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The Meó language is a language spoken within the nation of Alaźéta Meó as well as within its former colonies and throughout the [[Malaeze Sea]]. It is the official language of the Meó Amalgamate. It has millions of speakers.
The Meó language is a language spoken within the nation of Meó as well as within its former colonies and throughout the [[Malaeze Sea]]. It is the official language of the Meó Amalgamate. It has millions of speakers. It is ultimately derived from [[Ancient Meó]]


== Phonology ==
== Phonology ==
Meó is noted for its odd phonology, with multiple dialectal difference in pronunciation and an array of phonological processes. Still, its orthography remains relatively phonemic.
 


=== Consonants ===
=== Consonants ===
Line 9: Line 9:
! PULMONIC
! PULMONIC
! Bilabial
! Bilabial
! Alveolar
! Alveolar/Dental
! Dental
! Palatal/Post-alveolar
! Palatal
! Velar
! Velar
|-
|-
! <center>Nasal</center>
! <center>Nasal</center>
| <center>m</center>
| <center>m </center>
| <center>n</center>
| <center>n </center>
| <center></center>
| <center>ɳ ɳʲ </center>
| <center></center>
| <center>ŋ ŋʲ</center>
| <center>ŋ</center>
|-
! <center>Voiceless Stops</center>
| <center>p pʲ</center>
| <center>t tʲ</center>
| <center>tʂ tɕ</center>
| <center>k kʲ</center>
|-
! <center>Aspirated Stops</center>
| <center>pʰ pʰʲ</center>
| <center>tʰ tʰʲ</center>
| <center>tʂʰ tɕʰ</center>
| <center>kʰ kʰʲ</center>
|-
! <center>Voiced Stops</center>
| <center>b bʲ</center>
| <center>d dʲ</center>
| <center>dʐ dʑ</center>
| <center>g gʲ</center>
|-
|-
! <center>Strong Series</center>
! <center>Voiced Continuants</center>
| <center>p</center>  
| <center>v vʲ</center>
| <center>t</center>
| <center>l lʲ</center>
| <center></center>
| <center>ʐ zʲ</center>
| <center>ɕ~s̺ʲ</center>
| <center>(j)</center>
| <center>k</center>
|-
|-
! <center>Weak Series</center>
! <center>Voiceless Continuant</center>
| <center>b</center>
| <center>(ʍ) (ʍʲ)</center>
| <center>d</center>
| <center>(ɬ) (ɬʲ)</center>
| <center>ð</center>
| <center>ʂ sʲ</center>
| <center>ʑ~z̺ʲ</center>
| <center>x ç</center>
| <center>g</center>
|-
|-
! <center>Fricative or Approximate</center>
! <center>Tap or Trill</center>
| <center>v</center>
| <center></center>
| <center>l</center>
| <center>ɾ ɾʲ</center>
| <center></center>
| <center></center>
| <center></center>
| <center></center>
| <center>x</center>
|}
|}
/x/ is represented by "h". The dental series are "s" and "z", while the palatal series are "ś" and "ź". /m n ŋ v l x/ all may occur as long word internally.


/d/, /ð/, and /ʑ~z̺ʲ/'s pronunciation varies depending on their place within a word or phrase, and are part of the prosody of the language.  
Many consonants have a high degree of allophony, such as /ɲ ɲʲ/ which has the post-vocalic/intervocalic allophone [ɻ̃ ɻ̃ʲ~j̃] in fast speech. The voiced continuants tend to be closer to approximants, and the voiceless continuants closer to fricatives. /ʐ/ varies between [ʐ~ɻ̝~ɻ] with [ɻ̝] (a non-sibilant fricative) being considered the most correct.  
 


