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Kotava

Kotava (sometimes also spelled Kodava) is a proposed international auxiliary language (IAL) that focuses especially on the principle of cultural neutrality. The name means "the language of one and all", and the Kotava community has adopted the slogan "a project humanistic and universal, utopian and realistic". The language is mainly known in French-speaking countries and most learning materials for it are in French.

Kotava
Kotava
Created byStaren Fetcey
Date1978
Setting and usageInternational auxiliary language
Purpose
Sourcesa priori language
Official status
Regulated byLinguistic committee (Kotava Avaneda)
Language codes
ISO 639-3avk
avk
Glottologkota1280

History edit

Kotava was invented by Staren Fetcey, a Canadian traveler and linguist, who began the project in the summer of 1975, on the basis of her study of previous IAL projects. The language was first made available to the public in 1978, and two major revisions were made in 1988 and 1993. Since then, the language has stabilized, with a lexicon of more than 17,000 basic roots. In 2005, a committee of seven members was established with the responsibility of guiding the future evolution of the language.

The overall goal was to create a potential IAL that was not based on a particular cultural substrate. To do this, a number of subgoals were established:

  • A simple and limited phonetic system that can be pronounced easily by the majority of people.
  • A simple and totally regular grammar that reflects the grammars of the majority of languages in the world.
  • A clear morphology, with each morpheme having a well-defined and exclusive function.
  • An a priori lexicon that does not favor any language. (This appears to be of supreme importance to its creator.)[citation needed]
  • A collection of basic roots that are clearly defined and homonym-free. They are completely invented and absolutely independent of any existing language (Staren Fetcey considers the Western origin of Esperanto as a disadvantage).[1]
  • Mechanisms for productive derivation and composition to allow for maximum expressiveness, from the most general to the most subtle and precise.

Properties edit

Classification edit

As an a priori constructed language, Kotava is not related to any other language, natural or constructed. The word order is very free, but current practice leans toward object–subject–verb. All objects and other complements must be introduced by prepositions. There are also innovations involving conjunctions and prepositions (its system of locative prepositions).

Alphabet edit

Kotava is written with the Latin alphabet but does not use the letters H or Q. The letter H, which was used only to palatalize a preceding L, M, or N, was eliminated and replaced by the letter Y in all cases. The only diacritic is an acute accent indicating stress on the final vowel in the first person of verbs. Like in French, a space is added between text and exclamation or question marks.

Phonology edit

In Kotava, there are no irregular pronunciations; the sound is always predictable from the spelling and vice versa.

Most consonants are pronounced as in the IPA, except for ⟨c⟩, pronounced [ʃ]; ⟨j⟩, pronounced [ʒ]; and ⟨y⟩, pronounced [j].

The consonants (in IPA form) are:

Labial Alveolar Post-
alveolar
Velar
Nasal m n
Plosive p b t d k ɡ
Fricative f v s z ʃ ʒ x
Trill r
Approximant l j w

The vowels are pronounced as in Spanish, Swahili, or Tahitian, with no differences of length and no nasalization.

Front Back
Close i u
Mid e o
Open a

There are five diphthongs: ay, ey, iy (very rare), oy, and uy (very rare).

The stress rule in Kotava is regular for all polysyllabic words: on the last syllable (ultima) if the word has a final consonant; on the second-last syllable (penult) if the word has a final vowel except for the first person of conjugated verbs, which is stressed on the last syllable and marked with an acute accent.

Morphology edit

Kotava has strict morphological rules, which are outlined in a table that prescribes order and interaction. All parts of speech are marked and so there is no ambiguity. Nouns and pronouns are invariable, and there is no system of declensions. There are no affixes of gender or plurality, both of which can be indicated with particles or other words if necessary. One unusual feature of Kotava is the "euphonic" principle, which matches endings of adjectives and other modifiers with their nouns.

Grammar edit

Pronouns edit

The main personal pronouns are the following:

singular plural
1st 2nd 3rd 1st 2nd 3rd 4th
Kotava jin rin in min win sin cin
English I you he/she/it we (incl.) you they we (excl.)

