ELDER FAERYN — Base Dialect Introduction to the Proto-Borean Language
Linguistic and Dialectical Overview — History and Development
Glossogeny and Linguistic Prehistory
“The Eldertongue”, as it was known by speakers of its descendant languages, also known informally as Old Borean (OB) and more technically in modern linguistic studies as the Proto-Borean Language (PBL), was created ex nihilo, albeit very gradually, by a supposedly thereunto mute Anatolian people who at the earliest stages of linguistic development used a speech shockingly similar both to the natural manner in which the Corvus caurinus ~ Corvus brachyrhynchos (Crow) gradient/hybrid of the Pacific Northwestern United States communicates, and to the “uh-oh” theory of glossogeny among Homo sapiens: One type of vocalization might have meant “danger, predator!”, and another, “danger, rival!”, still another, “come hither, there’s food!”, and so on. This people was (like, and possibly inspired by, Crows) able to refine this process into an extremely complex system of vocal communication that enabled them to function cooperatively toward communal goals such as defensive and offensive measures and maneuvers, including complicated ambushes, and food-finding endeavors. The people believed this to have been divinely guided as one of the Primordial Charismata, and claimed to have had the ability to translate between local Crow populations and their own groups (which due to an astounding level of proto-syntactic similarity was likely possible, as many species such as the tool-manufacturing New Caledonian Crow have demonstrated feats of remarkably Human-like intelligence); this may have been the original source of common myths of future societies concerning divine inspiration for their own languages (cf. “Language of the Gods”, “Divine Language”) and anecdotal or legendary accounts of persons occasionally learning the language(s) of birds (cf. “Language of the Birds”). Hence was only an infinitesimal step to using certain consonants and vowels in association with gestures, tones, and possibly facial expressions to convey basic psychological concepts such as firmness, being, highness, etc., and stringing these together into simple monosyllabic words for things and ideas defined vaguely by their constituent “morphonemes”. As the language’s speakers, the Proto-Borean people, migrated westward along the European coast of the Mediterranean Sea, the language gained increasingly sophisticated syntax and grammar to govern how these words should fit together to form whole sentences. At first this process was simple: A speaker might have said the word for “me”, followed by the word for “go”, followed by the word for “up”, followed by the word for “hill”, producing “me go up hill”. This was an extremely primitive, very poorly analytical or isolating language that often used root-inflection of lexemes with a CVC ~ CCVCC morphology (where C = a consonant, an “h” digraph, or one of a limited number of consonant clusters treated as a single phone, and V= a monophthong or diphthong) to distinguish between passivity, intransivity, transivity, causality, time, aspect, frequency, and a host of other characteristics, and relied upon word order, tones, and possibly also gestures to indicate the difference between, for example, a passive, present-tense verb and an intransitive, past-tense verb. However, as this primitive and fragile syntax was evolving during a period of migration, the people who spoke the language found that other nearby bands and tribes were using different word orders, and using the same word forms for different lexical categories. While these “sub-dialects” were still somewhat inter-intelligible, these differing lineages of syntactic alignment based in the same morphoneme inventory and resultant overlapping of morphologies managed to cause sufficient confusion both between and within the various proto-dialects, that the need arose to mark words with affixes to clearly define each word’s grammatical and lexical role. Suffixes were added to mark verbs and nouns, and both the consonants and vowels of these suffixes could be changed according to the language’s inherent [morphoneme = vague meaning] morphosyntax, allowing for the creation of clearly marked verb tenses and noun classes that could be easily understood by the sounds used to express them; noun cases also began to appear, both grammatical and prepositional, and verb moods could be expressed by adding prefixes to verbs, as could a cornucopia of different verb aspects. Even affixes themselves, such as lexical category markers, could be inflected ad nauseum. Soon there were hundreds of thousands of (possible) word forms per each lexeme’s inflecto-derivational paradigm. Out of this sudden explosion of inflection and derivation emerged what would become known as the Elder Dialect — that is, the dialect spoken as the Proto-Borean Language was first beginning to evolve beyond its absolute proto-language state into a more thoroughly developed speech. Thus, by the time the nomadic Proto-Boreans had reached their new homeland in the historical area of Etruria, the speech of the Proto-Borean people had come into its own as a full-fledged and complex tongue: a concise, moderately agglutinative, highly fusional, oligosynthetic language — the relative proto-language of the Borean Language Family.
Early Dialectical Developments
In its first stages as a true language, Old Borean was a highly fusional language with a limited number of morphemes, as each morpheme corresponded only to a single phoneme (hence the afore-used term, “morphoneme”) such as a consonant, digraph, or vowel, and used these morphonemes to define the lexemes and inflections that comprised them. Each morphoneme had a range of conceptually related meanings, so that an “arc-morpheme” (either a lexical root or affix) constructed of them might only be vaguely defined by its morphology, therefore both arc-morphemes and whole lemmas (canonical word forms with the most “neutral” inflections of a lexeme’s inflecto-derivational paradigm) were associated with much more specific concepts than one might have guessed by analyzing their constituent morphonemes. As time went on, many lexemes became so associated with the concepts they described, that they were used with little regard to the literal meaning outlined by the morphemes they comprised, allowing certain words to be used metaphorically, figuratively, or even just plain incorrectly, and subsequently undergo semantic drift, leading to a handful of cases in which the semantic meaning of a word seemed unjustified, or at least little justified, by its morphology (especially in the case of interjections), though this was the exception rather than the rule, and would only begin to occur on a truly noteworthy scale in subsequent dialects. This also allowed new words to be coined from old lexemes or specific word forms that would not necessarily have made sense according to the definitions implied by their morphologies, and could only be understood in the context of the older lexemes they were derived from. Additionally, a large number of roots were created via onomatopoeia (especially in the case of animal species names) and had no literal meaning discernible from the roots’ morphologies, though such roots were affixed and inflected just as any arc-morpheme root in the Old Borean language. All of these forces working together somewhat obscured the oligosynthetic origins of much of the language’s lexicon.
