Bjoden

Natively known as: bjode /ˈbʤodiː/

  ...and he stood holding his hat and turned his wet face to the wind...
ba bing mond gela sa nngwo ba leh sa thang bahlang kong akah
Pronunciation: /bɑ bɪŋ mond ˈxiːlɑ sɑ nŋwo bɑ liːh sɑ tʰɑŋ ˈbɑhlɑŋ koŋ ˈɑkɑh/
Bjoden word order: and he stood holding hat his and turned his face wet to the wind  

Spelling & Phonology

  Consonant inventory: b d f h j k kʰ l m n p pʰ r s t tʰ w x ŋ ɫ ɫʰ ɲ ʃ ʤ ʧ ʨ  
↓Manner/Place→BilabialLabiodentalAlveolarPalato-alveolarAlveolo-palatalPalatalVelarGlottal
Nasalmnɲŋ
Stopb pʰ pd t tʰk kʰ
Affricateʤ ʧʨ
Fricativefsʃxh
Approximantj
Trillr
Lateral approximantl
  Co-articulated phonemes  
↓Manner/Place→Labial-velarVelarized alveolar
Approximantw
Lateral approximantɫ ɫʰ
  Vowel inventory: iː o ɑ ɪ ʊ  
FrontBack
High
Near-highɪʊ
High-mido
Lowɑ
  Syllable structure: Custom defined ?
Stress pattern: Penultimate — stress is on the second last syllable ?   Spelling rules:  
PronunciationSpelling
tɫʰtlh
ʨtšh
tl
th
ph
ɲny
ŋng
kh
kxkg
jy
ʊu
ʃš
ʤj
ɪi
xg
e
ɑa
 

Grammar

  Main word order: Subject Verb Object (Prepositional phrase). “Mary opened the door with a key” turns into Mary opened the door with a key.
Adjective order: Adjectives are positioned after the noun.
Adposition: prepositions ?  

Nouns

 
SingularPrefix xiː-
gedah /ˈxiːdɑh/ dog
PluralIf starts with vowel: Prefix l-
Else: Prefix lɑ-
ladah /ˈlɑdɑh/ dogs
 

Articles

 
DefiniteIndefinite
Singulargon /xon/ the kang /kɑŋ/ a
Pluralfo /fo/ the lo /lo/ some
  Uses of definite article that differ from English:
  • Definite article can be omitted: ‘I am going to supermarket’
  • Used to talk about countable nouns in general: English’s ‘I like cats’ would translate to ‘I like the cats’
  • Not used for mass (uncountable) nouns: ‘Walking in the mud’ would always translate to ‘Walking in mud’.
  • Used for personal names in third person: ‘The Maria has left for school’
  • Used with place names: ‘The London’
  Uses of indefinite article that differ from English:
  • Not used for non-specific countable nouns: non-specific means ‘I am looking for a (any) girl in a red dress’, whereas specific means ‘I am looking for a (particular) girl in a red dress’
  • Not used for non-specific mass (uncountable) nouns: non-specific means ‘Would you like some (any) tea?’ whereas specific means ‘Some tea (a specific amount) fell off the truck’
 

Pronouns

 
1st singularle /liː/ I, me, mine
2nd singulara /ɑ/ you, yours
3rd singular mascbing /bɪŋ/ he, him, his, it (masc), its (masc)
3rd singular femna /nɑ/ she, her, hers, it (fem), its (fem)
1st pluralbjo /bʤo/ we, us, ours
2nd pluralyend /jiːnd/ you all, yours (pl)
3rd pluralgu /xʊ/ they, them, theirs
 

Possessive determiners

 
Possessive
1st singularlo /lo/ my
2nd singularla /lɑ/ your
3rd singular mascsa /sɑ/ his
3rd singular femgang /xɑŋ/ her
1st pluralsong /soŋ/ our
2nd pluralpo /po/ your (pl)
3rd pluralnngwang /nŋwɑŋ/ their
 

