Old Unuvi

From PavHaki Wiki

Old Unuvi is the oldest form of the Unuvi language, attested in documents from the 84th century.

Phonology

Consonants

Consonants Bilabial Dental Velar Uvular
Plosive
k͡p p ⟨kp p⟩
t̪ t̪̻ ⟨t th⟩
k ⟨k⟩
q ⟨q⟩
Nasal
ŋ͡m m ⟨ngm m⟩
n̪ ⟨n⟩
ŋ ⟨ng⟩
ɴ ⟨nq⟩
Tap/Flap
ɺ̻ ⟨r⟩
Approximant
l̪ ⟨l⟩
ɰ ⟨w⟩
ʟ̠ ⟨l2

Vowels

Speakers of Old Unuvi associated each point of vowel articulation with a gender. ⟨i⟩ was associated with the green gender, ⟨a⟩ with the foreign gender and ⟨u⟩ with the heavenly gender.

Vowels in Old Unuvi
Vowels Front Back
Close
i i: ⟨i ii⟩
Open
ɯ ɯ: ⟨u uu⟩
a a: ⟨a aa⟩

Counting

Old Unuvi was spoken in a culture that used an octal number system. Numbers 2-7 and 9-15 were irregular, while powers of two and other numbers were generally regularly conjugated. Some important decimal numbers were borrowed into the language from nearby decimal cultures.

Numbers from 1-16
Decimal form Octal form Word Translation / Notes
1 1 'one'
2 2 'two'
3 3 'three'
4 4 'second-two'
5 5 'five'
6 6 'six'
7 7 'seven'
8 108 'third-two'
9 118 'eleven'
10 128 'twelve'
11 138 'thirteen'
12 148 'fourteen'
13 158 'fifteen'
14 168 'sixteen'
15 178 'seventeen'
16 208 'fourth-two'
Multiples of eight and irregulars from 108-708
Decimal form Octal form Word Translation / Notes
8 108 'third-two'
10 128 (borrowed from decimal system)
16 208 'fourth-two'
20 24 8 (borrowed from decimal system)
24 308 'three third-two'
32 408 'fifth two'
40 508 'five third-two'
48 608 'six third-two'
50 628 (borrowed from decimal system)
56 708 'seven third-two'
Multiples of eight from 1008-7008
Decimal form Octal form Word Translation / Notes
64 1008 'sixth-two'
100 1448 (borrowed from decimal system)
128 2008 'seventh-two'
192 3008 'three sixth-two'
256 4008 'eigth-two'
320 5008 'five sixth-two'
384 6008 'six sixth-two'
448 7008 'seven sixth-two'
Other irregularities
Decimal form Octal form Word Translation / Notes
500 7648 (borrowed from decimal system)
1,000 17508 (borrowed from decimal system)
10,000 234208 (borrowed from decimal system)
1,000,000 36411008 (borrowed from decimal system)

Grammar

Old Unuvi had a complicated grammatical system that made heavy use of its three genders[1].

Formality

Old Unuvi lacked the complicated formality system that the later evolutions of Unuvi would come to have. The Heavenly gender of Old Unuvi would eventually be co-opted into being the means by which formality was displayed.

Grammatical number

Old Unuvi had a complex grammatical number system where one could attach clitics and conjugate verbs to specify an arbitrary 2n number of items. In addition, there was a generic plural form that would later be usurped by the octuple clitic.

Pronouns

Old Unuvi had a set of pronouns with marked gender and grammatical person. The language did not mark number on the pronouns, but rather on verbs. Regular suffixes could be attached to pronouns to form their dual, quadruple, octuple, etc. forms.

Pronouns in Old Unuvi
Green Foreign Heavenly
1st Person
ngmiit
2nd Person kngi
lar
3rd Person (proximate) ptii ptaa ptuu
3rd Person (obviative) rii raa ruu

Correlatives

Adding -kpam to the end of a pronoun created a demonstrative pronoun[2]. First-person pronouns became proximal, second-person pronouns medial, and third-person pronouns distal.

Table of correlatives[3]
interrogative demonstrative quantifier
proximal medial distal assertive existential1 elective/dubitative
existential2
universal negatory positive alternative
determiner akpam ngmiitkpam (G/F/H) kngikpam (G)
larkpam (F/H)
ptiikpam (G)
ptaakpam (F)
ptuukpam (H)
ruukpam raakpam thath ingmiip wuullu
pronoun human raangmuuth
nonhuman raapti
out of two (dual)
out of many (plural)
pro-adverb location kpama itaa kitaa ptitaa ruuqaa raaqaa
source kpamari itaari kitaari ptitaari ruuri raari
goal kpamathi itaathi kitaathi ptitaathi ruuthi raathi
time kpamatha itaatha kitaatha ptitaatha ruutha raatha

1 The 3rd person obviative heavenly gender pronoun was the base for assertive existential correlatives. One could think of it as "the heavens, far away, are known to exist". 2 The 3rd person obviative foreign gender pronoun was the base for elective correlatives. One could think of it as "some foreign thing, far away, which may or may not exist."

References