ELDER FAERYN — Base Dialect Introduction to the Proto-Borean Language
Linguistic and Dialectical Overview — Diagnostic Summaries
The Elder Dialect of Old Borean most commonly employed a subject-verb-object word order for independent clauses in the transitive, verb-object-subject for dependent clauses in the transitive, verb-subject-indirect object in the intransitive, subject-verb-object in the reflexive, object-subject-verb in the passive, and subject-object-verb in the causative. (This does not apply to stative verbs in the adjectival and adverbial moods, which were prefixed to whatever they modified.) The Elder Dialect most often used either a manner-place-time or place-manner-time order, with other arrangements being slightly less common but perfectly acceptable. Despite having a relatively free word order, the exact meaning of many words depended heavily upon the words around them: For example, a verb’s subject marked in the nominative case could be either the agent or experiencer of the verb if it was intransitive, the agent only if the verb was monotransitive or causative, or the patient if the verb was passive; if the verb was ditransitive or reflexive, however, the subject (agent) would be marked for the ergative case. Similarly complex rules governed the direct and indirect object of sentences. While context was certainly important, Old Borean was foremost a highly inflectional language rather than an analytic one. In informal speech and writing, Old Borean was a pro-drop language; in formal speech and writing, pronouns were obligatory. Morphology: Root arc-morphemes used a C, CVC, CCVC, CCVCC, or CVCC order. These were whole words early in Old Borean’s prehistory. V equals verb class. Verbs used a (C1)V1+[root]+V2C2V3C3(C4) order. C1 equals mood; if absent, implies indicative mood. V1 equals aspect. V2 equals voice and tense. C2, V3, C3, and C4 equal tense. Adjectives and Adverbs used a re-arranged verb order. Nouns used a (C1)(V1)+[root]+V2C2(C3)(C4)V3(’C5(C6)V4) order unless derived. C1 equals mood. V1 equals aspect. V2 equals number and class. C2 and C3 equal central declension. C4 equals determiner. V3 equals gender and number. C5(C6) and V4 equal peripheral declension. Roots could sometimes be doubled or used as prefixes: [root]+V+[root], where V equals intensity and class. Radicals generally used a simple (V)(C)CV(C) order. Allomorphy is almost nonexistent.
The Old Borean language had the most complex system of inflection and derivation of any known language. Lexical category markers transformed verb roots into either nouns or full verbs. Nouns (including pronouns) could be inflected for noun class, number, person, gender, grammatical case, prepositional case, and also determiner. Verbs could be inflected for voice, tense, grammatical mood, intensity, verb class, multiple categories of aspect, and conjugation in gender, number, and person with their primary arguments. Verb inflections were so extensive, in fact, that the language had no need for either auxiliary verbs or copulas. Adjectives and adverbs were a sub-class of verb, created with the adjectival or adverbial mood in combination with the stative voice (for non-participles). This arrangement was highly conductive to the formation of adjectival and adverbial participles, created by changing the adjective or adverb’s voice. All verb forms could be easily transformed into verbal nouns, such as gerunds and infinitives, merely by adding the verbal gender morphoneme to the end of the verb. Nouns could be transformed into verbal nouns by using the verbal gender as well. Both nouns and adjectives could be given a stative gender, roughly equating to the English suffixes -ity, -itous, -ness, -ism, -ist, -ry, etc. There were also radicals — usually monosyllabic or disyllabic conjunctions, verb mood supplements, and interjections.
• Phonology is at the heart of the Proto-Borean tongue’s innermost workings. Each of the language’s limited number of perceived phonemes corresponded to its own set of vague yet interrelated psychological concepts; these morphonemes were then strung together into verb-based word roots and inflections. The result is a language that was not only highly fusional, but also oligosynthetic with surprising brevity. This was made possible by what one might call active fusion: A morpheme would take only one or two of all its interrelated meanings depending upon its relative position within a root or affix. The language’s “morphoneme oligarchy” (phoneme inventory) included 30 monophthongs and diphthongs, 13 consonantal monographs, and 13 consonantal digraphs, for a grand total of just 56 morphonemes (not including consonant clusters perceived as single phones) providing all the various shades and nuances of a morphosyntactic and semantic complexity unparalleled by any other known language. Because of this complexity, there was little if any room for allophony among word forms, though the language had evolved so by virtue of its own internal features that morphonemes of phonetic similarity were also relatively close in semantic similarity, meaning that occasional mispronunciations probably wouldn’t have caused an unreasonable or intolerable amount of confusion.
• While the Old Borean language expressed grammatical moods morphologically, it probably also used some degree of intonation, as does English — but unlike English, it would have used intonation to supplement morphological distinctions whose meanings may not have otherwise been obvious. It is also possible that intonation was used to supplement the language’s massive inventory of vowels and diphthongs to prevent any overlapping that may have confused listeners, though even if this were true it is unlikely that it was practiced consistently enough to qualify the Eldertongue as a tonal language. However, it is relatively safe to assume that the Proto-Borean tongue was an intonation language.
Pro-Dropping and Diglossia
Within the Elder Dialect existed a certain amount of diglossia, which could be loosely divided into an acrolect and a basilect. While non-expletive pronouns were obligatory in the acrolect, expletives such as the pleonastic pronoun (an example in English: “it”, as in “it is good to work”, also known as the “preparatory it”) were typically found only in the basilect. Within the acrolect, these forms were avoided (for example in English: “to work is good”) although, strangely, they were not considered incorrect (per the English example: “it” refers to the to-infinitive, “to work”; since infinitives are considered verbal nouns, “to work” can logically be the referent of “it” — in other words, the “it” isn’t truly an expletive). The pleonastic pro-adverb (an example from English: “there”, as in “there are many people here”) was likewise avoided in the acrolect, and had its own rationale in the basilect (in this case, a special ambiguous form of “there” was used, so that the word for “here” could be its referent). So while the basilect dropped many non-expletive pronouns, the acrolect avoided the so-called “expletive”, “pleonastic” pro-forms.