{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable"
|-
|-
! Orthography
! PULMONIC
! Phrase Initial/Emphasis
! Bilabial
! Word Initial
! Alveolar/Dental
! Medial
! Palatal/Post-alveolar
! Final Before a Consonant
! Velar
! Final Before a Vowel
|-
! <center>Nasal</center>
| <center>m my</center>
| <center>n ny</center>
| <center>ṇ ṇy </center>
| <center>ṅ ṅy</center>
|-
! <center>Voiceless Stops</center>
| <center>p py</center>
| <center>t ty</center>
| <center>c cy</center>
| <center>k ky</center>
|-
! <center>Aspirated Stops</center>
| <center>ph phy</center>
| <center>th thy</center>
| <center>ch chy</center>
| <center>kh khy</center>
|-
! <center>Voiced Stops</center>
| <center>b by</center>
| <center>d dy</center>
| <center>j jy</center>
| <center>g gy</center>
|-
! <center>Voiced Continuants</center>
| <center>v vy</center>
| <center>l ly</center>
| <center>z zy</center>
| <center>(y)</center>
|-
! <center>Voiceless Continuant</center>
| <center>(hv) (hvy)</center>
| <center>(hl) (hly)</center>
| <center>s sy</center>
| <center>h hy</center>
|-
|-
! d
! <center>Tap or Trill</center>
| <center>t͡s</center>
| <center>d͡z</center>
| <center>ɾ</center>
| <center></center>
| <center></center>
| <center>d</center>
| <center>r ry</center>
|-
! z
| <center>t͡θ</center>
| <center>d͡ð</center>
| <center>ð</center>
| <center></center>
| <center></center>
| <center>d̪</center>
|-
! ź
| <center>t͡ɕ</center>
| <center>t͡ɕ</center>
| <center>ʑ~z̺ʲ</center>
| <center></center>
| <center></center>
| <center>dʲ</center>
|}
|}


Additionally, before a final unstressed "e", "o", or "oe", the consonant before that unstressed vowel changes form as in this position "e, o, oe" all reduce to [ʲɵ]
Palatalised consonants are written Cy or C' at the end of words - mya, am'.
 
=== Vowels ===
 


{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable"
|-
|-
! PULMONIC
! Vowels
! Bilabial
! Front
! Alveolar
! Mid
! Dental
! Back
! Palatal
! Velar
|-
|-
! <center>Nasal</center>
! <center>Close</center>
| <center>mʲɵ</center>
| <center>ɲɵ</center>
| <center></center>
| <center></center>
| <center></center>
| <center>ɨ</center>
| <center>ŋʲɵ</center>
| <center>u</center>
|-
|-
! <center>Strong Series</center>
! <center>Mid</center>
| <center>pʲɵ</center>
|
| <center>tɕɵ</center>
| <center>ɘ</center>
| <center>θʲɵ</center>
| <center>o</center>
| <center>ɕʲɵ</center>
| <center>çɵ</center>
|-
|-
! <center>Weak Series</center>
! <center>Open</center>
| <center>bʲɵ</center>
| <center>ʑɵ</center>
| <center>ðʲɵ</center>
| <center>ʑʲɵ</center>
| <center>ʝɵ</center>
|-
! <center>Fricative or Approximate</center>
| <center>vʲɵ</center>
| <center>ʎɵ</center>
| <center></center>
| <center></center>
| <center>a</center>
| <center></center>
| <center></center>
| <center>xɵ</center>
|}
|}
/ɘ, o/ reduce to /ɨ, u/ in unstressed syllables
/ɘ/ is written -e, /ɨ/ as y (ÿ if adjacent to another vowel, or to distinguish from the palatalising y; ty /tɨ/, tÿa /tɨa/, tya /tʲæ/. This is not necessary with i and e as they imply /ʲ/, that is yi and ye represent /ɨji/ and /ɨje/ respectively, not /ʲi/ and /ʲe/). /a/, /o/, and /u/ are written a, o, and u


=== Vowels ===
Meó has eight vowels, each with a stressed and unstressed form. Some of the unstressed forms may merge with others. Stressed to the left, unstressed to the right. Stress falls on the first syllable unless marked, with an acute accent over the vowel, except for ú [ʉː~yː] and u [uː], which are the assumed stressed vowels within a word, unless another vowel is marked with stress. ɵ is represented by oe, and æ by æ or ae, if they are stressed, the acute accent goes on the first vowel of the digraph, ɑ is represented by "a" and the rest of the vowels go by their IPA equivalent except for u and ú as previously explained.
{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable"
|-
|-
! Monopthongs
! Vowels Palatal
! Front
! Front
! Mid
! Mid
Line 127: Line 150:
|-
|-
! <center>Close</center>
! <center>Close</center>
| <center>iː i</center>
| <center>ʲi</center>
| <center>ʉː~yː ʉ</center>
| <center>ʲʉ</center>
| <center>uː u</center>
|  
|-
|-
! <center>Mid</center>
! <center>Mid</center>
| <center>eː ɵ</center>
| <center>ʲe</center>
| <center>ɵː~ɵʉ ɵ</center>
| <center>ʲɵ</center>
| <center>oː ɵ</center>
|  
|-
|-
! <center>Open</center>
! <center>Open</center>
| <center></center>
| <center></center>
| <center>æː æ</center>
| <center>ʲæ</center>
| <center>ɑː ɑ</center>
| <center></center>
|}
|}
/ʲi/ and /ʲe/ are written i and e, /ʲʉ/, /ʲɵ/, /ʲæ/ as yu, yo, ya.
Only palatal vowels may follow palatal consonants, and only plain vowels may follow plain consonants. Therefore /mʲʉ/ and /mu/ are allowed but */mʉ/ and */mʲu/ are not.


