Pinecone
| Pinecone | |
|---|---|
| Early form(s) | Pinecone (traditional) |
| Era | VERY LONG AGO-Now |
| Writing system | Latin |
| Official status | |
| Spoken in | 'bed |
| Speaker | |
| Endonym | ū |
| Exonym | Pinecone |
| Number of speakers | Unknown |
| Technical information | |
| Usage | Native language |
Pinecone (Pinecone: ū /u˥/) is one of the languages spoken in 'bed. It is distantly related to ve dkq mvli w, however it has been fully ship of theseused[1], so there is nothing in common between the two languages besides loanwords.
Phonology
Pinecone has 48-49 consonants, 10 vowels and 6 tones.
Consonants
| consonants | labial | alveolar | postalveolar | retroflex | palatal | velar | guttural | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| plain | dorsal | ||||||||
| nasal | m | ŋʷ <ŋv> | n | ɲ <ń> | ŋ <ŋ> | ɴ <ŋ̇> | |||
| plosive | aspirated | pʰ <p'> | kʷʰ <kv'> | tʰ <t'> | cʰ <c'> | kʰ <k'> | qʰ <q'> | ||
| voiceless | p | kʷ <kv> | t | c | k | q | |||
| voiced | b | ɡʷ <gv> | d | ɟ <j> | ɡ <g> | ɢ <r> | |||
| fricative | voiceless | f | χʷ <xv> | s | ʃ <š> | ʂ <ṣ> | ɕ <ś> | χ <x> | |
| voiced | ʁʷ <řv> | ʁ <ř> | |||||||
| affricate | aspirated | t͡sʰ <z'> | t͡ʃʰ <ž'> | ʈ͡ʂʰ <ẓ'> | t͡ɕʰ <ź'> | ||||
| voiceless | t͡s <z> | t͡ʃ <ž> | ʈ͡ʂ <ẓ> | t͡ɕ <ź> | |||||
| approximant | ɥ <y> | w | l | ɭ <ḷ> | j | ɰ <w> | h | ||
Vowels
| vowels | front | back | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| unr. | rnd. | unr. | rnd. | |
| high | i | y | ɯ <w> | u |
| mid | e <ẹ> | ɘ <ạ> | o <ọ> | |
| low | ɛ <e> | a | ɔ <o> | |
Tones
The exact way that tonogenesis happened in Pinecone is a mystery, however the leading hypothesis seems to be that, just like with everything else strange about the language, "they just kind of did that".
| tones | ipa | rom |
|---|---|---|
| mid | a˧ | a |
| high | a˥ | ā |
| rising | a˩˥ | á |
| falling | a˥˩ | à |
| falling rising | a˥˩˧ | ǎ |
| falling rising | a˩˥˧ | â |
Phonotactics
Just like its sibling language, ve dkq mvli w, all Pinecone words are monosyllabic. The syllables come in the form (C)(G)V(L), where C is any consonant except for approximants, G is any glide, V is any vowel and L is any lateral or non labial nasal. The glide G may not be present if the vowel V is a high vowel. The lack of an onset consonant is realized as a glottal stop [ʔ]. Any tone can be applied to any syllable.
Grammar
Parts of speech
There are two parts of speech in pinecone: nouns and verbs, with adjectives simply being verbs that mean "to be [adjective]". It is worth noting that all of the verbs are intransitive.
Syntax
Pinecone has a staggeringly low amount of syntactic structures, at only 2 or 3 depending on how you count. Pinecones syntax usually uses terms from the language itself, similarly to Lojban.
jw̌l
In pinecone, all words come in pairs called jw̌l. A jw̌l is always composed of one noun and one verb. One of these jw̌l simply conveys a clause with an intransitive verb and an argument, with the noun-verb arrangement meaning the noun is doing the verb and the verb-noun arrangement meaning the verb is being done to the noun (one can alternatively analyze pinecone as having only transitive verbs with SVO word order where every jw̌l just has a null subject/object, however this analysis is disregarded by most). With this one can translate some simple sentences, such as the following:
xvȳń p'ǎ
horse explode
'the horse explodes (something)'
sạ̄n ž'ǎ
eat fish
'the fish is being eaten'
Note how the first jw̌l doesnt mean that the horse is the one that is being exploded but rather is causing something else to be exploded, to talk about a horse being the one who is exploded one would say p'ǎ xvȳń. It is also worth noting that despite the fact that the English backtranslations have the nouns marked as definite singular and the verbs marked as present tense, the Pinecone jw̌l dont express any of that. An equally valid backtranslation of the first jw̌l would be 'horses will have exploded (something)'.