ELDER FAERYN — Base Dialect As transliterated from the Elder-Runes alphabet
Verb Inflections — Voices and Tenses (Exemplar: eredenele, root: red)
Past Passive
Non-Future Passive
Present Passive
Non-Past Passive
Future Passive
Aorist Atelic
eredanale
Aorist Atelic
eredanile
Aorist Atelic
eredanele
Aorist Atelic
eredanule
Aorist Atelic
eredanole
Aorist Telic
eredaanale
Aorist Telic
eredaanile
Aorist Telic
eredaanele
Aorist Telic
eredaanule
Aorist Telic
eredaanole
Progressive
eredaenale
Progressive
eredaenile
Progressive
eredaenele
Progressive
eredaenule
Progressive
eredaenole
Perfect Atelic
eredainale
Perfect Atelic
eredainile
Perfect Atelic
eredainele
Perfect Atelic
eredainule
Perfect Atelic
eredainole
Perfect Telic
eredaonale
Perfect Telic
eredaonile
Perfect Telic
eredaonele
Perfect Telic
eredaonule
Perfect Telic
eredaonole
Perf. Progress
eredaunale
Perf. Progress
eredaunile
Perf. Progress
eredaunele
Perf. Progress
eredaunule
Perf. Progress
eredaunole
Past Intransitive
Non-Future Intransitive
Present Intransitive
Non-Past Intransitive
Future Intransitive
Aorist Atelic
eredenale
Aorist Atelic
eredenile
Aorist Atelic
eredenele
Aorist Atelic
eredenule
Aorist Atelic
eredenole
Aorist Telic
eredeanale
Aorist Telic
eredeanile
Aorist Telic
eredeanele
Aorist Telic
eredeanule
Aorist Telic
eredeanole
Progressive
eredeenale
Progressive
eredeenile
Progressive
eredeenele
Progressive
eredeenule
Progressive
eredeenole
Perfect Atelic
eredeinale
Perfect Atelic
eredeinile
Perfect Atelic
eredeinele
Perfect Atelic
eredeinule
Perfect Atelic
eredeinole
Perfect Telic
eredeonale
Perfect Telic
eredeonile
Perfect Telic
eredeonele
Perfect Telic
eredeonule
Perfect Telic
eredeonole
Perf. Progress
eredeunale
Perf. Progress
eredeunile
Perf. Progress
eredeunele
Perf. Progress
eredeunule
Perf. Progress
eredeunole
Past Stative
Non-Future Stative
Present Stative
Non-Past Stative
Future Stative
Aorist Atelic
eredinale
Aorist Atelic
eredinile
Aorist Atelic
eredinele
Aorist Atelic
eredinule
Aorist Atelic
eredinole
Aorist Telic
eredianale
Aorist Telic
eredianile
Aorist Telic
eredianele
Aorist Telic
eredianule
Aorist Telic
eredianole
Progressive
eredienale
Progressive
eredienile
Progressive
eredienele
Progressive
eredienule
Progressive
eredienole
Perfect Atelic
erediinale
Perfect Atelic
erediinile
Perfect Atelic
erediinele
Perfect Atelic
erediinule
Perfect Atelic
erediinole
Perfect Telic
eredionale
Perfect Telic
eredionile
Perfect Telic
eredionele
Perfect Telic
eredionule
Perfect Telic
eredionole
Perf. Progress
erediunale
Perf. Progress
erediunile
Perf. Progress
erediunele
Perf. Progress
erediunule
Perf. Progress
erediunole
Past Causative
Non-Future Causative
Present Causative
Non-Past Causative
Future Causative
Aorist Atelic
eredonale
Aorist Atelic
eredonile
Aorist Atelic
eredonele
Aorist Atelic
eredonule
Aorist Atelic
eredonole
Aorist Telic
eredoanale
Aorist Telic
eredoanile
Aorist Telic
eredoanele
Aorist Telic
eredoanule
Aorist Telic
eredoanole
Progressive
eredoenale
Progressive
eredoenile
Progressive
eredoenele
Progressive
eredoenule
Progressive
eredoenole
Perfect Atelic
eredoinale
Perfect Atelic
eredoinile
Perfect Atelic
eredoinele
Perfect Atelic
eredoinule
Perfect Atelic
eredoinole
Perfect Telic
eredoonale
Perfect Telic
eredoonile
Perfect Telic
eredoonele
Perfect Telic
eredoonule
Perfect Telic
eredoonole
Perf. Progress
eredounale
Perf. Progress
eredounile
Perf. Progress
eredounele
Perf. Progress
eredounule
Perf. Progress
eredounole
Past Transitive
Non-Future Transitive
Present Transitive
Non-Past Transitive
Future Transitive
Aorist Atelic
eredunale
Aorist Atelic
eredunile
Aorist Atelic
eredunele
Aorist Atelic
eredunule
Aorist Atelic
eredunole
Aorist Telic
ereduanale
Aorist Telic
ereduanile
Aorist Telic
ereduanele
Aorist Telic
ereduanule
Aorist Telic
ereduanole
Progressive
ereduenale
Progressive
ereduenile
Progressive
ereduenele
Progressive
ereduenule
Progressive
ereduenole
Perfect Atelic
ereduinale
Perfect Atelic
ereduinile
Perfect Atelic
ereduinele
Perfect Atelic
ereduinule
Perfect Atelic
ereduinole
Perfect Telic
ereduonale
Perfect Telic
ereduonile
Perfect Telic
ereduonele
Perfect Telic
ereduonule
Perfect Telic
ereduonole
Perf. Progress
ereduunale
Perf. Progress
ereduunile
Perf. Progress
ereduunele
Perf. Progress
ereduunule
Perf. Progress
ereduunole
Verb Inflections — Voices and Tenses (Exemplar: eredenele, root: red)
• Note: The transitive verb forms, monotransitive and ditransitive, are morphologically indistinguishable. Reflexive verbs are treated as passive.
• Additional Note: The Aorist Atelic, Aorist Telic, progressive, perfective atelic, perfective telic, and perfect progressive verb aspects should be considered tense functions rather than true aspects, as the “aspect” in the morphology of the Proto-Borean Language had its own, distinct morphological place at the beginning of the verb (unless said verb was also inflected for mood, in which case the aspect followed the mood inflection).