=== Tone ===
=== Tone ===
Meó features a tone system (more accurately, a pitch-accent), with one of four registers being assigned to each stressed syllable. Generally, one tone is allowed per morpheme. Bisyllabic morphemes are very common in Meó.
Meó has five tones;
 
* Low - mè
* Mid/default - me
* High - mé
* Rising - mě
* Falling - mê
 
== Naming System ==
The naming system is as follows;




[tēːn] - mid V́ tén
[guardian deity title] [given name] [parent of same gender name] [maternal clan name] [paternal clan name]


[htè̤ːn] - low hCV - hten. The 'h' here is often pronounced, especially in formal speech. /xŋ/ and /xg/ are not permitted and /xm/, /xn/, /xd/, /xð/, /xʑ/ are not permitted initially. /xp/ and /xb/ both are merged into /xv/. This is the only 'tone' allowed to occur unstressed. However, it is the stressed unless marked otherwise. E.g.
e.g. Ahkɨn Soinkot' Hrezvinn Qoli Phlyi


Vahte [vɑˈhtè̤ː]


vs.
It is common practice to omit the parent's name when referring to someone, and maternal clan names when a man is being spoken about or paternal clan names when a woman is being spoken about.
 
The guardian deity is one of the five sacred deities of the Meó religion of [[Siela]]. It is an important part of the name as it determines which honorific one must use when addressing a person, detailed below. The first form (ending in -n), is the neutral/polite form and generally the most common, the -va form is for people who have a maternalistic relationship to the addressee (i.e. mothers/grandmothers talking to children and vice versa), whilst the -di form is similarly the paternalistic form. It is generally reserved only for familial relations and is often considered rude or patronising to use outside of these contexts.  There are in addition a series of honorifics stemming from the "-n" form. There are many nuances in the honorifics of Meó.
{| class="wikitable"
|-
!Guardian Deity
!Base form
!Maternalistic form
!Paternalistic form
|-
!Akya
|kyan
|kyava
|kyadi
|-
!Amako
|(m)akon
|mava
|madi
|-
!Akhe
|khen
|kheva
|khedi
|-
!Amiru
|min
|miruva
|mirudi
|-
!Aahko
|ahkɨn
|ahkɨva
|ahkodi
|-
|}


Váhte [ˈvɑ̄ːhtè̤]
== Vocabulary ==


[téːn] - high, hCV́ (historically breathy, now considered archaic) - htén
Most vocabulary derives from the [[Meó-Succlythian languages|Proto-Meo-Succlythian Language]], though much of the vocabulary traces its origin to the [[Fertile Tongue]], especially words related to the ocean, and later through Htaevic influence much of the sophisticated vocabulary of Meó comes from languages derived from the fertile tongue (cf. English and French/Latin).


[tên(̄ˀ)] - falling V̀ (shortest of the four, often has faint glottal stop) - tèn
{| class="wikitable"
|-
!Meó Word
!Meó Meaning
!Fertile Tongue Root
|-
|ntyu
|ocean
|nityū
|-
|syum
|bay
|kasyūm
|-
|tyu
|beach creek
|tyua
|-
|ramɨ
|island
|rama
|-
|kunkɨ
|riptide
|kūnka
|-
|saurelan
|sand
|sārilan
|-
|hraulɨ
|beach sand
|irālu
|-
|hliulɨ
|reef
|ulīla
|-
|tauzɨ
|lagoon (rarely; bay)
|tausau
|-
|kya
|region
|khya
|-
|zhanɨ
|canal
|asyanu
|-
|}

Revision as of 19:08, 13 September 2021

The Meó language is a language spoken within the nation of Meó as well as within its former colonies and throughout the Malaeze Sea. It is the official language of the Meó Amalgamate. It has millions of speakers. It is ultimately derived from Ancient Meó

Phonology

Consonants

PULMONIC Bilabial Alveolar/Dental Palatal/Post-alveolar Velar
Nasal
m mʲ
n nʲ
ɳ ɳʲ
ŋ ŋʲ
Voiceless Stops
p pʲ
t tʲ
tʂ tɕ
k kʲ
Aspirated Stops
pʰ pʰʲ
tʰ tʰʲ
tʂʰ tɕʰ
kʰ kʰʲ
Voiced Stops
b bʲ
d dʲ
dʐ dʑ
g gʲ
Voiced Continuants
v vʲ
l lʲ
ʐ zʲ
(j)
Voiceless Continuant
(ʍ) (ʍʲ)
(ɬ) (ɬʲ)
ʂ sʲ
x ç
Tap or Trill
ɾ ɾʲ

