

"They could become Spanish people."

↗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.

Ixeṣ imen a’telman es’pañom. / Imen ‘hire’ixeṣ a’telman es’pañom.

COP-FUT 3-PL person-N-PL Spain-ADJ-ORIGIN / 3-PL IMP.COP-FUT person-N-PL Spain-ADJ-ORIGIN

"They ought to become Spanish people."

↗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.

A’telman es’pañom imen ixeṣ. / Imen kwe’lixeṣ a’telman es’pañom.

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."

Emotion Markers

Iskel has optional particles placed before a clause that mark the speaker's emotion resulting from what is said.

  • gwęʔ - positive
  • xwęʔ - angry
  • çwęʔ - bummed-out
  • qwęʔ - excited
  • twęʔ - firm
  • hwęʔ - sad

Ę is replaced with Ǫ if the speaker's emotion is weak.

  • gwǫʔ - content
  • xwǫʔ - irked
  • çwǫʔ - disappointed
  • qwǫʔ - expectant
  • twǫʔ - serious
  • hwǫʔ - feeling down

Script

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 eda. 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, kŋę, which is only used in cases where the speaker's meaning cannot come across without it.

There are 4 declensions for the demonstrative determiner eŏst. It can be interpreted as a proximal demonstrative, but is used for topical proximity not physical proximity. Likewise, its distal counterpart eŏstę is only for topical distance. Both can be inflected for plurality as eŏsn and eŏskęn, 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.

Singular Plural
Basic Reflexive Basic Reciprocal Reflexive
1P INCL yos / īo yo’soĭ i‘tio i‘tioyan ‘itio’soĭ
EXCL imos imosyan ‘imo’soĭ
2P it it’soĭ yade yadeyan ‘yade’soĭ
3P.COM ime noun-soĭ imen yan noun-nsoĭ
3P.NEU vųl vųln
3P.INAN ksini ksinin

"Someone" and "some people" are a’telma (person) and a’telman (people) if they refer to someone in particular, but a’telña and a’telñan if they refer to no one in particular, which covers some instances of "anyone". "Other" and "others" are otes and o’tesn. Iskel cannot directly express the concept of "no one"/"nobody".

Relative/Interrogative Relative Interrogative
Pronoun Sentence Pronoun Sentence
who ji A’telma ji beibe metia.

person-N who drink-V medicine-N

"The person who drinks medicine."

jiðs Jiðs beibe metia.

who-INT drink-V medicine-N

"Who drinks medicine?"

what ke Łeka’refan ta’et ke ‘plokseve’teñasi.

1.EXCL.GEN-food-N-PL all what explode-V.PST-PRS

"All our food that has been exploding."

keðs ‘Plokseve’teñasi keðs.

explode-PST-PRS what-INT

"What has been exploding?"

why je Qoma je yos guse ʔu’nevan.

eat-N why 1.SG like-V egg-N-PL

"The meal that I like eggs due to."

jeðs Yos guse jeðs ʔu’nevan.

1.SG like-V why-INT egg-N-PL

"Why do I like eggs?"

when ju Įn’sena ju ime a’veña.

show-N when 3.SG.COM fun-V.PST

"The show when/where she had fun."

juðs Ime a’veña juðs.

3.SG.COM fun-V-PST when-INT

"When did she have fun?"

where jo Gaĭsa jo sotia ksesi.

air-N where sound-N exist-V-PRS

"The air where the sound is."

joðs Sotia ksesi joðs.

sound-N exist-V-PRS where-INT

"Where is the sound?"

how kamái Vezida ka’maĭ ksinin vwale.

speed-N how 3.INAN-PL fly-V

"The speed that they fly due to."

kamáiðs Ksinin vwale ka’maĭðs.

3.INAN-PL fly-V how-INT

"How do they fly?"

which/what kind ja Axxinan ja it ne’guse.

nightmate-N-PL which 2.SG NEG-like-V

"Nightmares which you dislike."

jaðs It ne’guse jaðs.

2.SG NEG-like-V which-INT

"Which (dreams) do you dislike?"

how much Ki memseṣ.

five amount mind-V-FUT

"Five that will be thought of."

jǫðs Memseṣ jǫðs .

mind-V-FUT amount-INT

"How many will be thought of?"

what result ka Mų’gusa ka se’latoþa.

1.SG.GEN-like-N what_result salt-ADJ-QUAL

"My appreciation that results from saltiness."

kaðs Se’latoþa kaðs .

salt-ADJ-QUAL what_result-INT

"What results from saltiness?"

catch-all + disbelief Vųlkęn aŋ’kse!

Vulcan REL.MIR NEG-exist-V

"Vulcan, which apparently doen't exist!"

kąðs Aŋ’kse kąðs!

NEG-exist-V REL.MIR-INT

"Huh?! Doesn't exist?"

Numerals

Iskel uses biejctive base-12, meaning it's base 12 but zero is not used to make any other numerals.

Arabic Iskel
mysterious number i dont remember making ca
Ø (no numeric value) aŋki‘vol
0 ʔiv
1 ʔų
2 to
3 ðe
4 skwǫ
5 ki
6 ṣe
7 ze
8 kho
9 na
10 ye
11 ha
12 lu
13 ʔųʔų
14 ʔųto
15 ʔųðe
16 ʔųskwǫ