ELDER FAERYN — Base Dialect As transliterated from the Elder-Runes alphabet
Verb Inflections — Conjugation (Exemplar: eredelen, root: red)
First Person Nominative
Second Person Nominative
Third Person Nominative
Feminine
Singular
eredemela
Feminine
Singular
eredetela
Feminine
Singular
eredenela
Feminine
Dual
eredemealaa
Feminine
Dual
eredetealaa
Feminine
Dual
eredenealaa
Feminine
Trial
eredemeelae
Feminine
Trial
eredeteelae
Feminine
Trial
eredeneelae
Feminine
Paucal
eredemeilai
Feminine
Paucal
eredeteilai
Feminine
Paucal
eredeneilai
Feminine
Plural
eredemeulau
Feminine
Plural
eredeteulau
Feminine
Plural
eredeneulau
Feminine
Mass
eredemeolao
Feminine
Mass
eredeteolao
Feminine
Mass
eredeneolao
Masculine
Singular
eredemelu
Masculine
Singular
eredetelu
Masculine
Singular
eredenelu
Masculine
Dual
eredemealua
Masculine
Dual
eredetealua
Masculine
Dual
eredenealua
Masculine
Trial
eredemeelue
Masculine
Trial
eredeteelue
Masculine
Trial
eredeneelue
Masculine
Paucal
eredemeilui
Masculine
Paucal
eredeteilui
Masculine
Paucal
eredeneilui
Masculine
Plural
eredemeuluu
Masculine
Plural
eredeteuluu
Masculine
Plural
eredeneuluu
Masculine
Mass
eredemeoluo
Masculine
Mass
eredeteoluo
Masculine
Mass
eredeneoluo
Neuter
Singular
eredemele
Neuter
Singular
eredetele
Neuter
Singular
eredenele
Neuter
Dual
eredemealea
Neuter
Dual
eredetealea
Neuter
Dual
eredenealea
Neuter
Trial
eredemeelee
Neuter
Trial
eredeteelee
Neuter
Trial
eredeneelee
Neuter
Paucal
eredemeilei
Neuter
Paucal
eredeteilei
Neuter
Paucal
eredeneilei
Neuter
Plural
eredemeuleu
Neuter
Plural
eredeteuleu
Neuter
Plural
eredeneuleu
Neuter
Mass
eredemeoleo
Neuter
Mass
eredeteoleo
Neuter
Mass
eredeneoleo
First Person Objective
Second Person Objective
Third Person Objective
Feminine
Singular
eredemena
Feminine
Singular
eredetena
Feminine
Singular
eredenena
Feminine
Dual
eredemeanaa
Feminine
Dual
eredeteataa
Feminine
Dual
eredeneanaa
Feminine
Trial
eredemeenae
Feminine
Trial
eredeteetae
Feminine
Trial
eredeneenae
Feminine
Paucal
eredemeinai
Feminine
Paucal
eredeteitai
Feminine
Paucal
eredeneinai
Feminine
Plural
eredemeunau
Feminine
Plural
eredeteutau
Feminine
Plural
eredeneunau
Feminine
Mass
eredemeonao
Feminine
Mass
eredeteotao
Feminine
Mass
eredeneonao
Masculine
Singular
eredemenu
Masculine
Singular
eredetetu
Masculine
Singular
eredenenu
Masculine
Dual
eredemeanua
Masculine
Dual
eredeteatua
Masculine
Dual
eredeneanua
Masculine
Trial
eredemeenue
Masculine
Trial
eredeteetue
Masculine
Trial
eredeneenue
Masculine
Paucal
eredemeinui
Masculine
Paucal
eredeteitui
Masculine
Paucal
eredeneinui
Masculine
Plural
eredemeunuu
Masculine
Plural
eredeteutuu
Masculine
Plural
eredeneunuu
Masculine
Mass
eredemeonuo
Masculine
Mass
eredeteotuo
Masculine
Mass
eredeneonuo
Neuter
Singular
eredemene
Neuter
Singular
eredetete
Neuter
Singular
eredenene
Neuter
Dual
eredemeanea
Neuter
Dual
eredeteatea
Neuter
Dual
eredeneanea
Neuter
Trial
eredemeenee
Neuter
Trial
eredeteetee
Neuter
Trial
eredeneenee
Neuter
Paucal
eredemeinei
Neuter
Paucal
eredeteitei
Neuter
Paucal
eredeneinei
Neuter
Plural
eredemeuneu
Neuter
Plural
eredeteuteu
Neuter
Plural
eredeneuneu
Neuter
Mass
eredemeoneo
Neuter
Mass
eredeteoteo
Neuter
Mass
eredeneoneo
ELDER FAERYN — Base Dialect As transliterated from the Elder-Runes alphabet
Verb Inflections — Moods (Exemplar: eredenele, root: red)
Descriptive Moods
Relative Moods
Volitive Moods
Sensory Evidental Moods
Indicative
eredenele
Sarcastic
gnyeredenele
Desiderative
mberedenele
Aural
dyeredenele
Declarative
beredenele
Facetious
myeredenele
Optative
mveredenele
Extra-sensory
psyeredenele
Energetic
heredenele
Inferential
mdyeredenele
Imprecative
mveredenele
Generic
mtyeredenele
Generic
neredenele
Felicitous
ndyeredenele
Commissive
mderedenele
Olfactory
msyeredenele
Narrative
nderedenele
Infelicitous
nyeredenele
Hortative
tsyeredenele
Savory
myeredenele
Capacitive
ceredenele
Admirative
mjeredenele
Cohortative
tsyeredenele
Tactile
mpyeredenele
Negative
ñeredenele
Confirmative
gneredenele
Jussive
tsyeredenele
Visual
vsyeredenele
Conditional Moods
Summative Moods
Directive Moods
Inquisitive Moods
Subjunctive
weredenele
Dubitative
gñeredenele
Permissive
syeredenele
Interrogative
kweredenele
Hypothetical
feredenele
Probabilitative
lderedenele
Prohibitive
ñesyeredenele
Precative
kwe-weredenele
Presumptive
lyeredenele
Obligative
lteredenele
Suggestive
seredenele
Deliberative
kweseredenele
Tentative
wyeredenele
Reputative
kyeredenele
Injunctive
nseredenele
Conjunctive
weredenele
Potential
cweredenele
Deductive
ltyeredenele
Necessitative
nseredenele
Derivative Moods
Eventive
ldweredenele
Approximative
yeredenele
Imperative
tyeredenele
Adjectival
redele
Probable
ldyeredenele
Assumptive
ldyeredenele
Implorative
mbyeredenele
Adverbial
redenele
? Mood Supplements — Radicals
The Elder Dialect’s verb morphology made it impossible to express more than one mood with a single verb. Therefore, it was impossible to express, for example, a “negative dubitative” (“I doubt it doesn’t”) mood using the Elder Dialect’s standard rules of verb morphology. However, there existed in the Elder Dialect a lexical provision for just such a contingency: the mood radical. Syntactically, mood radicals were the Old Borean language’s closest equivalent to auxiliary verbs and copulas. (Usage of these is exampled above.) Using mood radicals for whole phrases, sentences, or clauses, while never inflecting a verb for mood to begin with, was very common in casual writing and conversation, however, and became the standard in some of the more analytical dialects that later developed. Even in the Elder Dialect, a few moods could not be expressed without the use of mood radicals (most such are not listed here, as they are created merely by combination of the moods above; examples of these that are listed above include the prohibitive and deliberative moods). For more information, see the section on Radicals.