Many consonants have a high degree of allophony, such as /ɲ ɲʲ/ which has the post-vocalic/intervocalic allophone [ɻ̃ ɻ̃ʲ~j̃] in fast speech. The voiced continuants tend to be closer to approximants, and the voiceless continuants closer to fricatives. /ʐ/ varies between [ʐ~ɻ̝~ɻ] with [ɻ̝] (a non-sibilant fricative) being considered the most correct.


PULMONIC Bilabial Alveolar/Dental Palatal/Post-alveolar Velar
Nasal
m my
n ny
ṇ ṇy
ṅ ṅy
Voiceless Stops
p py
t ty
c cy
k ky
Aspirated Stops
ph phy
th thy
ch chy
kh khy
Voiced Stops
b by
d dy
j jy
g gy
Voiced Continuants
v vy
l ly
z zy
(y)
Voiceless Continuant
(hv) (hvy)
(hl) (hly)
s sy
h hy
Tap or Trill
r ry

Palatalised consonants are written Cy or C' at the end of words - mya, am'.

Vowels

Vowels Front Mid Back
Close
ɨ
u
Mid
ɘ
o
Open
a

/ɘ, o/ reduce to /ɨ, u/ in unstressed syllables

/ɘ/ is written -e, /ɨ/ as y (ÿ if adjacent to another vowel, or to distinguish from the palatalising y; ty /tɨ/, tÿa /tɨa/, tya /tʲæ/. This is not necessary with i and e as they imply /ʲ/, that is yi and ye represent /ɨji/ and /ɨje/ respectively, not /ʲi/ and /ʲe/). /a/, /o/, and /u/ are written a, o, and u


Vowels Palatal Front Mid Back
Close
ʲi
ʲʉ
Mid
ʲe
ʲɵ
Open
ʲæ

/ʲi/ and /ʲe/ are written i and e, /ʲʉ/, /ʲɵ/, /ʲæ/ as yu, yo, ya.

Only palatal vowels may follow palatal consonants, and only plain vowels may follow plain consonants. Therefore /mʲʉ/ and /mu/ are allowed but */mʉ/ and */mʲu/ are not.

Tone

Meó has five tones;

  • Low - mè
  • Mid/default - me
  • High - mé
  • Rising - mě
  • Falling - mê

Naming System

The naming system is as follows;


[guardian deity title] [given name] [parent of same gender name] [maternal clan name] [paternal clan name]

e.g. Ahkɨn Soinkot' Hrezvinn Qoli Phlyi


It is common practice to omit the parent's name when referring to someone, and maternal clan names when a man is being spoken about or paternal clan names when a woman is being spoken about.

The guardian deity is one of the five sacred deities of the Meó religion of Siela. It is an important part of the name as it determines which honorific one must use when addressing a person, detailed below. The first form (ending in -n), is the neutral/polite form and generally the most common, the -va form is for people who have a maternalistic relationship to the addressee (i.e. mothers/grandmothers talking to children and vice versa), whilst the -di form is similarly the paternalistic form. It is generally reserved only for familial relations and is often considered rude or patronising to use outside of these contexts. There are in addition a series of honorifics stemming from the "-n" form. There are many nuances in the honorifics of Meó.

Guardian Deity Base form Maternalistic form Paternalistic form
Akya kyan kyava kyadi
Amako (m)akon mava madi
Akhe khen kheva khedi
Amiru min miruva mirudi
Aahko ahkɨn ahkɨva ahkodi

Vocabulary

Most vocabulary derives from the Proto-Meo-Succlythian Language, though much of the vocabulary traces its origin to the Fertile Tongue, especially words related to the ocean, and later through Htaevic influence much of the sophisticated vocabulary of Meó comes from languages derived from the fertile tongue (cf. English and French/Latin).

Meó Word Meó Meaning Fertile Tongue Root
ntyu ocean nityū
syum bay kasyūm
tyu beach creek tyua
ramɨ island rama
kunkɨ riptide kūnka
saurelan sand sārilan
hraulɨ beach sand irālu
hliulɨ reef ulīla
tauzɨ lagoon (rarely; bay) tausau
kya region khya
zhanɨ canal asyanu