qạŋ
When two jw̌l are put next to eachother, the meaning becomes 'jw̌l 1 causes jw̌l 2'. This operation of putting two jw̌l together is called a qạŋ. For example, sạ̄n ž'ǎ xvȳń p'ǎ would mean that the consumption of a fish has led a horse to explode something. This is also how you can express transitive verbs, xvȳń p'ǎ p'ǎ ž'ǎ would mean that the exploding of something has led to a fish being exploded, which one can usually assume to mean 'a horse exploded a fish'. There is no limit as to how long a chain of qạŋ (called a mà) can get, for example something like tí zuạ zuạ šal p'ǎ tí 'you get get pipebomb explode you' is valid, though intermediate steps usually only get added if they add new information or in some cases when jw̌l seem completely unrelated it might be helpful to add some extra context, so theres usually no need to explain how you exploding by receiving the pipebomb happened step by step from the beginning of the universe (foreshadowing :3). Each mà is one 'sentence' in pinecone, as they are separated by periods and intonation breaks.
xvyọ̄
xvyọ̄ happen at the beginning of each new mà. The first jw̌l in every mà that isnt the first in a kv'ēŋ̇ (a bunch of mà (a paragraph)) must have been said in a previous sentence. That first jw̌l is where the new mà begins from. This does also mean that you cant talk about things that happened before the event described in the first jw̌l of a kv'ēŋ̇, so its not uncommon to see Pinecone kv'ēŋ̇ starting with something like `universe exist`. This maneuver is how you turn a linear sentence into a sentence tree. You can also end the mà on a previously mentioned jw̌l, which would mean that said jw̌l has multiple events leading up to it (this is called a fẹ́n). because of this, its impossible to have multiple identical jw̌l on different parts of a sentence tree. This doesnt mean that you cant separately talk about when you exploded a cat and when you exploded a horse, that would just be ù p'ǎ p'ǎ píŋ. ù p'ǎ p'ǎ xvȳń., but it does mean that a kv'ēŋ̇ like zō ê zō lỳḷ lỳḷ fuô. zō ê fuô ê lỳḷ fuô. 'sun exist sun melt melt house. sun exist house exist melt house.' doesnt refer to 2 separate instances of a house melting, just 2 events leading up to one melting of a house (or multiple houses being melted, plurals arent marked, point is that the two events leading up to the house melting have the same effect on the melting of the house). xvyọ̄ sometimes arent counted as a separate syntactic structure, due to how they occour across sentence boundaries.
Parallel universes
If every event in a kv'ēŋ̇ has to be traced back to a common root cause, how does one talk about events that didnt happen? Or events where one is unsure if they occoured? Or events that cant be accurately given a truth value? Since the truth split off from the false some time before our universe began, we can make the first jw̌l in a kv'ēŋ̇ k'ẁŋ rwạ̄ŋ̇ 'universe fake' and from there we can xvyọ̄ one event per truth value. The phrase k'ẁŋ rwạ̄ŋ̇ being at the beginning of nearly every Pinecone utterance also led it to be loaned into ve dkq mvli w as a greeting. There are 4 main truth values: true (for plain indicative statements), false (for negated statements), unknown (for statements that are one or the other but you dont know which but it is possible to find out which exactly, for example the truth value of the Collatz Conjecture) and undefinable (for statements where you have no way of knowing the truth value, often used for hypothetical events). We write out our sentence tree as normal from the truth xvyọ̄, but whenever there is a statement with a different truth value one simply adds a qạŋ from whatever event you chose to represent said truth value at the beginning to the event which is meant to have said truth value. Thus, 'the sun melted me and it did not melt my friend' would be k'ẁŋ rwạ̄ŋ̇ k'ẁŋ ê zō ê zō lỳḷ lỳḷ ù. zō lỳḷ lỳḷ geń. k'ẁŋ rwạ̄ŋ̇ t'wēń kò lỳḷ geń. 'universe fake universe exist sun exist sun melt melt me. sun melt melt friend. universe fake cave_johnson to_be_super_mario melt friend' (The jw̌l t'wēń kò 'Cave Johnson is Super Mario' can be replaced with any objectively incorrect jw̌l). This isnt counted as a separate syntactic structure as it uses ones that were previously mentioned, however it has to be separately due to it being one of the less intuitive aspects of how the language is used.
