Agisian language

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Agisian
agiṣio
Pronunciation[ɔːˈkɛɪ̯θˤʏf]
Native toAgisia
EthnicityAgisian people
Native speakers
X
Ashno-Verethian
  • Verethian
    • Western Verethian
      • Agisian
Early forms
Old High Hashdezi
  • Middle Agisian
Verethian common alphabet
Official status
Official language in
 Agisia
Recognised minority
language in

Agisian (agiṣio, tr. Agiṣiv [ɔːˈkɛɪ̯θˤʏf]) is a Western Verethian language. It descended from Old High Hashdezi, which was the official language of the Hashdezi Empire. Its closest relative is Hashdezi, with which it shares many similarities. Until the independence of Agisia in 4598 CY, it was only recognised by the Hashdezi government as a dialect of the Hashdezi language as opposed to a distinct language. To this day, most Agisian speakers also have some degree of proficiency in Hashdezi.

History

Old High Hashdezi

Middle Agisian

Modern Agisian

Geographic distribution

Etzavaz

Agisian diaspora

Varieties

Current status and importance

Phonology

Consonants

Consonant phonemes in Agisian
Labial Alveolar/
Dental
Retroflex Palatal Velar/
Uvular
Glottal
plain pharyn.
Nasal m n
Stop Lenis p t c k
Fortis
Fricative voiceless f s θˤ ʂ ç χ h
voiced v ðˤ ʐ ʁ
Affricate (t͡ɬ)
Approximant l

Consonants in Agisian undergo several allophonic shifts which results in the orthography being somewhat fossilised. The dorsal consonants /c χ/ palatalise to [ç] around the front vowels æ e i y. The lateral /l/ becomes an affricate [t͡ɬ] after vowels, unless it is followed by another vowel. Old clusters and geminate consonants also underwent sound changes: Middle Agisian /n:/ has shifted to a pre-stopped nasal cluster [tn̥], while stop clusters have dropped the second consonant, e.g. sædb [sat], cigd [çʏk]. The dental fricatives /ð θ/ shifted to [v h] and are even dropped in word-final position.

Vowels

Vowels in Agisian follow a long-short distinction depending on the openness of the syllable. If the vowel has no consonant coda, the syllable is considered open and the vowel will be long, unless word-finally in polysyllabic words. Otherwise, the syllable will be considered closed and the vowel will be short. Long and short vowels have undergone sound shifts and thus drifted from each other, making long-short pairs harder to associate.

Vowel phonemes in Agisian
  Short Long
a [ɛ] xas
chas
[ɔ:] jatyr
jatyr
ä [a] gäsneg
gæsneg
[e:] fäty
fæty
i [ʏ] oid
vid
[ɛɪ] igäś
igæś
u kuś
kuś
[œʏ] oudaj
vudaj
e [ɪ] ðej
ðej
[i:] dheby
eby
y deñyr
dennyr
[ø:] ċyoig
yvig
o [ʊ] xoo
chov
[u:] ho
ho
ö [ʌ] ðäzgöo
ðæzgøv
[y:] jöregy
jøregy

Writing system

Morphology

Verbs

Much like most other Verethian languages, Agisian's verbs feature polypersonal agreement in transitive verbs, while intransitive verbs make no person distinction. For transitive verbs, the subject is marked as a prefix while the object is marked as a suffix.

Personal affixes in transitive verbs
Person Subject Object
1SG unmarked -id
2SG i- -is
3SG zi- -ej
1PL ga- -ek
2PL je- -ug
-yg
3PL jæ- -ez

The past tense is marked with -(y)f- infixed between the verb stem and object suffix, e.g. tevis "[I] see [you]" → tevyfis "[I] saw [you]". For intransitive verbs, it is marked with -afy, e.g. pet "know" → petafy "knew".

Nouns

Agisian nouns decline according to four cases: nominative, accusative, dative and genitive. As opposed to the other Verethian languages, Agisian does not distinguish definite and indefinite nouns, therefore making the animacy distinction irrelevant. The case suffixes are the following:

  • Nominative is unmarked.
  • Accusative is marked with -v, with an epenthetic y inserted after consonants.
  • Dative is marked with -c, with an epenthetic y inserted after consonants.
  • Genitive is marked with -k, with an epenthetic y inserted after stops.

The plural is formed by adding -nny before the case suffixes: -nny, -nnyv, -nnyc, -nnk.

Pronouns