Difference between revisions of "Andaro-Yenmic Languages"

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The Andaro-Yenmic languages are among my younger projects, and with only one language developed to a usable degree perhaps also the most incomplete (save perhaps for [[Volsic Language|Volsic]]). Consequently short will their presentation on this page have to be, as I would rather carry on with the work than write about what has yet to be done.
The '''Andaro-Yenmic languages''' are among my younger projects, and with only one language developed to a usable degree perhaps also the most incomplete (save perhaps for [[Volsic Language|Volsic]]). Consequently short will their presentation on this page have to be, as I would rather carry on with the work than write about what has yet to be done.


== Branches and Languages ==
== Branches and Languages ==
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*** Common Erenic
*** Common Erenic
**** Erenic Dialects
**** Erenic Dialects
*** Old Yashamian*
*** Old Yashamian<ref name="lit">Major literary language</ref>
**** Middle Yashamian
**** Middle Yashamian
***** New Yashamian
***** New Yashamian
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****** Venyittan
****** Venyittan
***** Noridic
***** Noridic
'''<big>Notes</big>'''<references />


== History ==
== History ==
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Andaro-Yenmic morphology is predominantly agglutinating, focussing on the coding of case and number on nouns. A curious feature shared by all Andarian languages, and presumably the Yenmic languages before contact with Volsic and/or Celdic, is the seeming absence of verbs, not unlike the near-complete indifference to lexical categories found in Besokian languages, one of the many indications of genetic relations between the two. Sentences are usually analysed as possessing a null-copula, with the semantic predicate role most commonly fulfilled by a noun denoting an action or a process, as in Kal. ''Metila pepan''. ‘Any day [is] their entrance.’ ''i. e.'' ‘They might come any day.’
Andaro-Yenmic morphology is predominantly agglutinating, focussing on the coding of case and number on nouns. A curious feature shared by all Andarian languages, and presumably the Yenmic languages before contact with Volsic and/or Celdic, is the seeming absence of verbs, not unlike the near-complete indifference to lexical categories found in Besokian languages, one of the many indications of genetic relations between the two. Sentences are usually analysed as possessing a null-copula, with the semantic predicate role most commonly fulfilled by a noun denoting an action or a process, as in Kal. ''Metila pepan''. ‘Any day [is] their entrance.’ ''i. e.'' ‘They might come any day.’
[[Category:Language Families]]