The reflexive pronoun is int, and the reciprocal pronoun is sint. Possessives are created by adding -af to the personal pronoun.

Other pronouns include coba (thing), tan (unknown person), tel (known person), and tol (one of two).

Verbs edit

Verbs are conjugated into three tenses (present, past, and future) and four moods (realis, imperative, conditional, and relative). In addition, there are mechanisms for voices, aspects, modalities and other nuances, which permit a great deal of subtlety in expression. There are seven persons for verbs, including an inclusive and exclusive first-person plural.

The first person singular is used as the verb's lemma. Suffixes to the root indicate person and tense. The following table exemplifies that with the verbs (to be) and estú (to eat):

singular plural
1st 2nd 3rd 1st 2nd 3rd 4th
´ -l -r -t -c -d -v

("I am")
til
("you are")
tir
("he/she/it is")
tit
("we (inclusive) are")
tic
("you are")
tid
("they are")
tiv
("we (exclusive) are")
estú
("I eat")
estul
("you eat")
estur
("he/she/it eats")
estut
("we (inclusive) eat")
estuc
("you eat")
estud
("they eat")
estuv
("we (exclusive) eat")

The following modifiers can be used before the verb:

Name Function Example
en emphasis en estú
("I do eat")
rotir possibility in rotir estur
("he possibly eats")
me negative me estú
("I don't eat")
men pre-fact negative koe Paris men irubá
("I don't live in Paris yet")
mea post-fact negative koe Paris mea irubá
("I don't live in Paris any more")

The past tense is indicated by a -y- interfix before the verb's final vowel:

  • danká ("I sing") → dankayá ("I sang")

Similarly, the future tense is indicated by a -t- interfix:

  • estul ("you eat") → estutul ("you will eat")

Nouns edit

There is no grammatical gender. To indicate the sex or gender of a person or animal, -ya is used for females and -ye for males.[2]

none -ya -ye
krapol
("lion of either sex")
krapolya
("lioness")
krapolye
("male lion")
ayik
("human")
ayikya
("woman")
ayikye
("man")

Voice edit

Kotava has five grammatical voices:

  1. active - doalié (I fight)
  2. passive - zo doalié (I am fought)
  3. reflexive - va int tcaté (I wash myself)
  4. reciprocal - va sint disuked (they look at each other)
  5. complementary - va mbi zilí (I am given a cake)

Numbers edit

Numbers take the form of radical prefixes, which can be suffixed with certain attributes:

Suffixes:

  • -oy (cardinal numbers)
  • -eaf (ordinal numbers)
  • -da (years)
  • -ka (days)
  • jon- … -af (multiplied by)
  • fuxe- … -af (divided by)
  • vol- (negative numbers)

Mathematical signs:

  • = dum (equals)
  • + do (plus)
  • - bas (minus)
  • × jon (times)
  • / fuxe (divided by)

Literature edit

Literature has an important place in the Kotava-speaking community. There are hundreds of translations of novels (Leo Tolstoy,[3] Émile Zola,[4] Guy de Maupassant,[5] Octave Mirbeau,[6] Albert Camus,[7] Molière,[8] Mikhail Sholokhov,[9] Antoine de Saint-Exupéry,[10] Victor Hugo,[11] etc.), tales (La Fontaine, Charles Perrault, Brothers Grimm, Hans Christian Andersen, legends of the world[12]) and other literary texts (Machiavelli, etc.).

In popular culture edit

In Les Tétraèdres ("The Tetrahedra", a novel in French by Yurani Andergan, Verintuva, ISBN 978-2-9536310-0-5, 1274 p.), a wide historical and fantastic fresco, Kotava is the spoken language that Neanderthals transmitted in secret to their descendants for many generations and is recited by some heroines as long oracles. There are additional translations at the end.[13]

Sample texts edit

From "The Princess and the Pea" by Hans Christian Andersen: [14]

Lekeon tiyir sersikye djukurese va sersikya, va sersanyikya. Ta da vaon trasir, va tawava anamelapiyir vexe kotviele koncoba me dojeniayar ; sersikya, jontika tiyid, vexe kas tiyid sersanyikya ? Batcoba tiyir voldrikafa karolara, kotviele koncoba ok arcoba nuvelayad mekotunafa. Gabenapaf in dimdenlapiyir, va sersanyikya loeke co-djudiyir.

