BAANZISH

INTRODUCTION

I hope you have read my Artificial Languages page. It sets the context for this little linguistic study: and why I need not be embarrassed to have spent so much time on it!

The Nature of the Language

Baanzish is an artificial language which I wrote.

It is Germanic. It is almost wholly uninflected. Its grammar is regular. Its vocabulary is far more regular than other languages'. As with the natural Germanic languages Baanzish is basically an isolating language but with a range of common prefixes and suffixes, which can be combined. (As a contrast look at my other nascent project: "Marklendsk".)

Baanzish has many differences from the two famous artificial languages, Volapük and Esperanto. I wanted to keep a flexible word order, just as in Old English or Icelandic. (That is Volapük's great advantage.) However Baanzish is mostly uninflected.

I borrowed a couple of tricks from Esperanto but that is all. Esperanto vocabulary is a weird mixture of languages, leaving no consistency. Its grammar is largely latinate. Baanzish vocabulary and grammar start with spoken English. (Indeed some phrases still sound like stilted English.) The English words used are, for consistency's sake, almost all of Germanic origin, with gaps filled by Old English and Norse (and even a sprinkling of Welsh and Hebrew in places.)

I would welcome any constructive suggestions anyone has on my humble efforts. Schleyer set Volapük congresses up to develop his language and then took fright when they disagreed with him. I should make it clear that this is my project and I reserve autocratic power over it, with a smiling face and a listening ear.

GRAMMAR

SPELLING & PRONUNCIATION
NOUNS
  • The Genitive
  • Word Pairs
  • PERSONAL PRONOUNS
    VERBS:
  • Present Tenses
  • Past Tenses
  • Future Tenses
  • Indicative mood
  • Subjunctive mood
  • Imperative mood
  • Interrogative mood
  • Auxiliary Verbs
  • Reflexive and Co-ordinate Verbs
  • WORD ORDER
  • The accusative preposition "en"
  • INTERROGATIVES, DEMONSTRATIVES & CONCEPTS
    NUMBERS
    PREFIXES & SUFFIXES
  • Common Prefixes
  • Verb Prefixes
  • Suffixes
  • PREPOSITIONS
  • Verb Modifying Postpositions
  • COMPARATIVE & SUPERLATIVE
    TIME



    VOCABULARY

    TEXTS

    THE BABEL TEXT

    SPELLING & PRONUNCIATION

    Consonants:

    b, d, f, g, h, k, l, m, n, p, t, v, w & z are as in English

    c
          
    English "ch"
      
    as in "church"
    j English "y" as in "yellow"
    q German light "ch" as in English "loch"
    r as a Westcountry / East Anglian "r"
    s unvoiced English "s" as in "sister"
    x (unpronounced)

    Also:

    cg
          
    soft g
      
    as in "general"
    ch as "k" as in "chlorine"
    dh voiced "th" as in "that"
    sh English "sh" as in "shift"
    th unvoiced "th" as in "thin"
    wh aspirated "w": "hw" as in Scots "what"

    Vowels:

    a ; ant
        
    aa ; arm
     
    ai ; ice
     
    au ; out
    e ; egg ee ; air ei ; raid ey ; earn
    i ; ink ie, ij ; eel
    o ; otter oi ; oil oo ; order ou ; oats
    u ; foot ue ; hoop
    y ; utter

    Generally the stress falls on the first syllable of a word. However when there is a prefix it will be unstressed. Words beginning "tu-" however still have the emphasis on that first syllable.

    ( Names of the Letters:

    aa, bie, ec, die, ee, ef, gie, hei, ij, jei, ek, lee, mee, nei, oo, ep, qei, rie, es, et, ue, vie, wei, exks, ey, zie )

    NOUNS

    The only inflections are for the plural and the genitive.

