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{{Short description|An article about a conlang}}
{{Short description|An article about a conlang}}
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=== [[Grammar|Other grammatical rules]] ===
=== [[Grammar|Other grammatical rules]] ===


* Nouns are always capitalized; adjectives, verbs, abverbs, prepositions, etc. are not unless they're the first word in the sentence.
* Nouns are always capitalized; adjectives, verbs, abverbs, prepositions, etc. are not unless they're the first word in the sentence.
* Nouns may be connected with adjectives, abverbs, prepositions, etc. together into one word, and verbs may be connected with adjectives, abverbs, prepositions, etc. together into one word. However, nouns cannot be connected with verbs.
* Nouns may be connected with adjectives, abverbs, prepositions, etc. together into one word, and verbs may be connected with adjectives, abverbs, prepositions, etc. together into one word. However, nouns cannot be connected with verbs.
* Some letters can be used interchangeably in order to make pronounciation better. This is also the reason the genitive and possessive cases can be used interchangeably. See the table below to know which letters can be used interchangeably.
* Some letters can be used interchangeably in order to make pronounciation better. This is also the reason the genitive and possessive cases can be used interchangeably. See the table below to know which letters can be used interchangeably.
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|Ω 𝝮
|Ω 𝝮
|}
|}
*


* The grammatical person may be omitted if the verb is conjugated.<!-- This is a conlang I'm developing, first article. If I need to change something to meet the quality standarts, please notify me and I'll gladly update this article. -->
* The grammatical person may be omitted if the verb is conjugated.<!-- This is a conlang I'm developing, first article. If I need to change something to meet the quality standarts, please notify me and I'll gladly update this article. -->
<!-- I am also actively working on this page, that means I'll keep updating it as much as I can. -->


=== <!-- I am also actively working on this page, that means I'll keep updating it as much as I can. --> ===

== Important info about this article ==
{{AFC submission|d|nn|u=MyNamesIs 55|ns=118|decliner=KylieTastic|declinets=20240228225254|ts=20240228224928}}
== References ==
== References ==
{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}

Revision as of 13:27, 29 February 2024

An example poster showcasing Shared Alliantic. Translates to "The free Rheuarmian sun rise with us".

Shared Alliantic is a conlang created by MyNameIs 55. Its main purposes are to be easy, fast, and descriptive. The latest version 8.6 of Shared Alliantic was finished on 27/02/2024.

This conlang combines elements of other languages, such as English, German, Ukrainian, Russian, Spanish, Turkish, Japanese and others, in order to achieve its aforementioned goal. In addition, some other special features have been added for the same reason.

Alphabet

Shared Alliantic 8.6 consists of 12 vowels, 26 consonants and 12 punctuation marks. All of them could be written with Unicode, but a special font has been created. The symbols for this conlang have been taken from different scripts, notably Greek, Cyrrilic and Latin, as well as Armenian, Shavian, Runic, Malayalam and Deseret. This choice of the letters is explained by the fact that they are easy to write, with most of them requiring only one stroke.

Shared Alliantic 8.6 alphabet.

It is divided into 3 sections to look clean.

The letters are specifically in this order to be melodic when saying it.

Vowels

IPA[1] /a/ /ɔ/ /u/ /ɛ/ /i/ /ɪ/ /ja/ /jo/ /ju/ /je/ /ji/ /aj/, /ej/
Unicode 𐒷 𐓟 O o У y Ҽ e I ı Ω 𝝮 𐑙 ᛟ Ɂ ɂ Ю ю Ɣ ɣ Ҁ ҁ Ь ь
Name (EN) Alar Olor Ulur Eler Ilir Ylyr Jalar Jolor Julur Jeler Jilir Ajrej

Consonants

IPA[1] /j/ /g/, /gh/ /m/ /ɭ/ /h/ /n/ /b/ /v/ /f/ /p/ /k/ /z/ /s/
Unicode 𐑓 𐑨 Г q М м Λ ʌ X x И и 𐑑 𐑪 V v Ψ ψ, F f Շ 𐑗 𐓒 𐑳 Z z C c
Name (EN) Jej Geg Mem Lel Heh Nen Beb Vev Fef Pep Kek Zez Ses
IPA[1] /t/ /d/ /dz/ /ɖʐ/ /ts/ /tɕ/ /ʂ/ /ʐ/ /θ/ /r/ /ks/ /tɬ/
Unicode T т D ẟ 𐒳 λ 🝘 џ Ϟ 𐑰 Ч ч ധ ω ߖ 𐑱 ф ϕ P ρ Ϙ ϙ 𐐖 𐐾, Վ վ
Name (EN) Tet Ded Dzedz Dzhedzh Tsets Chech Shesh Szheszh Theth Rer Kseks 𐐖e𐐾