Once upon a time there was a prince who wanted to marry a princess; but she would have to be a real princess. He travelled all over the world to find one, but nowhere could he get what he wanted. There were princesses enough, but it was difficult to find out whether they were real ones. There was always something about them that was not as it should be. So he came home again and was sad, for he would have liked very much to have a real princess.

The Lord's Prayer:

Kotava English
Cinaf Gadik koe kelt tigis, Our Father who is in heaven,
Rinaf yolt zo tutumtar, Hallowed be your name,
Rinafa gazara artfir, Your kingdom come,
Rinafa kuranira Your will be done
moe tawava lidam kelt zo askir. On Earth, as it is in heaven.
Va vieleaf beg pu cin re zilil Give us today our daily bread
va kota cinafa kantara ixel and forgive us our debts,
dum pu bagesik dere ixev. as we also have forgiven our debtors.
Ise gu zoenuca va cin me levplekul, And do not bring us into temptation
Volse gu rote va cin tunuyal. but rescue us from the evil.

The Universal Declaration of Human Rights:
Kot ayik sokoblir nuyaf is miltaf gu bagaliuca is rokeem. Va ova is jiluca sodir isen kottan is artan va sint beron gotegid.

All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights. They are endowed with reason and conscience and should act towards one another in a spirit of brotherhood.

References edit

  1. ^ Kotava, the universal language of communication
  2. ^ Fetcey, Staren; Kotava Linguistic Committee (May 2016). Kotava: Official Complete Grammar (PDF) (IV.03 ed.). p. 10. Retrieved 27 November 2020.
  3. ^ "Anna Karenina Pak01 Luz01 - Wikikrenteem". www.europalingua.eu. Retrieved 2022-11-09.
  4. ^ "Germinal Luz01 - Wikikrenteem". www.europalingua.eu. Retrieved 2022-11-09.
  5. ^ "Cwekfixuya (Guy de Maupassant) Boule de Suif | PDF | La nature". Scribd. Retrieved 2022-11-09.
  6. ^ The Diary of a Chambermaid, Octave Mirbeau Pone ke mawakwikya, Cahiers Octave Mirbeau n°20, March 2013
  7. ^ "Emudenik - Wikikrenteem". www.europalingua.eu. Retrieved 2022-11-09.
  8. ^ "NyagaceemScapin Nakileem01 Nakila01 - Wikikrenteem". www.europalingua.eu. Retrieved 2022-11-09.
  9. ^ "Don Diliodaf Bost Luz01 - Wikikrenteem". www.europalingua.eu. Retrieved 2022-11-09.
  10. ^ "The Little Prince in Kotava | PDF". Scribd. Retrieved 2022-11-09.
  11. ^ "Claude Gueux (Claude Jastrik) (Victor Hugo) Claude Gueux | PDF | Crime et violence | Thriller policier". Scribd. Retrieved 2022-11-09.
  12. ^ "100 Legends of The World, in Kotava | PDF". Scribd. Retrieved 2022-11-09.
  13. ^ Le Canard Gascon, n°35, p.28-29, nov. 2010, Criticism[permanent dead link]
  14. ^ "Sersikya dem urt - Wikikrenteem". www.europalingua.eu. Retrieved 2022-11-09.