Verbs

 
PresentPastFuture
1st singularPrefix kɑ-
kapa /ˈkɑpɑ/ (I) learn
Prefix o-
opa /ˈopɑ/ (I) learned
If starts with vowel: Prefix k-
Else: Prefix kiː-
kepa /ˈkiːpɑ/ (I) will learn
2nd singularPrefix ɑ-
apa /ˈɑpɑ/ (you) learn
If starts with vowel: Prefix b-
Else: Prefix bɑ-
bapa /ˈbɑpɑ/ (you) learned
If starts with vowel: Prefix b-
Else: Prefix biː-
bepa /ˈbiːpɑ/ (you) will learn
3rd singularPrefix ʊ-
upa /ˈʊpɑ/ (he/she/it) learns
Prefix xiː-
gepa /ˈxiːpɑ/ (he/she/it) learned
If starts with vowel: Prefix x-
Else: Prefix xo-
gopa /ˈxopɑ/ (he/she/it) will learn
1st pluralPrefix iː-
epa /ˈiːpɑ/ (we) learn
If starts with vowel: Prefix d-
Else: Prefix diː-
depa /ˈdiːpɑ/ (we) learned
Prefix xɑ-
gapa /ˈxɑpɑ/ (we) will learn
2nd pluralIf starts with vowel: Prefix d-
Else: Prefix dɑ-
dapa /ˈdɑpɑ/ (you all) learn
If starts with vowel: Prefix x-
Else: Prefix xɑ-
gapa /ˈxɑpɑ/ (you all) learned
If starts with vowel: Prefix x-
Else: Prefix xiː-
gepa /ˈxiːpɑ/ (you all) will learn
3rd pluralIf starts with vowel: Prefix iːn-
Else: Prefix iːno-
enopa /iːˈnopɑ/ (they) learn
Prefix mo-
mopa /ˈmopɑ/ (they) learned
If starts with vowel: Prefix l-
Else: Prefix lɑ-
lapa /ˈlɑpɑ/ (they) will learn
 

Imperfective aspect

  The ‘imperfective’ aspect refers to ongoing actions, such as I am learning and habitual actions, such as I learn (something new every day).
Bjoden uses a standalone particle word for imperfective:  
ImperfectiveParticle before the verb: ɪ -
i pa /ɪ pɑ/ learn
 

Numbers

  Bjoden has a base-12 number system:   1 - ka
2 - neng
3 - ga
4 - de
5 - go
6 - khe
7 - lero
8 - be
9 - dong
10 - gatlo
11 - sind
12 - lang
144 - kogwe
1728 - yu
 

Derivational morphology

  Adjective → adverb = Prefix o-
Adjective → noun (the quality of being [adj]) = If starts with vowel: Prefix n-
Else: Prefix no-
Adjective → verb (to make something [adj]) = Prefix o-
Noun → adjective (having the quality of [noun]) = If starts with vowel: Prefix iːm-
Else: Prefix iːmiː-
Noun → adjective relating to noun (e.g. economy → economic) = If starts with vowel: Prefix j-
Else: Prefix jo-
Noun to verb = Prefix jɑ-
Verb → adjective (result of doing [verb]) = If starts with vowel: Prefix ts-
Else: Prefix tsʊ-
Tending to = Prefix ʨɑ-
Verb → noun (the act of [verb]) = Prefix nɑ-
Verb → noun that verb produces (e.g. know → knowledge) = Prefix xiː-
One who [verb]s (e.g. paint → painter) = If starts with vowel: Prefix x-
Else: Prefix xɑ-
Place of (e.g. wine → winery) = If starts with vowel: Prefix x-
Else: Prefix xiː-
Diminutive = If starts with vowel: Prefix ɑkx-
Else: Prefix ɑkxiː-
Augmentative = If starts with vowel: Prefix x-
Else: Prefix xiː-

Dictionary

3092 Words.

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