Punctuation marks

IPA[1] /◌̥ / /◌ʲ/ /◌:/ /ʔ/ -
Unicode ◌‾ ◌_ ◌: , |・ ・|
Action Voiceless Soft Long Stop Dot Comma ! ? ... ; :

Grammar

SA 8.6 has four grammatical genders. They describe the subject or object and determine the endings of verbs. Note that only one of the genders is used for objects; others are used for subjects.

List of grammatical genders
Question 3rd p.s. English Usage Example word (English)
ᒪ 𐓒𝝮ㆍ Ωи They (singular) Subjects whose gender is unknown or kept ambiguous. М𐓟н𝝮 (Person)
ᒪ 𐓒oㆍ He Living male subjects. Λеρo (Male teacher)
ᒪ 𐓒𐓟ㆍ 𐒷и She Living female subjects. М𐓟и𐓟 (Woman)
ᒪ 𐓒eㆍ Ҽи It Inanimate objects with no gender. Tρe (Tree)

SA 8.6 contains 8 persons, including singular and plural formal persons. The formal versions can be used for the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd persons of the same plurality.

List of grammatical persons
Person SA English Verb ending
1st p.s. 𐑙 / Мı / Ɂ I -y (-ю)
2nd p.s. T𝝮 (Official), Dy (Met), Ю (Friends) You -𝝮 (-𐑨), -o (-ɂ), -𐓟 (-ᛟ)
3rd p.s. Ωи,Oи, 𐒷и, Ҽи They, He, She, It -𝝮𐑨, -o𐑨, -𐓟𐑨, -e𐑨
Formal s. ф𝝮 (Very formal), V𝝮 (formal), T𝝮 (less formal) You -𝝮ρ, -ɂρ, -ᛟρ, -ɣρ
1st p.p. Ωc𝝮, Oco, 𐒷c𐓟, Ҽce We -𝝮c𝝮, -oco, -𐓟c𐓟, -ece
2nd p.p. Ωρ𝝮, Oρo, 𐒷ρ𐓟, Ҽρe You -𝝮ρ, -oρ, -𐓟ρ, -eρ
3rd p.p. Ωиc, Oис, 𐒷иc, Ҽиc They -𝝮и, -oи, -𐓟и, -eи
Formal p. ф𝝮c (Very formal), V𝝮с (formal), T𝝮c (less formal) You -𝝮ρc, -ɂρc, -ᛟρc, -ɣρc

Affixes in Shared Alliantic are used to mark tense, case, nouns, adjectives, verbs, and more.

Prefix list
Prefix Usage Example English
Ve- Future tense. Veʌеρyㆍ I will teach.
Ɣe- Present tense. Ɣʌеρyㆍ I am teaching
Гe- Past tense. Гeʌеρyㆍ I taught.
Ψe- Hypothetical. Ψeʌеρyㆍ I would teach. / I would've taught.
М𝝮- Adjective is more.

Noun/verb is sweeter.

М𝝮qyẟıㆍ

М𝝮ʌеρ𝝮ㆍ М𝝮ʌеρ𝝮ᒧ

Better.

A liked teacher. Please, teach!

И𝝮- Adjective is most.

Noun/verb is sweetest.

И𝝮qyẟıㆍ

И𝝮ʌеρ𝝮ㆍ И𝝮ʌеρ𝝮ᒧ

Best.

A beloved teacher. I'm begging you, teach!

𐑑𝝮- Adjective is less.

Noun/verb is ruderruder.

𐑑𝝮qyẟıㆍ

𐑑𝝮ʌеρ𝝮ㆍ 𐑑𝝮ʌеρ𝝮ᒧ

Less.

A disliked teacher. Please, do not teach!

D𝝮- Adjective is least.

Noun/verb is rudest.

D𝝮qyẟıㆍ

D𝝮ʌеρ𝝮ㆍ D𝝮ʌеρ𝝮ᒧ

Least.

A hated teacher. I'm begging you, do not teach!