OLD BOREAN — Elder Dialect As transliterated from the Elder-Runes alphabet
Verb Inflections — Adjectives and Adverbs (Exemplar: nelene, root: n)
? Adjectival agreement with Nouns (Exemplar: nelne, root: n) — Nouns presented in the singular, dual, trial, paucal, plural, and mass.
? Adverbial agreement with Verbs (Exemplar: enelenen root: n) and Adjectives (Exemplar: nelne, root: n)
Adjectives and Nouns
Adjectives and Nouns
Assuming Noun is in the Nominative Case
Assuming Noun is in the Objective Case
Noun
Adjective
Noun
Adjective
? Presented in both the feminine and masculine gender. ? Presented as referring to this example’s noun. ? Presented in both the feminine and masculine gender. ? Presented as referring to this example’s noun.
Feminine
Masculine
Feminine
Masculine
Feminine
Masculine
Feminine
Masculine
nella
nellu
nali(n)’-
nuli(n)’-
nenna
nennu
nani(n)’-
nuni(n)’-
neallaa
neallua
naali(n)’-
nuali(n)’-
neannaa
neannua
naani(n)’-
nuani(n)’-
neellae
neellue
naeli(n)’-
nueli(n)’-
neennae
neennue
naeni(n)’-
nueni(n)’-
neillai
neillui
naili(n)’-
nuili(n)’-
neinnai
neinnui
naini(n)’-
nuini(n)’-
neullau
neulluu
nauli(n)’-
nuuli(n)’-
neunnau
neunnuu
nauni(n)’-
nuuni(n)’-
neollao
neolluo
naoli(n)’-
nuoli(n)’-
neonnao
neonnuo
naoni(n)’-
nuoni(n)’-
Adverbs and Verbs
Adverbs and Verbs
Assuming Verb agrees with Noun in the Nominative Case
Assuming Verb agrees with Noun in the Objective Case
Verb
Adverb
Verb
Adverb
? Presented as conjugating with this example’s noun.
? Presented as referring to this example’s verb.
? Presented as conjugating with this example’s noun.
? Presented as referring to this example’s verb.
Feminine
Masculine
Feminine
Masculine
Feminine
Masculine
Feminine
Masculine
enenela
enenelu
naleni(n)’-
nuleni(n)’-
enenena
enenenu
naleni(n)’-
nuleni(n)’-
enenealaa
enenealua
naaleni(n)’-
nualeni(n)’-
eneneanaa
eneneanua
naaleni(n)’-
nualeni(n)’-
eneneelae
eneneelue
naeleni(n)’-
nueleni(n)’-
eneneenae
eneneenue
naeleni(n)’-
nueleni(n)’-
eneneilai
eneneilui
naileni(n)’-
nuileni(n)’-
eneneinai
eneneinui
naileni(n)’-
nuileni(n)’-
eneneulau
eneneuluu
nauleni(n)’-
nuuleni(n)’-
eneleunau
eneneunuu
nauleni(n)’-
nuuleni(n)’-
eneneolao
eneneoluo
naoleni(n)’-
nuoleni(n)’-
eneneonao
eneneonuo
naoleni(n)’-
nuoleni(n)’-
Adverbs and Adjectives
Adverbs and Adjectives
Assuming Adjective agrees with Noun in the Nominative Case
Assuming Adjective agrees with Noun in the Objective Case
Adjective
Adverbs Adjectives Adverb
? Presented as referring to this example’s noun. ? Presented as referring to this example’s adjective. ? Presented as referring to this example’s noun. ? Presented as referring to this example’s adjective.