    Thus:

    Stan Stanen
              
    Mais Maisen
    Stone Stones Woman Women
    Stans Stanens Maises Maisens
    Stone's Stones' Woman's Women's

    One slight irregular noun is allowed due to its frequent use:

    Man Men
    person people
    Mans Mens
    person's people's


    The Genitive

    Add "-s", or "-es" after "s" or "z". "Ov" is not so used. The genitive is placed before the main noun. Where that would be messy or need two articles next to one another it can be placed after the noun.

    Thus: "In a corner of the playing field" can be "In a dha pleifields nuk" is better put as "In a nuk dha pleifields".

    Also a postpositioned genetives are useful for titles, for example:
    "In dha Halag Magarethe, Kingais Danmarks and Albert, King dha Belgierns aad."
    ("In the Palace were Margarethe, Queen of Denmark and Albert, King of the Belgians".)

    Note: "Henrys dha Eitths siks kingaisen".

    Word Pairs

    As with all Germanic languages, noun pairs are used, and pairs can be condensed into a single noun. Examples are too numerous and obvious to list, but just looking in front of me I have as examples;

    ei rekenervjel printert (computer printer), ei pipbood (keyboard), ei flatraund boks (disc box).

    Another use is in titles, for example:

    King Malcolm (King Malcolm)
    Stadag London (The City of London)

    In translating Hebrew word pairs, there are several forms to use. The the genitive form given above is often the most useful. For example:
    Gods weyd, Davids haus, Shalom Foost, or perhaps King kingens, Hailij heiliens

    A simple word pair is used in other circumstances:
    Dha ee beyden, dha sie fishen jei and dha field biesten.

    "Ov" is used where it expresses "containing" (like the Welsh "o"):
    Ei kin ov broon (A family of brothers), or indeed Ei paund ov spyden (A pound of potatoes).

    PERSONAL PRONOUNS

    Singular Plural Dual
    mie wie wit
    thie jue jut
    hoo / hais
    it
    dhuen
    dhin
                         
                         
    The possessives:
    mies wies wits
    thies jues juts
    hoos / haiss
    its
    dhuens
    dhins



    In the third person "hoo", "hais" and "it" are he, she and it respectively. "Dhuen" is the plural of he or she while "dhin" is the plural of it. If a sentence would refer to each of two people as "hoo" or as "hais" then alternative forms "dhoo" and "dhais" are available to label the latter or more distant of the two.

    VERBS

    All verbs in Baanzish are regular. They come in four moods:

    Indicative,
    Subjunctive,
    Imperative &
    Interrogative.

    Within each mood (apart from the imperative) there are tenses:

    Past (expressed in Simple Past, Completed Past and Continuous Past)
    Present (expressed in Simple Present and Continuous Present)
    Future (in four variants).

    All the detailed description of the tenses are given for the Indicative mood. The sections on the other moods give the tenses in those moods as necessary. In the Imperative though there are no tenses. In the Interrogative the contruction is a simple one from the Indicative. Only the Subjuctive requires care.

    Present tenses

    Simple Present

    The simple present tense is used as it is in English. In the indicative mood the present tense is simply the uninflected infinitive (wiithout "tu"). See above examples.

    Continuous Present

    As in English there is a present continuous tense formed from tu aa, with the present participle (verb + ing).

    Tu wook ("to walk"):

    Mie aa wooking
              
    Wie aa wooking
              
    Wit aa wooking
    Thie aa wooking Jue aa wooking Jut aa wooking
    Hoo aa wooking Dhuen aa wooking

    Past tenses

    Simple Past ("Imperfect")

    The simple past is used as it is in English. It is created by adding "-d" to the infinitive, or "-ed" if preceeding a "-t-" or "-d-". See above examples.

    Completed Past ("Perfect")

    The completed past is used as it is in English. It is created by adding "-d" to the infinitive, or "-ed" if preceeding a "-t-" or "-d-". See above examples.

    Continuous Past

    The past continuous is closer to the French past imperfect, or the English past tense version of the present continuous. Indeed it is just a past tense version of the present continuous. As the continuous present is created by "aa" and the "present participle" with "-ing", so the continuous past uses "aad" and the "-ing" participle.

