Mundeze/Grammar/Summary

Phonology

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The writing system used is the latin script *, except for Q and X. Here are the letters and their equivalent in the IPA:

Letter IPA Sound Example Notes
Mundeze English
Vowels
a a, ɑ hat ala another
e ɛ, e let eze language
o o, ɔ for opo up
i i, ɪ machine iti to go
u u, ʊ rude ubu below
Semi-vowels
y j yes yaye shout
w w we wawe dog
Voiceless consonants
k k kiss kuki to cook
c ʃ, ʂ sheep cici to shut up
s s sand ses six
t t tea tete humanity
f f, ɸ fat fufe wind
p p pit pupe buttocks
Voiced consonants
g g hard G as in go goga crazy
j ʒ, ʐ vision jela yellow
z z zoo zidzi to saw
d d dance davi to give
v v voice vive life
b b back bibe lip
Consonants without allophone
h x, h hope ha yes
l l left leli to lie
n n nice nova new
r ɾ, r bottom (in American English) rara strange tap / trilled R. Roll your tongue, as in Spanish.
m m map mame breast

In Mundeze, there is a nearly one-to-one correspondence of letter to sound.

  • There is a proposal for a new alphabet alongside the latin script: the alfare.

The stress always falls on the syllable preceding the grammatical ending, so generally on the last syllable of the word root.

More info

Syntax

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The allowed word order typologies are SVO and OSV.

Mundeze is a head-final language (the complements precede its head) and it uses prepositions.

Mundeze can be spoken with ellipsis. That means that parts of the sentence may be omitted, if the context is clear.

  • Example: tie atake; daví ola pagile = That — attack; give all money

(titie si bankatake; voy daví ola voya pagile na me = This is a bank robbery; give me all your money!)

More info

Gender and number

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– Mundeze doesn’t distinguish between masculine and feminine nouns. Gender is indicated by the prefix ba- (masculine), ma- (feminine) and za- (genderqueer).

  • Example: te = human / bate = man / mate = woman

– To put a noun in the plural form, you can add a –y at the end of the word (after -e), but it is not mandatory.

  • Example: bi amigey (two friends) = bi amige (two friends)

– Adjectives and adverbs show no agreement.

Parts of speech

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In Mundeze, all words have an invariable root, the radical, from which you can form substantive, verb, adjective and adverb.

The nouns end in -e, verbs in -i, adjectives in -a and adverbs in -o.

Example with “pel-” (to speak)

  • pele: speech
  • peli: to speak
  • pela: oral, verbal, speaking
  • pelo: orally, verbally

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Pronouns

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– The personal pronouns are:

  • me (I, me)
  • tu (you)
  • lo (he, she, him, her, it)
  • noy (we, us)
  • voy (you)
  • ley (they, them)

There is also ane (one -indefinite pronoun). It is of course possible to specify the gender, adding the appropriate prefix: malo = she

– The adjectives and possessive pronouns are formed by adding the adjectival suffix -a to the pronoun: tua = your, yours

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Articles

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There is no article. However, the indefinite nature can be indicated with the adjective ya (some, any), just like definite nature can be indicated using adjectives like tia (that).

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tabula-leksey

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Mundeze uses a system inspired by the “tabel-vortoj” of Esperanto to easily produce correlatives and other function words.

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Conjugation

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Verb conjugation is done optionally with adverbs:

  • pretempo or preo: for the past
  • nutempo or nuo: for the present
  • postempo or poso: for the future

There are also 3 adverbs to precise aspect. They are placed just before the verb:

  • jo: for an accomplished action = perfect aspect
  • so: for an ongoing action = progressive aspect
  • vo: for a planned action = prospective aspect

The jussive mood (imperative) is obtained by placing the stress on the last syllable, the one of the verbal ending.

Example with “pel-” (to speak)

  • noy peli = We speak
  • noy pretempo peli = We spoke
  • noy vo peli = We are going to speak
  • preo noy vo peli = We were going to speak
  • noy pelí = Let’s speak

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Sentence forms

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Interrogative

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To form a question (direct or indirect), you can either add “ki” (interrogative particle) at the beginning or end of the clause, or use interrogative words (which are also at the beginning or end of the clause). Interrogative words can be preceded by a preposition.

  • Examples:

ki lo nyami? / lo nyami ki? = Does he eat?
ha, lo nyami = Yes, he eats.
ne, lo guli = No, he drinks.
kias lo ne nyami? / lo ne nyami kias? = Why doesn’t he eat?
as lo ne gwiri = Because he is not hungry.
kie tu nyami? / tu nyami kie? = What do you eat?
me nyami apole = I eat an apple.
kon kian tu nyami? / tu nyami kon kian? = With whom do you eat?
me nyami kon mea basere = I eat with my brother.
me tsivoli ki lo nyami / me tsivoli, lo nyami ki = I wonder if she eats.
me tsivoli kie lo nyami / me tsivoli (ti) lo nyami kie = I wonder what she eats.

Negative and affirmative

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To form a negative sentence, we just add “ne” (no, not) before the word we want to negate. To emphasize an affirmative sentence, we just add “ha” (do, yes, indeed) before the word we want to emphasize.

Example

  • me ne kanti = I don’t sing
  • ne me kanti = I am not the one who sings
  • me ha kanti = I do sing
  • ha me kanti = I am really the one who sings

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Morphology

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In Mundeze, we can easily create new words by combining roots, using juxtaposition. The root is the part of a word that precedes the grammatical ending. For example, in buke (book) the root is buk-, and the -e is the grammatical ending that indicates a noun.

Mundeze is a head-final language, which means that the head precedes its complements. That applies to the words order at the sentence level, but also to word composition (for compound words using more than one lexeme)

  • Examples

From anar.e (group) and of.e (work), we can create:

  • anarofe (anarof.e) = group work
  • ofanare (ofanar.e) = working group

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In Mundeze, root agglutination allows to create many words, but almost all morphemes have a meaning by their own, so it is almost possible to use Mundeze like an isolating language.

For example, the locative morpheme en (in, at…) can be used as follows:

  • Locative preposition: en dome (at home)
  • Verb: eni (to be located in/at, to stand in/at)
  • Noun: ene (place, location)
  • Locative suffix: panene (bread’s place = bakery)
  • Locative relative pronoun: premí en ayifi (press where it hurts)
  • Locative morpheme: kien, tien (where, there)

Even grammatical endings have a meaning when isolated:

  • swela energie (solar energy) = energie a swele (energy of the sun)
  • tu hwinko nyami (you eat “pigly“) = tu nyami, o hwinke (you eat like a pig)
  • cesí buke (take a book) / cesí, e tu voli (take what you want)
  • foba myawe (a frightened cat) = myawe, a fobi (a cat who is afraid)
  • me analizi (I’m analysing) = me i analize (I’m doing an analysis)
  • etc.