Feminine
Masculine
Feminine
Masculine
Feminine
Masculine
Feminine
Masculine
nali(n)’-
nuli(n)’-
naleni(n)’-
nuleni(n)’-
nani(n)’-
nuni(n)’-
naleni(n)’-
nuleni(n)’-
naali(n)’-
nuali(n)’-
naaleni(n)’-
nualeni(n)’-
naani(n)’-
nuani(n)’-
naaleni(n)’-
nualeni(n)’-
naeli(n)’-
nueli(n)’-
naeleni(n)’-
nueleni(n)’-
naeni(n)’-
nueni(n)’-
naeleni(n)’-
nueleni(n)’-
naili(n)’-
nuili(n)’-
naileni(n)’-
nuileni(n)’-
naini(n)’-
nuini(n)’-
naileni(n)’-
nuileni(n)’-
nauli(n)’-
nuuli(n)’-
nauleni(n)’-
nuuleni(n)’-
nauni(n)’-
nuuni(n)’-
nauleni(n)’-
nuuleni(n)’-
naoli(n)’-
nuoli(n)’-
naoleni(n)’-
nuoleni(n)’-
naoni(n)’-
nuoni(n)’-
naoleni(n)’-
nuoleni(n)’-
OLD BOREAN — Elder Dialect As transliterated from the Elder-Runes alphabet
Note: the passive participle is nearly equivalent to English’s past participle, and implies the Aorist Telic aspect in the passive voice, present tense (English’s so-called “past participle” rarely if ever indicates the past tense or a non-passive voice, and almost always implies the telic aspect). The intransitive, transitive, and causative participles are equivalent to English’s present participle, and can imply either the imperfective or continuous aspect (realized in this circumstance together as the progressive aspect; similar again to English, which rarely distinguishes between the imperfective and the continuous aspects except with the addition of a qualifier like “always” to an -ing verb) in the intransitive, transitive, and causative voice respectively.
OLD BOREAN — Elder Dialect As transliterated from the Elder-Runes alphabet
Noun Inflections — Noun Classes and Numbers (Exemplar: ilne)
Passive Class Intransitive Class Descriptive Class Causative Class Transitive Class
One of One
alne
One of One
elne
One of One
ilne
One of One
olne
One of One
ulne
Two of One
alnea
Two of One
elnea
Two of One
ilnea
Two of One
olnea
Two of One
ulnea
Three of One
alnee
Three of One
elnee
Three of One
ilnee
Three of One
olnee
Three of One
ulnee
Some of One
alnei
Some of One
elnei
Some of One
ilnei
Some of One
olnei
Some of One
ulnei
Many of One
alneu
Many of One
elneu
Many of One
ilneu
Many of One
olneu
Many of One
ulneu
All of One
alneo
All of One
elneo
All of One
ilneo
All of One
olneo
All of One
ulneo
One of Two
aalne
One of Two
ealne
One of Two
ialne
One of Two
oalne
One of Two
ualne
Two of Two
aalnea
Two of Two
ealnea
Two of Two
ialnea
Two of Two
oalnea
Two of Two
ualnea
Three of Two
aalnee
Three of Two
ealnee
Three of Two
ialnee
Three of Two
oalnee
Three of Two
ualnee
Some of Two
aalnei
Some of Two
ealnei
Some of Two
ialnei
Some of Two
oalnei
Some of Two
ualnei
Many of Two
aalneu
Many of Two
ealneu
Many of Two
ialneu
Many of Two
oalneu
Many of Two
ualneu
All of Two
aalneo
All of Two
ealneo
All of Two
ialneo
All of Two
oalneo
All of Two
ualneo
One of Three
aelne
One of Three
eelne
One of Three
ielne
One of Three
oelne
One of Three
uelne
Two of Three
aelnea
Two of Three
eelnea
Two of Three
ielnea
Two of Three
oelnea
Two of Three
uelnea
Three of Three
aelnee
Three of Three
eelnee
Three of Three
ielnee
Three of Three
oelnee
Three of Three
uelnee
Some of Three
aelnei
Some of Three
eelnei
Some of Three
ielnei
Some of Three
oelnei
Some of Three
uelnei
Many of Three
aelneu
Many of Three
eelneu
Many of Three
ielneu
Many of Three
oelneu
Many of Three
uelneu
All of Three
aelneo
All of Three
eelneo
All of Three
ielneo
All of Three
oelneo
All of Three
uelneo
One of Some
ailne
One of Some
eilne
One of Some
iilne
One of Some
oilne
One of Some
uilne
Two of Some
ailnea
Two of Some
eilnea
Two of Some
iilnea
Two of Some
oilnea
Two of Some
uilnea
Three of Some
ailnee
Three of Some
eilnee
Three of Some
iilnee
Three of Some
oilnee
Three of Some
uilnee
Some of Some
ailnei
Some of Some
eilnei
Some of Some
iilnei
Some of Some
oilnei
Some of Some
uilnei
Many of Some
ailneu
Many of Some
eilneu
Many of Some
iilneu
Many of Some
oilneu
Many of Some
uilneu
All of Some
ailneo
All of Some
eilneo
All of Some
iilneo
All of Some
oilneo
All of Some
uilneo
One of Many
aulne
One of Many
eulne
One of Many
iulne
One of Many
oulne
One of Many
uulne
Two of Many
aulnea
Two of Many
eulnea
Two of Many
iulnea
Two of Many
oulnea
Two of Many
uulnea
Three of Many
aulnee
Three of Many
eulnee
Three of Many
iulnee
Three of Many
oulnee
Three of Many
uulnee
Some of Many
aulnei
Some of Many
eulnei
Some of Many
iulnei
Some of Many
oulnei
Some of Many
uulnei
Many of Many
aulneu
Many of Many
eulneu
Many of Many
iulneu
Many of Many
oulneu
Many of Many
uulneu
All of Many
aulneo
All of Many
eulneo
All of Many
iulneo
All of Many
oulneo
All of Many
uulneo
One of All
aolne
One of All
eolne
One of All
iolne
One of All
oolne
One of All
uolne
Two of All
aolnea
Two of All
eolnea
Two of All
iolnea
Two of All
oolnea
Two of All
uolnea
Three of All
aolnee
Three of All
eolnee
Three of All
iolnee
Three of All
oolnee
Three of All
uolnee
Some of All
aolnei
Some of All
eolnei
Some of All
iolnei
Some of All
oolnei
Some of All
uolnei
Many of All
aolneu
Many of All
eolneu
Many of All
iolneu
Many of All
oolneu
Many of All
uolneu
All of All
aolneo
All of All
eolneo
All of All
iolneo
All of All
oolneo
All of All
uolneo
OLD BOREAN — Elder Dialect As transliterated from the Elder-Runes alphabet
Noun Inflections — Persons and Genders (Exemplar: ilne)
0th Person Pronoun 1st Person Pronoun 2nd Person Pronoun 3rd Person Pronoun 4th Person Pronoun
Feminine
ilna
Feminine
milna
Feminine
tilna
Feminine
nilna
Feminine
kilna
Neuter
ilne
Neuter
milne
Neuter
tilne
Neuter
nilne
Neuter
kilne
Stative
ilni
Stative
milni
Stative
tilni
Stative
nilni
Stative
kilni
Masculine
ilnu
Masculine
milnu
Masculine
tilnu
Masculine
nilnu
Masculine
kilnu
Verbal
ilno
Verbal
milno
Verbal
tilno
Verbal
nilno
Verbal
kilno
Note: The 0th Person was used for the pleonastic pronoun, inanimate objects, concepts and actions, and hypothetical entities. It functioned much like the English ambiguous pronoun, “one”, as well as the “hypothetical you”. The 1st, 2nd, and 3rd Persons were used only for known, specific individuals or groups, whether human-like entities (wights) or other sentient beings (birds, beasts, serpents, etc.). The plural 3rd person neutral pronoun could never be used to refer to a singular entity, as with the English language’s “singular they” (which is also considered incorrect), nor did speakers have to resort to the more cumbersome “he or she”; instead, the singular neuter form, meaning “it”, was used, and was not considered even remotely offensive (as it is English). The 4th person was used only for known, specific creatures regarded as non-sentient, seemingly sentient but unnatural constructs (automatons), and sentient beings treated as part of a larger whole (cf. “kindred”). In some later dialects, the 4th person would also come to be used derogatorily for persons of a herd- or group-oriented mentality, for example persons perceived as having no sense of individuality or capacity for independent thought (cf. “sheople”, “mindless drones”). The verbal gender existed solely for converting verbs or nouns into verbal nouns such as infinitives and gerunds. The stative gender could be added to either stative verbs (specifically in the creation of adjectives and adverbs) or nouns.