    Pluperfect

    As the Completed Past is formed with the present tense of "tu hav" and the past participle with "-d", so to express the Pluperfect ("By yesterday I had eaten it all") use the simple past tense of "tu hav":

    "Bai foodei mie havd ieted al it."

    Future tenses

    The future is not a simple concept in life nor philosophy, and so it is not simple in Baanzish. The future is uncertain, or contingent, or just wished-for. In Baanzish therefore the future can be expressed in four ways:

    The present tenses can express the future, where the context suggests it, as in English.
    "Shal" expresses obligation or compulsion to a future event.
    "Wil" expresses a desire or intent for the future event.
    "Mun" is a pure future (still found in some Northern English dialects and in the Icelandic/Old Norse "munir".

    Indicative Mood

    All verbs are regular and do not inflect nor alter with person nor number. The only inflection is in creating the past tenses (see below). The indicative is the main mood. The various tenses

    Thus:

    Tu aa ("to be"):

    Present tense
    mie aa
    (I am)
    wie aa
    (we are)
    wit aa
    (we [two] are)
    thie aa
    (thou art)
    jue aa
    (you are)
    jut aa
    (you [two] are)
    hoo aa
    (he is)
    dhuen aa
    (they are)
                       
                       
    Past Imperfect Past Perfect Pluperfect
    mie aad
    (I was)
    mie hav aad
    (I have been)
    mie havd aad
    (I had been)

    Future
    mie mun aa or
    mie shal aa or
    mie wil aa see below
    (I shall/will be)

    Tu iet ("to eat"):

    Present tense
    mie iet
    (I eat)
    wie iet
    (we eat)
    wit iet
    (we [two] eat)
    thie iet
    (thou eatest)
    jue iet
    (you eat)
    jut iet
    (you [two] eat)
    hoo iet
    (he eats)
    dhuen iet
    (they eat)
                       
                       
    Past Imperfect Past Perfect Pluperfect
    mie ieted
    (I ate)
    mie hav ieted
    (I have eaten)
    mie havd ieted
    (I had eaten)

    Future
    mie mun iet or
    mie shal iet or
    mie wil iet see below
    (I shall/will eat)

    Subjunctive Mood

    Perfect
           
    Imperfect
           
    Present
           
    Future
    mie havi kumd mie kumdi mie kumi mie shali kum

    Use of the Subjunctive

    Use the same tense as the contingency.

    1. If / indic. present + indic. future

    2. If / subj p. imperfect + subj p. imperfect

    3. If / subj p. perfect + subj p. perfect

    1. "Mie shal aa hysh if thie teil tu mie dha teil."
    I shall be quiet if you tell me the story.

    "If thie aa lyging mie shal smait thie."
    If you are lying I shall hit you.

    2. "If mie ietedi dha il fruet mie kendi dhe it aad il."
    If I had eaten the bad fruit I would know that it was bad.

    "Mie wildi fee awei if mie kandi."
    I would have gone away if I had been able to.

    "Mie spiekd dhe if hoo havdi biekd dhat, it havdi beerd hoos neim."
    I said that if he had written that it would have borne his name.

    Imperative Mood

    Most often the imperative is second person singular or plural ("Run!", "Open your books." etc, but it can exist in any person.

    Tu gan ("to go"):

    Singular
              
    Plural
              
    Dual
    gan-mie gan-wie gan-wit
    gan-thie gan-jue gan-jut
    gan-hoo / -hais gan-dhuen

    Thus:
    "Rysh-thie bak" = "Hurry back" (2nd p. sing.)
    "Blesd aa-hoo dha Lood" = "Blessed be the Lord" (3rd p. sing.).
    "Prei-wie" = "Let us pray" (1st p. plur.),

    Interrogative Mood

    For questions there is no reversal of word order in Baanzish. Questions beginning with a question word (What, Whic, Whee, Whue, Whai, Whau, When etc.) just add that word or use it as a subject or object. Where there is no such word the sentence begins with the interrogative particle "Whej".

