It's me again :)
From: | Yann Kiraly <yann_kiraly@...> |
Date: | Monday, November 8, 2004, 13:35 |
After realising that my quest for Minilang Perfection had taken a wrong
turn, I developed a far more minimal and easy to learn approach:
Phonology:
tkslmnj
iua
Gram:
Word blocks are separated by conjunctions, that make the text more
readable. Words are derived from consonant stems that are combined with
vowel paterns, of which we have:
CaCi
CaCa
CaCu
CiCi
CiCa
CiCu
CuCi
CuCa
CuCu
Variants can be formed through combinations. Every word has two forms,
called, logically, form 1 and form 2. Form two is produced by putting the
vowel(s) in front of the consonant(s) instead of behind. The second form
has 3 meanings, depending on the binding type, explained further down, of
the word:
o Binding:
Genitive (turns it into a -o binding)
-o Binding:
Comparative (turns it into a -o- binding)
-o- or variable binding:
Non-present
Binding is the conection a word can make to other words. It works like
this:
o binding words can not bind themselves to anything. -o binding words bind
themselves only to the last preceeding o binding word.
-o- bind themselves to the last preceeding and the nearest following o
binding word. Variable bindng words are words that can be connected to a
following word but don't have to.
To make this language computer parsable and quick to read and speak, words
that are bound together turn into one word.In speech, they are pronounced
as one long word, with the stress on every second word's first syllable.
Between these blocks of words there are isolated conjunctions, that
explain the relation between two word blocks. They are:
ki,si,ti, ma, na. and, because, by, despite, neutral respectavely. Any
comments?