Amilin

Amilin, formally Westi Amilin (the Amilin Language), is a mysterious language that first appeared in early May 2021 in the undercity of Mount September among Squareblobist-Allenist radicals. It is widely suspected that animeme_master may have had a large role in the introduction of Amilin to this section of Septembrian society.

Usage
AllenY has announced plans to name some streets in the MtS undercity with Amilin names.

Writing system
Amilin has so far only been known to be written in the Latin alphabet.

The first letters of sentences and of proper names are capitalised; lowercase is used elsewhere.

The other letters of the Latin alphabet are used only in proper non-Amilin names.

Consonants
Unvoiced stop consonants /p/, /t/, /k/ may be slightly geminated.


 * Before /i/, /t/ and /d/ may have allophones of [tɕ] and [dʑ] respectively.
 * /ɣ/: only in some speakers in loanwords and proper names.
 * /h/: only word-initially in some speakers in loanwords and proper names.
 * /ʔ/: only intervocalically in loanwords and proper names.

Phonotactics and word-accent
Amilin has a (C)V(C) syllable structure. All syllables except the initial one in a word are required to have an onset; the coda is always optional, but can only take a limited range of consonants, this being: /m/, /n/, /f/, /s/, /l/.

Additionally there are a range of forbidden coda-onset and diphthong-onset pairs across syllable boundaries:

Where a coda or diphthong would cause a forbidden pair to occur (for instance in loanwords or transcriptions of proper names), the coda disappears or changes via sandhi rules, or the diphthong is reduced to /a/ (respectively).

Word-accent
All one-syllable words in Amilin are unstressed. Most two-syllable words, except for a small set of prepositions and forms of the word elai (which have no stress), take stress on the first syllable. The vowel of a stressed syllable is pronounced for somewhat longer than that of an unstressed syllable.

Morphology
Amilin is a highly isolating, analytic language with few inflections. It makes heavy use of prepositions to indicate the role of words in a phrase, and most words in the vocabulary can variously be nouns, verbs, adjectives or adverbs depending on word order. Verb particles are used similarly to noun prepositions to indicate the mood and aspect of a verb, which can be imperfect, perfect, optative-imperative, or mark an auxiliary verb. Tense is usually implicit but can be specified or established using a set of auxiliary verbs.

Pronouns are one of the few classes in Amilin which inflect, for number. There are 3 grammatical numbers: singular, plural, and total (indicating the absence of exceptions). Nouns, including proper nouns, in Amilin have grammatical gender, being either animate (including groups) or inanimate. Animate nouns fall into one of three categories, reflected by use of one of three sets of animate third-person pronouns. These categories are not grammatical, however, being used depending on context, the speaker's opinion, and the speaker's status.

Amilin has a zero copula, with statements such as "This is a house", "This house is red", and "This red house exists" being expressed through word order and use of cases and the instransitive verb marker mo.

Typologically, word order is principally subject-verb-object, noun-adjective. However, word order is partially free, with the first noun in a phrase indicating the topic, followed immediately by the verb; this is especially common with fronted indirect objects acting as topics. Fronted objects are by comparison rare, but correspondingly place especially heavy emphasis on the object noun.

Grammatical cases
There are 12 cases in Amilin. The nominative and genitive cases may be unmarked and indicated by word order; all other cases require their preposition.


 * Nominative: unmarked or siba depending on position in the phrase
 * Vocative: unmarked subject of a verb in the optative-imperative mood
 * Accusative: lef before a word starting with a vowel, le otherwise
 * Genitive: unmarked, lin, or le lin depending on position in the phrase
 * Dative: de, also used for expressing inalienable or abstract possession or ownership
 * Locative: pon
 * Ablative: kai
 * Instrumental: waiki
 * Comitative: elpa, also used for expressing alienable, immediate possession
 * Superlative: istuwi
 * Adverbial-Comparative: folgu
 * Evidential: kosalo

Aspectual particles
Verbs are required to be preceeded by an aspectual particle, which conveys information about the aspect (e.g. perfect, imperfect, habitual) and/or mood (e.g. realis, irrealis, imperative) of the verb. Tense is not marked by verb particles, being usually implicit, although there is a set of auxiliary verbs used to specify tense more precisely.


 * Imperfect: ni
 * Perfect: da
 * Habitual: nol
 * Imperative, optative, or jussive (any aspect): sen
 * Auxiliary: ko; note that a verb phrase cannot end in an auxiliary verb, and so the final verb must use an aspectual particle other than ko; this then acts as the aspectual particle for the entire verb phrase

Transitivity
All verbs are transitive in their base form. Typically the subject of a transitive verb will not undergo a change of state via the action indicated by the verb, while the object of the verb will. This semantic distinction has some effects on the grammar:


 * There is no verb for possession - instead, the copula is used, with the possessor in the dative case (and usually clause-initially) and the possessee in the nominative case.
 * To say one holds an opinion on something (e.g. "like" or "hate"), as this does not change the state of the thing in question, the copula is used with the opinion holder in the evidential case, marked by kosalo.

To mark a verb as intransitive, the particle mo is used in the place of an object, where le(f) would usually appear. This particle tends to appear at the very end of the clause. Intransitive verbs typically indicate a durative state of being rather than a imperfective/perfective action. Therefore the aspectual particle da, when used with an intransitive verb, is taken to mean that the state of being no longer applies. For example:


 * Gau ni gala: I entertain/cheer up [someone].
 * Gau da gala: I entertained/cheered up [someone - I may or may not still be entertaining someone else].
 * Gau ni gala mo: I am happy.
 * Gau da gala mo: I was happy [and am no longer].

Example sentences with gloss

 * Gaima ko titau da buyu kai uweli ta gau de sinya Mount Augusta.
 * [NOM] 1EX-DISTR AUX past PFV walk ABL homestead PL 1EX DAT city "Mount Augusta"
 * We had all walked from our homesteads to the [then-active] city of Mount Augusta.


 * Pon sinya elai siba matikabi ni ta istuwi estu mo.
 * LOC city DEM NOM large.building NPFV be.many SUPESS stack.amount NTR
 * In this city there were very many large buildings (lit. "more than a stack").


 * Os ni uswi, siba nufuyema ko lon ni buyu de, ni westi gala elpa gausta.
 * When NPFV arrive, NOM 3FAM-DISTR AUX begin NPFV walk DAT, NPFV speak happily COM 1EX-PL
 * On approaching, all its newfriends ran out and happily talked with us.


 * Le lusita ailef ta da dof de gaima.
 * ACC brew bright PL PFV give DAT 1EX-DISTR.
 * Many delicious brews were given to us all.