Noeneg, nicknamed "C" by scouts, has an overall SOV, head-final typology. But in fact, main clauses are SvOV or AvSOV: after the first noun phrase or adverbial phrase is a tense particle. Scouts notice a parallel to helping verbs in the real-world V2 languages German and Dutch.
Scouts report plurals following several patterns, or declensions.
In the k-declension, the plural form of a noun is derived from the root by making the vowel long and suffixing k.
The i-declension was a bit harder to figure out. If the final consonant is nasal, the plural form is derived by adding an 'i' after the root vowel.
A final plosive becomes nasal, and if voiceless, a glottal stop is inserted before it. This combination of a glottal stop is spelled with the original consonant followed by 'n'.
It is believed that this was originally a suffix -in that has metathesized.
It turns out this metathesis is common in compound words: the resulting vowel is a diphthong formed from the first and last roots in the compound.
There are two kinds of clauses in C: main clauses and subordinate clauses.
The second component of a main clause, after a noun phrase or adverb phrase, is a tense-aspect particle. One scout pointed out a parallel to verb-second behavior in Germanic languages. The form of a main clause is
Main verbs come in several participle forms:
The stems of the auxiliary verbs express aspect. They inflect for tense (C*VC* becomes C*uVC*) but not for subject agreement.
Present | Past | Gloss |
---|---|---|
bli [blɪ] | blui [bloʏ] | inchoative ("start") |
ir [ɪɻ] | uir [oʏɻ] | neutral ("be") |
ham [hɐm] | huam [χʷəm] | perfective ("finish") |
Noun-verb compounds are fairly common in Noeneg. The vowel drops out of the verb stem, just as the a drops out of Latin facere when it becomes -ficare as a suffix.
Some languages have a closed class of finite verbs (verbs that take conjugation), with most of the work done by other word classes.[1] Standard Noeneg is like this to an extent, with the tense-aspect particles in the V2 slot originating from suppletive verbs, one for each tense. But one related language appears to go even further, with only a handful of verbs (glossed be, make, go, etc.) taking the aspect inflection as well, producing Basic English-like constructions such as "has made a promise" instead of "has promised".
There are hints of a contact language between Noeneg and Nognese that keeps the tense auxiliary in V2 but fronts the main verb to the first position (or third with a topic NP or sentence adverb): "Written had he that letter last week." This pattern is typical in Breton[2] and possible but rare in German.[3]
Categories: Languages of Noen