Sources edit

  • Fetcey, Staren (1979). Kotava, langue internationale neutre. Québec, Canada : Ed. Univers des langues T.B. INC. 148 p.
  • Kotava Avaneda (Kotava linguistic committee). Official grammar of Kotava {PDF}; Official grammar of Kotava (French) {PDF}. Kotava Organisation (March 2007, version III.8, 49 p. ; March 2013, v.III–14, 59 p.)
  • Christo Moskovsky & Alan Reed Libert (2011). Aspects of the Grammar and Lexica of Artificial Languages. Peter Lang GmbH. ISBN 978-3631596784

External links edit

  • Official site (in French; autotranslated to other languages)
  • Linguistic and encyclopaedic websites
    • Bilingual Kotava dictionaries (22 double dictionaries)
    • Online searchable bilingual dictionaries
    • Scribd Kotava Group - Novels, translations, miscellanies and other texts in Kotava (AVK)
    • Kotapedia (dictionary in Kotava with translations)

kotava, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, relies, excessively, references, primary, sources, please, improve, this, article, adding, second. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article relies excessively on references to primary sources Please improve this article by adding secondary or tertiary sources Find sources Kotava news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed July 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Kotava news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Kotava sometimes also spelled Kodava is a proposed international auxiliary language IAL that focuses especially on the principle of cultural neutrality The name means the language of one and all and the Kotava community has adopted the slogan a project humanistic and universal utopian and realistic The language is mainly known in French speaking countries and most learning materials for it are in French KotavaKotavaCreated byStaren FetceyDate1978Setting and usageInternational auxiliary languagePurposeConstructed language International auxiliary languageKotavaSourcesa priori languageOfficial statusRegulated byLinguistic committee Kotava Avaneda Language codesISO 639 3 a href https iso639 3 sil org code avk class extiw title iso639 3 avk avk a Linguist ListavkGlottologkota1280 Contents 1 History 2 Properties 2 1 Classification 2 2 Alphabet 2 3 Phonology 2 4 Morphology 2 5 Grammar 2 5 1 Pronouns 2 5 2 Verbs 2 5 3 Nouns 2 6 Voice 2 7 Numbers 3 Literature 4 In popular culture 5 Sample texts 6 References 7 Sources 8 External linksHistory editKotava was invented by Staren Fetcey a Canadian traveler and linguist who began the project in the summer of 1975 on the basis of her study of previous IAL projects The language was first made available to the public in 1978 and two major revisions were made in 1988 and 1993 Since then the language has stabilized with a lexicon of more than 17 000 basic roots In 2005 a committee of seven members was established with the responsibility of guiding the future evolution of the language The overall goal was to create a potential IAL that was not based on a particular cultural substrate To do this a number of subgoals were established A simple and limited phonetic system that can be pronounced easily by the majority of people A simple and totally regular grammar that reflects the grammars of the majority of languages in the world A clear morphology with each morpheme having a well defined and exclusive function An a priori lexicon that does not favor any language This appears to be of supreme importance to its creator citation needed A collection of basic roots that are clearly defined and homonym free They are completely invented and absolutely independent of any existing language Staren Fetcey considers the Western origin of Esperanto as a disadvantage 1 Mechanisms for productive derivation and composition to allow for maximum expressiveness from the most general to the most subtle and precise Properties editClassification edit As an a priori constructed language Kotava is not related to any other language natural or constructed The word order is very free but current practice leans toward object subject verb All objects and other complements must be introduced by prepositions There are also innovations involving conjunctions and prepositions its system of locative prepositions Alphabet edit Kotava is written with the Latin alphabet but does not use the letters H or Q The letter H which was used only to palatalize a preceding L M or N was eliminated and replaced by the letter Y in all cases The only diacritic is an acute accent