Word list
| běŋ̇ | bɛɴ˥˩˧ | clan |
| bẹ̌ŋ̇ | beɴ˥˩˧ | understanding |
| buó | bwɔ˩˥ | idiot |
| c'ue | cʰwɛ˧ | hand |
| cuěń | cwɛɲ˥˩˧ | naqoo people |
| c'ùl | cʰul˥˩ | the jw̌l in which this word is located in |
| cūŋ̇ | cuɴ˥ | vaporization |
| cyaŋ̇ | cɥäɴ˧ | purpose |
| ệḷ | eɭ˩˥˧ | Daniw |
| fẹ́n | fen˩˥ | pinecone branch in |
| fộ | fo˩˥˧ | reason |
| fuô | fwɔ˩˥˧ | house |
| fy̌ | fy˥˩˧ | ray |
| fŷḷ | fyɭ˩˥˧ | vision |
| gạ́ń | gɘɲ˩˥ | engineer |
| geń | gɛɲ˧ | friend |
| gvǎ | ɡʷa˥˩˧ | cooking |
| gvạ́ŋ | gʷɘŋ˩˥ | skye |
| gvu | ɡʷu˧ | disappearence |
| hạ̀ | hɘ˥˩ | collatz conjecture |
| iạ̌ | jɘ˥˩˧ | [The Sun] |
| jw̌l | ɟɯl˥˩˧ | pinecone noun/verb pair |
| k'āŋ | kʰäŋ˥ | robot |
| kún | kun˩˥ | sanskrit |
| kv'ēŋ̇ | kʷɛɴ˥ | pinecone paragraph |
| kvyā | kʷɥa˥ | rain |
| k'ẁŋ | kʰɯŋ˥˩ | universe |
| lȳ | ly˥ | king |
| mà | ma˥˩ | pinecone chain of implication phrases |
| māŋ | mäŋ˥ | lower class |
| mwḷ | mɯɭ˧ | lemonade |
| nīŋ | niŋ˥ | tounge |
| ŋvwêŋ̇ | ŋʷɰɛɴ˩˥˧ | humanity |
| ŋvyē | ŋʷɥɛ˥ | Ħixin |
| o | ʔɔ˧ | thing |
| ọ́ | o˩˥ | now |
| ọ̀ | o˥˩ | here |
| píŋ | piŋ˩˥ | cat |
| qạŋ | qɘŋ˧ | pinecone implication phrase |
| q'w | qʰɯ˧ | pot |
| qw̄ | qɯ˥ | emergency |
| q'yán | qʰɥän˩˥ | year |
| rẹ̀ | ɢe˥˩ | nightmare golden freddy |
| rên | ʁɛn˩˥˧ | rene descartes |
| řǐn | ʁin˥˩˧ | lemon |
| šw | ʃɯ˧ | life |
| ṣw̄ | ʂɯ˥ | the hatred towards people who lauch fireworks on new years eve upon seeing how terrified your pet is at them |
| ṣwạ | ʂɰɘ˧ | ultrafrench |
| syạ̀ | sɥɘ˥˩ | gourd soup |
| śué | ɕwɛ˩˥ | food |
| śun | ɕun˧ | carrying (event of carrying) |
| tí | ti˩˥ | 2p |
| t'iǒŋ̇ | tʰjɔɴ˥˩˧ | language |
| t'wēń | tʰɰɛɲ˥ | cave johnson |
| ù | ʔu˥˩ | 1p |
| ū | u˥ | pinecone the language the languaeg pinecone |
| uêl | wɛl˩˥˧ | meeting |
