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Yuktepat

This is an abridgment of my more comprehensive grammar on my hard drive. As I work through editing my general grammar, filling out the patchy spots, I will be adding new sections to this page, section by section - hopefully every week, although knowing myself, it probably won't be.

Background

Tepat

Tiptum, the continent on which Tepat sits, is the easternmost and second largest continent on the planet. The continent as a whole stretches from the tropics to the polar regions. The lifeline of Tepat is the great river valley cutting diagonally through its center. The two major rivers of the north, the Pemet and Phitim, merge in the center of the country at Xhangtyel, the 'Meeting of Waters,' to form the Yot Klun, 'Wide River.' The Klun is also Tyel Kyet or Yot Kyet, possibly meaning 'Braided River' and referring to the fact that the waters of the two rivers are ‘twisted’ together here - or that the lower reaches of the river, winding and surrounded by oxbow lakes, resemble braided hair. Further northeast, the Salpit River flows into the Phitim. Tepat claims all land south of 37 degrees latitude, as well as land within 50 km on either side of the Pemet, Lower Phitim, and Salpit rivers not otherwise within that range. In the east, the Xhop river forms the boundary between Tepat and Notoq.

Different regions of Tepat have different seasonal patterns of precipitation. The eastern part, with a humid subtropical climate, gets precipitation mainly in the summer in the form of thunderstorms, with less in winter. The western regions with more Mediterranean climates have dry summers with rain in the winter. In the middle of Tepat where the two climate zones transition, there is a zone with two annual peaks in precipitation, in the summer, and the winter. By coincidence, this area corresponds largely to the drainage basin of the Klun River. The availability of so much water year-round made it ideal for agriculture and transport, however, floods were also a risk. The eastern branch of the upper part of the Phitim River, through which most of the country’s thunderstorms and tornadoes pass, was known as the Winds’ Road, or Khat i-Xyul.

Map of Tepat, in the central region of Tiptum - the
        area where Yuk Tepat is spoken

Above: Map of Tepat, in the central region of Tiptum - the area where Yuk Tepat is spoken

Familial Relationship

Yuktepat is in a relationship with around 20 other languages.

It is a member of an important language family, known as the Macro-Tepatic family, naturally, which covered the majority of the middle latitudes of Tiptum. The most closely-related one is Yuk Notoq. Notoqic is very similar but more conservative; in the feudal age of Tepat, they are nearly indistinguishable, and Yuk Notoq has remained in that mold. Notoq inherited the same basic writing system, and the languages were easily legible to each other before the Great Script Reform. Outside of Yuknotoq, Yuktepat’s closest relative is Yuh Rolov, the former majority language of the Qolup Autonomous Region, followed by Teenotkutsu on the eastern coast (a camptive of the East Coast City States Sprachbund). The existence of other closely related languages is implied, by surviving place names and personal names, and references to other nations in Tepatic historical records. It has been speculated that, in the shadows of remote and rugged mountains, certain languages persist undercover, regarded as divergent dialects of Yuk Tepat.

History

Yuktepat is often broadly divided into Conciliar, Pre-Conciliar, and Post-Conciliar Yuktepat, which may also be called Classical, Old, and New Yuktepat. Pre-Conciliar Yuktepat stretches from the earliest written sources into the unified era of Qom. Conciliar Yuktepat is dated from the year of the Great Script Reform. New Yuktepat begins after the Swira Invasion and the disintegration of the Conciliarity, as local dialects begin to take on a life of their own. Archaic Yuktepat is also sometimes used to refer to a variety of the language predating true written records. This page focuses on written Classical Yuktepat; when I refer to the spoken language, I am generally referring to how it was spoken in the capital.

The Script Reform, which marked the beginning of Classical Yuktepat, also marked the beginning of traditional Tepatic linguistics. Intellectuals believed the standard language was a force for progress, and naturally, linguistics was used as a tool for this, making it very prescriptive. Tepatic linguistic philosophy was greatly concerned with proper order. It was taken for granted that in different dialects a glyph would have different pronunciations, but they were quite picky about how things were written and in what order. Because of this, and the analytic nature of the language, traditional linguistics was almost exclusively about syntax and semantics. Pontification on the details and implications of grammar also influenced the development of logic and philosophy.



Characteristics

What kind of language is Yuk Tepat? Some of the salient and / or interesting characteristics:

Turning to the typological categories that were in style in their own world, Yuk Tepat was also described as

Phonology

Yuk Tepat distinguished aspirated and unaspirated stops (and affricates), and also had fricatives, nasals, a lateral, and semivowels, with consonants at six points of articulation - labial, alveolar, palatal, velar, uvular, and glottal.

Behold, the consonants of Yuk Tepat, with their usual ‹way of transcribing›, their /phonemic representation/, and other [phonetic variations].


Labial Alveolar
Palatal
Velar
Uvular
Glottal
plain stop
‹p›   /p/ ‹t›   /t/ [t~ɾ]   ‹k›   /k/ [k~q~c] ‹q›   /q/ [q~k~c~ʔ] (‹q›   /ʔ/)*
aspirated stop
‹ph›   /pʰ/ ‹th›   /tʰ/   ‹kh›   /kʰ/ [kʰ~cʰ] (‹qh›   /qʰ/ [qʰ~q͡χ])*  
plain affricate
  ‹c›    /ts/ [ts~tɕ]        
aspirated affricate
  ‹ch›   /tsʰ/ [tsʰ~tɕʰ]        
fricative
  ‹s›   /s/ [s~ɕ]   ‹x›   /x/ [x~ç] ‹xh›   /χ/ ‹h›   /h/ [h~ç~ɸ]
nasal
‹m›   /m/ ‹n›   /n/   ‹ng›   /ŋ/ [ŋ~ɡ~ɲ~ɴ]    
lateral
  ‹l›   /l/ [l~ɮ~ɬ]        
glide
‹w›   /w/ [w~ʋ~β~ʍ~ɸ]   ‹y›   /j/ [j~ʝ]    

*In the capital dialect, the glottal stop only occurs at the end of syllables, and /q/ only occurs at the beginning, becoming [ʔ] elsewhere; hence they are regarded as the same phoneme. Contemporaneously, some dialects also have /qʰ ʔ/.

Now also, behold the vowels:

front
central / back unrounded
back rounded
high
‹i›   /i/ ‹û›   /ɯ/   [ɯ ~ ɨ] ‹u›   /u/
mid

‹ô›   /ʌ/   [ʌ ~ ǝ]
low
‹e›   /ɛ/ ‹a›   /a/ ‹o›   /ɔ/

The central vowels [ɨ ǝ], which only occur in "weak" syllables, are considered variants of the two circumflexed, non-low back unrounded vowels, and spelt as such. The vowels /ɛ ɔ/, while technically being about the same vowel height as /ʌ/, are considered "low" for phonological reasons, because they act more like /a/ than /ʌ/.

Syllable structure of Yuk Tepat

C1(G)V(C2)

hence

...are all possible with CVC being most common. C1 can be almost any consonant; G is the sonorants /l j w/; C2 is only plain stops, nasals, and /l j w/. There is an additional constraint that, with few exceptions, C1 =/= C2.

A few other restrictions apply; for example, /i/ cannot occur with /j/, or /u/ with /w/, and front vowels /i e/ cannot occur next to uvular consonants.

Traditional Tepatic grammar divides syllables (and morphemes, which are one syllable) into 2 types:

Lexicon

Parts of Speech

Syntax

Pragmatics

Literature

The Future


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© 2005-present by Damátir Ando. Updated March 17, 2022.