Noun Inflections — Declensions (Exemplar: ilne)
Central Declension
Grammatical Cases
Noun Case Syntactic Role Word Form
Canonical
Lemma
ilne
Nominative
Subject
ille
Ergative
Agent (Ditran/Rflx)
ilde
Objective
Direct Object
inne
Accusative
Indirect Object
inte (innetu)
Vocative
Referent
iye
Peripheral Declensions
Prepositional Cases
(Using Direct Object as template)
Noun Case Meaning Word Form
Purposive
For reason of it
inneba
Causal
Because of it
innebao
Surpassive
(Going) by it
innevai
Invocative
In the name of it
innevia
Instructive
By means of it
innevie
Prolative
By way of it
innevio
Instrumental
Using it
innevuu
Benefactive
For it
innebu
Possessive
Of it
inneka
Dedative
Of / relating to it
innekaa
Respective
About it / of it
innekai
Topical
In the matter of it
innekao
Post-Temporal
After it
innekraa
Temporal
On / at the time of it
innekri
Pro-Temporal
Before it / ere it
innekrua
Exterior
Outside of it
innekta
Excessive
To the outside of it
innektu
Affective
To (the mind of) it
inneku
Genitive
Of / from it
inneda
Excessive
From being it
inneða
Adessive
Atop / on top of it
inneha
Superessive
On / upon it
innehi
Allative
Onto it
innehu
Prosecutive
Through way of it
innemveu
Comitative
Together with it
innewe
Associative
With it
innewi
Inessive
In / inside it
innemni
Illative
Into it
innemtu
Diapedetive
Through it
innemzu
Abessive
Without it
inneña
Omissive
Not / neither / nor it
inneñia
Sociative
Together with it
innenwa
Ubiquitous
All around it
innepao
Proximal
Near / at it
innepi
Distributive
Per / For each it
innepwi
Desiderative
For it
inneprui
Posterior
Behind it / after it
innepsa
Sublative
To it (destination)
inneptu
Terminative
Unto it (place)
inneptu
Pursuant
Upon / near it
innepu
Anterior
In front of / before it
innepui
Terminative
Until it (time)
innertu
Elative
Out of it
innesaa
Delative
Issued from it
innesda
Ablative
Off of it
innesa
Translative
To being it
innežu
Lative
To / into it
inneto
Equative
As it
innetsa
Co-Temporal
As / at the time of it
innetsi
Essive
As long as it
innetsu
Dative
To / unto it
innetu (inte)
Note: Whether these peripheral declensions are a matter of using actual noun cases, or clitics, affixes, or postpositions is highly debatable. The case for any of these three could be made, and one finds these inflections would be treated as any of said three in later languages; in one large branch of the Borean language family, these became prepositions; in another, they became prefixes; in another still, these merged partially into the central declensions and became suffixes more characteristic of inflected languages such as those in the Uralic language family.
OLD BOREAN — Elder Dialect As transliterated from the Elder-Runes alphabet
Noun Inflections — Pro-Forms; Table of Correlatives (presented in the canonical, nominative, and objective declensions) Note: While the proximal demonstrative determiner corresponds to the English word, “this”, and the distal demonstrative determiner corresponds to the English word, “that”, the generic demonstrative determiner corresponds not to an English determiner, but to the English definite article “the”. The equivalent to the English indefinite article, “a / an” is implied when a singular word is not inflected for a demonstrative, a quantifier, or for grammatical number.