indicating stress on the final vowel in the first person of verbs Like in French a space is added between text and exclamation or question marks Phonology edit In Kotava there are no irregular pronunciations the sound is always predictable from the spelling and vice versa Most consonants are pronounced as in the IPA except for c pronounced ʃ j pronounced ʒ and y pronounced j The consonants in IPA form are Labial Alveolar Post alveolar VelarNasal m nPlosive p b t d k ɡFricative f v s z ʃ ʒ xTrill rApproximant l j wThe vowels are pronounced as in Spanish Swahili or Tahitian with no differences of length and no nasalization Front BackClose i uMid e oOpen aThere are five diphthongs ay ey iy very rare oy and uy very rare The stress rule in Kotava is regular for all polysyllabic words on the last syllable ultima if the word has a final consonant on the second last syllable penult if the word has a final vowel except for the first person of conjugated verbs which is stressed on the last syllable and marked with an acute accent Morphology edit Kotava has strict morphological rules which are outlined in a table that prescribes order and interaction All parts of speech are marked and so there is no ambiguity Nouns and pronouns are invariable and there is no system of declensions There are no affixes of gender or plurality both of which can be indicated with particles or other words if necessary One unusual feature of Kotava is the euphonic principle which matches endings of adjectives and other modifiers with their nouns Grammar edit Pronouns edit The main personal pronouns are the following singular plural1st 2nd 3rd 1st 2nd 3rd 4thKotava jin rin in min win sin cinEnglish I you he she it we incl you they we excl The reflexive pronoun is int and the reciprocal pronoun is sint Possessives are created by adding af to the personal pronoun Other pronouns include coba thing tan unknown person tel known person and tol one of two Verbs edit Verbs are conjugated into three tenses present past and future and four moods realis imperative conditional and relative In addition there are mechanisms for voices aspects modalities and other nuances which permit a great deal of subtlety in expression There are seven persons for verbs including an inclusive and exclusive first person plural The first person singular is used as the verb s lemma Suffixes to the root indicate person and tense The following table exemplifies that with the verbs ti to be and estu to eat singular plural1st 2nd 3rd 1st 2nd 3rd 4th l r t c d vti I am til you are tir he she it is tit we inclusive are tic you are tid they are tiv we exclusive are estu I eat estul you eat estur he she it eats estut we inclusive eat estuc you eat estud they eat estuv we exclusive eat The following modifiers can be used before the verb Name Function Exampleen emphasis en estu I do eat rotir possibility in rotir estur he possibly eats me negative me estu I don t eat men pre fact negative koe Paris men iruba I don t live in Paris yet mea post fact negative koe Paris mea iruba I don t live in Paris any more The past tense is indicated by a y interfix before the verb s final vowel danka I sing dankaya I sang Similarly the future tense is indicated by a t interfix estul you eat estutul you will eat Nouns edit There is no grammatical gender To indicate the sex or gender of a person or animal ya is used for females and ye for males 2 none ya yekrapol lion of either sex krapolya lioness krapolye male lion ayik human ayikya woman ayikye man Voice edit Kotava has five grammatical voices active doalie I fight passive zo doalie I am fought reflexive va int tcate I wash myself reciprocal va sint disuked they look at each other complementary va mbi zili I am given a cake Numbers edit Numbers take the form of radical prefixes which can be suffixed with certain attributes 0 ned 1 tan 2 tol 3 bar 4 balem 5 alub 6 tev 7 per 8 anyust 9 lerd 10 san 100 decem 1000 decit 10 000 kun 100 000 vunt 1 000 000 celem 1 000 000 000 felem 1012 tung 1015 pung 1018 eung 1021 zung 1024 yung Suffixes oy cardinal numbers eaf ordinal numbers da years ka days jon af multiplied by fuxe af divided by vol negative numbers Mathematical signs dum equals do plus bas minus jon times fuxe divided by Literature editLiterature has an important place in the Kotava speaking community There are hundreds of translations of novels Leo Tolstoy 3 Emile Zola 4 Guy de Maupassant 5 Octave Mirbeau 6 Albert Camus 7 Moliere 8 Mikhail Sholokhov 9 Antoine de Saint Exupery 10 Victor Hugo 