    Thus:

    Whue leted thie in? or
    En what thie aa ieting?

    Whej thie aa kuming?
    Whej Fred riellij feed al hat dhaanes fey tu sie thie?

    Auxiliary Verbs

    Must: Mie must due dhat.
    I must do that.

    Kan: Mie kan due dhat.
    I can do that.

    Mei: Whej mie mei gan hen?
    May I go now?

    Mait: Dhat mait hap.
    That might happen.

    Shal: Ajaftdei dhat shal hap.
    Tomorrow that shall happen.

    Wil: Mie wil due dhat.
    I will do that.

    Out: Thie out due dhat.
    You ought to do that.

    Not: Hoo nij not due enimat whic help.
    He does not omit to do anything which helps.

    Let: Mie leted hoo win dhat ten.
    I let him win that time.

    Get: Mie geted hoo oupen dha doo fey mie.
    I got him to open the door for me.

    Reflexive and Co-ordinate Verbs

    As in English simply these are just the basic verb without a stated object.

    WORD ORDER

    Subject - verb - indirect object - object.

    This is however flexible. To aid flexibility in word order there are prepositions and particles. Thus unlike English an indirect object should always have a preposition ("tu" (to) usually).

    The Accusative Preposition "en"

    If the direct object wanders a new accusative preposition is needed: "En".

    Thus:

    "Him I don't like" is
    "En hoo mie nij laik."

    "What are you eating?" is
    "En what thie aa ieting?"

    Since "Him" and "What" in these cases are each their verb's direct object even though they appear at the beginning of their sentences.

    Interrogatives, Demonstratives & Concepts

    What
    what
    Hat
    this
    Dhat
    that
    Mat
    matter
    (Thing)
    thing
    Whee
    where
    Hee
    here
    Dhee
    there
    Stee
    place
    (Sted)
    position
    Whue
    who
    Hoo/Hais
    he/she
                   
    (Man)
    person
    Whai
    why
    Hai
    because (of)
    Dhai
    thus
    Wai
    reason
    Whau
    how
    (both senses)
    Hau
    like this
    Dhau
    so
    Lau
    quality
    (Wei)
    way/method
    When
    when
                   
    Hen
    now
                   
    Dhen
    then
                   
    Ten
    occasion
    (Taim)
    time
    Whic
    which
    Hic
    this one
    Dhic
    that one
                   



    NUMBERS

    Cardinals
     
    0 nein
    1 ein
    2 twaa
    3 thrij
    4 fjoo
    5 fif
    6 siks
    7 sen
    8 eit
    9 nain
    10 tij
    11 tij-ein
    12 tij-twaa
    13 tij-thrij
    14 tij-fjoo
    15 tij-fif
    16 tij-siks
    17 tij-sen
    18 tij-eit
    19 tij-nain
    20 twaatij
    21 twaatij-ein
    22 twaatij-twaa
    100 hynd
    1,000 thau
    1,000,000 megjon
               
    Ordinals
     
    1st einth
    2nd twaath
    3rd thrieth
    4th fjooth
    5th fifth
    6th siksth
    7th senth
    8th eitth
    9th nainth
    10th tijth
    11th tij-einth
    12th tij-twaath
    13th tij-thrijth
    14th tij-fjooth
    15th tij-fifth
    16th tij-siksth
    17th tij-senth
    18th tij-eitth
    19th tij-nainth
    20th twaatijth
    21st twaatij-einth
    22nd twaatij-twaath
    100th hyndth
    1,000th thauth
    1,000,000th megjonth
    nth n-th

    3,557,861: thrij megjon fifhynd fiftij-sen thau eitxhynd sikstij-ein.