Canonical
Relative / (Interrogative)
Demonstrative
Quantifier
Proximal
Generic
Distal
Quantitative
Indefinite
Universal
Negative
Determiner
-(k)w-
-p-
-y-
-f-
-c-
-py-
-j-
-ñ-
Pronoun
Impersonal
iln(k)we
ilnpe
ilnye
ilnfe
ilnce
ilnpye
ilnje
ilnñe
Sentient
niln(k)we
nilnpe
nilnye
nilnfe
nilnce
nilnpye
nilnje
nilnñe
Inanimate
iln(k)we
ilnpe
ilnye
ilnfe
ilnce
ilnpye
ilnje
ilnñe
Automaton
kiln(k)we
kilnpe
kilnye
kilnfe
kilnce
kilnpye
kilnje
kilnñe
Pro-Adverb
Location
piln(k)we
pilnpe
pilnye
pilnfe
pilnce
pilnpye
pilnje
pilnñe
Source
piln(k)weda
pilnpeda
pilnyeda
pilnfeda
pilnceda
pilnpyeda
pilnjeda
pilnñeda
Goal
piln(k)weptu
pilnpeptu
pilnyeptu
pilnfeptu
pilnceptu
pilnpyeptu
pilnjeptu
pilnñeptu
Time
tsiln(k)we
tsilnpe
tsilnye
tsilnfe
tsilnce
tsilnpye
tsilnje
tsilnñe
Manner
iln(k)wevi
ilnpevi
ilnyevi
ilnfevi
ilncevi
ilnpyevi
ilnjevi
ilnñevi
Reason
iln(k)weba
ilnpeba
ilnyeba
ilnfeba
ilnceba
ilnpyeba
ilnjeba
ilnñeba
Nominative
Relative / (Interrogative)
Demonstrative
Quantifier
Proximal
Generic
Distal
Quantitative
Indefinite
Universal
Negative
Determiner
-(k)w-
-p-
-y-
-f-
-c-
-py-
-j-
-ñ-
Pronoun
Impersonal
il(k)we
ilpe
ilye
ilfe
ilce
ilpye
ilje
ilñe
Sentient
nil(k)we
nilpe
nilye
nilfe
nilce
nilpye
nilje
nilñe
Inanimate
il(k)we
ilpe
ilye
ilfe
ilce
ilpye
ilje
ilñe
Automaton
kil(k)we
kilpe
kilye
kilfe
kilce
kilpye
kilje
kilñe
Pro-Adverb
Location
pil(k)we
pilpe
pilye
pilfe
pilce
pilpye
pilje
pilñe
Source
pil(k)weda
pilpeda
pilyeda
pilfeda
pilceda
pilpyeda
piljeda
pilñeda
Goal
pil(k)weptu
pilpeptu
pilyeptu
pilfeptu
pilceptu
pilpyeptu
piljeptu
pilñeptu
Time
tsil(k)we
tsilpe
tsilye
tsilfe
tsilce
tsilpye
tsilje
tsilñe
Manner
il(k)wevi
ilpevi
ilyevi
ilfevi
ilcevi
ilpyevi
iljevi
ilñevi
Reason
il(k)weba
ilpeba
ilyeba
ilfeba
ilceba
ilpyeba
iljeba
ilñeba
Objective
Relative / (Interrogative)
Demonstrative
Quantifier
Proximal
Generic
Distal
Quantitative
Indefinite
Universal
Negative
Determiner
-(k)mh-
-p-
-y-
-f-
-c-
-py-
-j-
-ñ-
Pronoun
Impersonal
in(k)we
inpe
inye
inphe
ince
inpye
inje
inñe
Sentient
nin(k)we
ninpe
ninye
ninphe
nince
ninpye
ninje
ninñe
Inanimate
in(k)we
inpe
inye
inphe
ince
inpye
inje
inñe
Automaton
kin(k)we
kinpe
kinye
kinphe
kince
kinpye
kinje
kilnñe
Pro-Adverb
Location
pin(k)we
pinpe
pinye
pinphe
pince
pinpye
pinje
pinñe
Source
pin(k)weda
pinpeda
pinyeda
pinpheda
pinceda
pinpyeda
pinjeda
pinñeda
Goal
pin(k)weptu
pinpeptu
pinyeptu
pinpheptu
pinceptu
pinpyeptu
pinjeptu
pinñeptu
Time
tsin(k)we
tsinpe
tsinye
tsinphe
tsince
tsinpye
tsinje
tsinñe
Manner
in(k)wevi
inpevi
inyevi
inphevi
incevi
inpyevi
injevi
inñebvi
Reason
in(k)weba
inpeba
inyeba
inpheba
inceba
inpyeba
injeba
inñeba
OLD BOREAN — Elder Dialect As transliterated from the Elder-Runes alphabet
Noun Inflections — Noun Classes and Derivation (Exemplar: radalne)
Passive Class Intransitive Class
Derivation Meaning Word Form Derivation Meaning Word Form
No Derivation
“Enlightened”
radalne
No Derivation
“Light; bright light”
radelne
Augmentative Derivation
“Great enlightened; Moon”
radambilne
Augmentative Derivation
“Great light; Sun”
radembilne
Diminutive Derivation
“Little enlightened”
radakilne
Diminutive Derivation
“Candlelight; starlight”
radekilne
Pejorative Derivation
“Fucking enlightened”
radalgilne
Pejorative Derivation
“Fucking light”
radelgilne
Negative Derivation
“Un-enlightened”
radañilne
Negative Derivation
“Non-lighter”
radeñilne
Descriptive Class
Causative Class
Derivation Meaning Word Form Derivation Meaning Word Form
Transitive Class • Note: The passive class was used extensively in the formation of taxonyms; as such, it sometimes performed the function of the diminutive derivation itself; the difference between the two was in some cases subtle enough that creation of new word forms properly requiring one were formed incorrectly using the other.
• Additional Note: All of the meanings given are to be used as nouns only; they are not adjectives, but could be converted into adjectives if desired. Also note that some of the meanings given are simply possible metaphorical derivations, and would be better (more literally) represented by other Old Borean words.
Note: The vowel of the Verb Mood Supplement radicals described above should be changed to match the monophthong or diphthong of the aspect of the verb being supplemented, except where the need to express an additional aspect is present and semantically (and logically) possible. When using more than one grammatical mood, it was customary to use one to modify the verb itself, while using an additional mood supplement radical before the verb. The “primary” mood was the one used to prefix the verb, while the “secondary” mood was the radical set just before the verb. Mood order is thus of extreme import.
? Examples — Mood Order Syntactics
It doubtfully is gñenenele It doubtfully isn’t gñe ñenenele It isn’t doubtful that it is ñe gñenenele
I doubt that it is gñenenele I doubt that it isn’t gñe ñenenele I don’t doubt that it is ñe gñenenele
OLD BOREAN — Elder Dialect As transliterated from the Elder-Runes alphabet
Radicals — Interjections