11 etc tales La Fontaine Charles Perrault Brothers Grimm Hans Christian Andersen legends of the world 12 and other literary texts Machiavelli etc In popular culture editIn Les Tetraedres The Tetrahedra a novel in French by Yurani Andergan Verintuva ISBN 978 2 9536310 0 5 1274 p a wide historical and fantastic fresco Kotava is the spoken language that Neanderthals transmitted in secret to their descendants for many generations and is recited by some heroines as long oracles There are additional translations at the end 13 Sample texts editFrom The Princess and the Pea by Hans Christian Andersen 14 Lekeon tiyir sersikye djukurese va sersikya va sersanyikya Ta da vaon trasir va tawava anamelapiyir vexe kotviele koncoba me dojeniayar sersikya jontika tiyid vexe kas tiyid sersanyikya Batcoba tiyir voldrikafa karolara kotviele koncoba ok arcoba nuvelayad mekotunafa Gabenapaf in dimdenlapiyir va sersanyikya loeke co djudiyir Once upon a time there was a prince who wanted to marry a princess but she would have to be a real princess He travelled all over the world to find one but nowhere could he get what he wanted There were princesses enough but it was difficult to find out whether they were real ones There was always something about them that was not as it should be So he came home again and was sad for he would have liked very much to have a real princess The Lord s Prayer Kotava EnglishCinaf Gadik koe kelt tigis Our Father who is in heaven Rinaf yolt zo tutumtar Hallowed be your name Rinafa gazara artfir Your kingdom come Rinafa kuranira Your will be donemoe tawava lidam kelt zo askir On Earth as it is in heaven Va vieleaf beg pu cin re zilil Give us today our daily breadva kota cinafa kantara ixel and forgive us our debts dum pu bagesik dere ixev as we also have forgiven our debtors Ise gu zoenuca va cin me levplekul And do not bring us into temptationVolse gu rote va cin tunuyal but rescue us from the evil The Universal Declaration of Human Rights Kot ayik sokoblir nuyaf is miltaf gu bagaliuca is rokeem Va ova is jiluca sodir isen kottan is artan va sint beron gotegid All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights They are endowed with reason and conscience and should act towards one another in a spirit of brotherhood References edit Kotava the universal language of communication Fetcey Staren Kotava Linguistic Committee May 2016 Kotava Official Complete Grammar PDF IV 03 ed p 10 Retrieved 27 November 2020 Anna Karenina Pak01 Luz01 Wikikrenteem www europalingua eu Retrieved 2022 11 09 Germinal Luz01 Wikikrenteem www europalingua eu Retrieved 2022 11 09 Cwekfixuya Guy de Maupassant Boule de Suif PDF La nature Scribd Retrieved 2022 11 09 The Diary of a Chambermaid Octave Mirbeau Pone ke mawakwikya Cahiers Octave Mirbeau n 20 March 2013 Emudenik Wikikrenteem www europalingua eu Retrieved 2022 11 09 NyagaceemScapin Nakileem01 Nakila01 Wikikrenteem www europalingua eu Retrieved 2022 11 09 Don Diliodaf Bost Luz01 Wikikrenteem www europalingua eu Retrieved 2022 11 09 The Little Prince in Kotava PDF Scribd Retrieved 2022 11 09 Claude Gueux Claude Jastrik Victor Hugo Claude Gueux PDF Crime et violence Thriller policier Scribd Retrieved 2022 11 09 100 Legends of The World in Kotava PDF Scribd Retrieved 2022 11 09 Le Canard Gascon n 35 p 28 29 nov 2010 Criticism permanent dead link Sersikya dem urt Wikikrenteem www europalingua eu Retrieved 2022 11 09 Sources editFetcey Staren 1979 Kotava langue internationale neutre Quebec Canada Ed Univers des langues T B INC 148 p Kotava Avaneda Kotava linguistic committee Official grammar of Kotava PDF Official grammar of Kotava French PDF Kotava Organisation March 2007 version III 8 49 p March 2013 v III 14 59 p Christo Moskovsky amp Alan Reed Libert 2011 Aspects of the Grammar and Lexica of Artificial Languages Peter Lang GmbH ISBN 978 3631596784External links edit nbsp Kotava edition of Wikipedia the free encyclopedia nbsp Look up Kotava in Wiktionary the free dictionary Official site in French autotranslated to other languages Linguistic and encyclopaedic websites Bilingual Kotava dictionaries 22 double dictionaries Online searchable bilingual dictionaries Scribd Kotava Group Novels translations miscellanies and other texts in Kotava AVK Kotapedia dictionary in Kotava with translations Discussion Kotava forum Archived 2020 02 16 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kotava amp oldid 1185239524, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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