    Fractions are the ordinal, with an added -t. For example:
    twaatht (half), thrietht (third), thrie fjoothten (three-quarters)

    PREFIXES & SUFFIXES

    Common Prefixes

    Ni- : not
    Un- : reverse
    Mis- : mis-
    Ri- : again
    Ouvij- : overly
    Undij- : inadequately


    Verb Prefixes

    Un- Reverse
    Ge- Getting someone or thing do something
    Le- Letting someone or thing do something
    Ri- Again
    Tu- Beginning to do something
    In-, Med-, etc.


    Suffixes

    -aang : being. Gladaang = gladness
    -ag : augmentative
    -et : diminutive
    -nes : as English -ness
    -hud : rank or class. Friehud = freedom
    -er : actor. Kyter = one who cuts
    -ert : tool. Kytert = a cutting tool
    -ij : (adjectival)
    -lik : -like
    -ful : -ful
    -nan : -less
    -kun : -able
    -ecg : -age
    -th : (makes a noun) Trueth = truth, Flaith = flight
    -oo : masculine Oksoo = bull
    -ais : feminine Oksais = cow
                
                            



    PREPOSITIONS

    Med, widh, ov, on, in, aut, thrue, twien, myng, foo, hind, aft, jond, bai, genst
    Yp, anedh, on, in, aut, thrue, twien, foo, hind, jond
    Awej, along, akros, amid, asaid, (afoo), (ahind), (ajond)

    Verb Modifying Postpositions

    Motion prepositions as above. Also:
    aus (to exhaustion), oon (continuance), in, footh (going forth), yp (yielding), bak

    COMPARATIVE & SUPERLATIVE

    Add "-or" and "-ost" to the adjective or adverb. Thus:

    "Mie aa baagor dhan thie, byt hoo aa dha baagost"
    I am bigger than you, but he is the biggest.

    "Mies haus aa lik baag lik thies haus"
    My house is as big as your house.

    Alternatively use "muc", "mor" and "most". ("Muc" means "much" and "very".)

    "Less" and "least" are "les" and "lest".

    TIME

    The concepts are "taim" (time) and "deit" (date). The usual questions:

    What dha taim aa?
    What dha deit aa?

    The divisions of time:

    Jierhynd Jier Munth Shav Dei Tiem Min Sek
    Century Year Month Week Day Hour Minute Second
            
            
            
            
            
            
            

    The Days:

    Loodsdei Mundei Tjusdei Wensdei Thoosdei Freisdei Shabatdei
    Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday
            
            
            
            
            
            

    The Months:

    Janmunth Febmunth Marmunth Appmunth Maimunth Junmunth
    January February March April May June
                
                
                
                
                
                
    Julmunth Augmunth Sepmunth Oktmunth Novmunth Decmunth
    July August September October November December

    A date may be given as, for example:

    Loodsdei twaatij-fifth Appmunths Tij-nain hynd naintij-nain (or Loo 25 App 1999)
    (Sunday, 25 Apr 1999)

    Note that the month is genitive: "Appmunths" not "Appmunth"

    The time may be given as, for example:

    Tiem thrie aftmiddei (3:00 am) (3:00pm)
    Tiem tij-ein and twaatij-sen foomiddei (11:27 fm) (11:27 am)
    or: Tiem twaa-ein les tij (Ten to eleven)

    Also note:
    Afoodei (yesterday), Ahatdei (today), Ajaftdei (tomorrow)

    (Though the A- is dropped if the day itself is described:
    It hapd afoodei (It happened yesterday) but
    Hatdei hav aad ei gud dei (Today has been a good day)



    VOCABULARY

    Most of the words in Baanzish are from Germanic English, as mentioned before. Those words are mostly as spoken, in a whimsical mixture of Northern & Southern pronunciations. For aesthetic reasons there are some pre-vowel-shift vowels and most "al" words (eg. "all", hall", "falcon") are still "al": (al, hal, falk).

    There is much Norse: eg. "wiktij" ("important") is from Norwegian and "vjel" ("machine") is Icelandic. There is even some mangled Hebrew (eg. "shav", "sab" & "shosh" for "week", "army" & "root"). At least one word, tiek ("fine") is Hindustani.

    go to Basic Vocabularies




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