фe- - - -
𐐖e- / Վe- - - -
Suffix list
Suffix Usage Example English
-𝝮 Nouns. Changes to -𐓟 -o -e according to gender. Mıтoㆍ Male meeting attendee.
-yи Nouns. Abstract proccess or action. Mıтyиㆍ Meeting .
-𝝮м Nouns. Acts as "the". Mıт𝝮мㆍ The meeting.
Adjectives. Changes to -𐑳ı for easier pronounciation. Mıтıㆍ Meeting-related.
-𝝮и Verbs. Changes according to person. Mıт𝝮иㆍ To participate in a meeting .
-𝝮ϕ Verbs. Acts as "-ing". Mıт𝝮и𝝮ϕㆍ Participating in a meeting.
-𝝮𐐾 / -𝝮վ - - -

SA 8.6 has 10 grammatical cases. They can be constructed by adding the suffix of the question word to the noun or subject.

Grammatical cases in Shared Alliantic are used as many times as there are nouns or subjects for each case. The priority of the cases is as shown in the table below; if a noun or subject can possibly have multiple cases, this order determines which case to use. For easier pronunciation, an -o-, -𐓟-, -e-, -𝝮- can be added before the prefix. Genitive and Possesive cases can be used interchangeably.

When a noun or subject has a case suffix, the -𝝮м suffix must not be added.

List of gramamtical cases
Name Question English Sentence English
Nominative ᒪ 𐓒ıㆍ X 𐓒𐓟т𝝮 A cat.
Ergative ᒪ𐓒ı𐑪ㆍ X does ... 𐓒𐓟тıиı𐑪 ɣıc Ψyẟeㆍ The cat is eating food.
Instrumentative ᒪ𐓒ıψㆍ Using X 𞥗 ɣqρy 𐓒𐓟тıψ I am playing with a cat.
Genitive ᒪ𐓒ıcㆍ Of X Мıc Dρyq𝝮ㆍ A friend of mine.
Possessive ᒪ𐓒ızㆍ Whose Мь𐑳𝝮z 𐓒𐓟т𝝮ㆍ Mike’s cat.
Dative ᒪ 𐓒ıмㆍ Whom Oи qeẟ𐓟vo eи Mıм He gave it to me.
Accusative ᒪ𐓒ıẟㆍ Doing X 𞥗 ɣρıẟy 𐑑y𐑳ı𐑪 I am reading a book.
Translative ᒪ𐓒ı𐑗ㆍ Into X V𐓟ẟe ɣ Ьce𐑗 Water turns into ice.
Abbessive ᒪ𐓒ıʌㆍ Without X Toɣ 𐓟𐑪yρı Dyıʌ It’s boring without you...
Vocative ᒪ𐓒ıρㆍ Calling X М𐓟м𐓟ρ Mom!

X stands for the subject or object.

There are 9 grammatical tenses in Shared Alliantic, as there is no perfect continuous. The table below explains how they're formed.

Past Present Future
Simple Гe-... ... Ve-...
Continuous Гe-...-𝝮ϕ Ɣe-... Ve-...-𝝮ϕ
Perfect Ɣ qe-... Ɣ ... Ɣ ve-...

"..." stands for "Verb". That verb must also be conjugated. "Ɣ" in the perfect tense stands for "to be" or in this case "had" and "have".

Here are example sentences in those tenses using "юcy" or "I use":

Past Present Future English: Past Present Future
Simple Гeюcy Юcy Veюcy I used I use I will use
Continuous Гeюcyϕ Ɣ:юcy Veюcyϕ I was using I am using I will be using
Perfect Ɣ qeюcy Ɣ юcy Ɣ veюcy I had used I have used I will have been using
  • Nouns are always capitalized; adjectives, verbs, abverbs, prepositions, etc. are not unless they're the first word in the sentence.
  • Nouns may be connected with adjectives, abverbs, prepositions, etc. together into one word, and verbs may be connected with adjectives, abverbs, prepositions, etc. together into one word. However, nouns cannot be connected with verbs.
  • Some letters can be used interchangeably in order to make pronounciation better. This is also the reason the genitive and possessive cases can be used interchangeably. See the table below to know which letters can be used interchangeably.
C c Z z
T т D ẟ
I ı Ω 𝝮
  • The grammatical person may be omitted if the verb is conjugated.

Important info about this article

References

  1. ^ a b c d "IPA Chart". www.ipachart.com. Retrieved 2024-02-28.