| wạ̀ŋ | ɰɘŋ˥˩ | person |
| wl | ʔɯl˧ | this |
| xvw̌ | χʷɯ˥˩˧ | 1465 ratare spaceship |
| xvȳń | χʷyɲ˥ | horse |
| xvyọ̄ | χʷɥo˥ | pinecone branch off |
| yạ̌n | ɥɘn˥˩˧ | location |
| yẹ̌ | ɥe˥˩˧ | the ngorld |
| yẹ́ŋ | ɥeŋ˩˥ | day |
| ž'ǎ | tʃʰä˥˩˧ | fish |
| ẓ'ệŋ | ʈʂʰeŋ˩˥˧ | manager |
| zō | tsɔ˥ | sun |
| žon | tʃɔn˧ | man |
| ź'í | tɕʰi˩˥ | particle |
| ź'ué | tɕʰwɛ˩˥ | earth |
| źyạ̄ń | tɕɥɘɲ˥ | fire |
| ạ | ʔɘ˧ | be at (general purpose locative adposition) |
| âń | aɲ˩˥˧ | one |
| ca | ca˧ | scream |
| c'ǎl | cʰal˥˩˧ | unknown |
| cuḷ | cuɭ˧ | know |
| cwọ | cɰo˧ | win |
| cý | cy˩˥ | love |
| dòŋ | dɔŋ˥˩ | golden |
| dwo | dɰɔ˧ | rule |
| ê | ʔɛ˩˥˧ | exist |
| éń | ɛɲ˩˥ | carry |
| eŋ̇ | ʔɛɴ˧ | meet |
| î | ʔi˩˥˧ | do |
| iǎ | ja˥˩˧ | many |
| ial | jäl˧ | bad |
| íḷ | ʔiɭ˩˥ | happy |
| kà | kä˥˩ | understand |
| kò | kɔ˥˩ | to be super mario |
| kv'ẹń | kʷʰeɲ˧ | float |
| kv'ọ̀ḷ | kʷʰoɭ˥˩ | combustile |
| lw | lɯ˧ | this |
| lỳḷ | lyɭ˥˩ | melt |
| nuēŋ̇ | nwɛɴ˥ | rue |
| ńw̄ŋ | ɲɯŋ˥ | vaporize |
| ŋvīḷ | ŋʷiɭ˥ | evil |
| p'ǎ | pʰa˥˩˧ | explode |
| p'iẹ̄ | pʰje˥ | burn |
| piọ́ | pjo˩˥ | dumb |
| pyè | pɥɛ˥˩ | invent |
| q'ûn | qʰun˩˥˧ | approach |
| řè | ʁɛ˥˩ | cook |
| řvw̌ | ʁʷɯ˥˩˧ | cold |
| rwạ̄ŋ̇ | ɢɰɘɴ˥ | false |
| šal | ʃal˧ | pipebomb |
| sạ̄n | sɘn˥ | eat |
| sậŋ | sɘŋ˩˥˧ | speak |
| siěŋ | sjɛŋ˥˩˧ | go around in a circle |
| syậ | sɥɘ˩˥˧ | inquire |
| śyạ | ɕɥɘ˧ | take |
| t'â | tʰa˩˥˧ | hate |
| t'ạ̌ | tʰɘ˥˩˧ | use |
| û | ʔu˩˥˧ | have |
| uạ̀n | wɘn˥˩ | make |
| uō | wɔ˥ | disappear |
| ẁn | ʔɯn˥˩ | give |
| wọ̀ŋ | ɰoŋ˥˩ | obsess |
| xî | χi˩˥˧ | see |
| xọ̀ | χo˥˩ | mad |
| ž'ạ̄ŋ | tʃʰɘŋ˥ | learn |
| zẹ̌ | tse˥˩˧ | desire |
| ẓi | ʈʂi˧ | turn |
| ž'u | tʃʰu˧ | think |
| zuạ | tswɘ˧ | get |
| z'ŷŋ̇ | tsʰyɴ˩˥˧ | manage |