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Naʼvi language

The Naʼvi language (Naʼvi: Lìʼfya leNaʼvi) is a fictional constructed language originally made for the 2009 film Avatar. In the film franchise, the language is spoken by the Naʼvi, a race of sapient humanoids indigenous to the extraterrestrial moon Pandora. The language was created by Paul Frommer, a professor at the USC Marshall School of Business with a doctorate in linguistics. Naʼvi was designed to fit moviemaker James Cameron's conception of what the language should sound like in the film. It had to be realistically learnable by the fictional human characters of the film and pronounceable by the actors, but also not closely resemble any single human language.

Naʼvi
Lìʼfya leNaʼvi
Pronunciationˈnaʔvi
Created byPaul Frommer
Date2005
Setting and usageAvatar and Avatar: The Way of Water
Purpose
none (in-universe)
Latin script
Sourcesconstructed languages
 a priori languages
Language codes
ISO 639-3None (mis)
08n
GlottologNone
IETFart-x-navi
This article contains IPA phonetic symbols. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters. For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA.

When the film was released in 2009, Naʼvi had a growing vocabulary of about a thousand words, but understanding of its grammar was limited to the language's creator.[1] However, this has changed subsequently as Frommer has expanded the lexicon to more than 2600 words[2] and has published the grammar, thus making Naʼvi a relatively complete, learnable and serviceable language.

Roots

The Naʼvi language has its origins in James Cameron's early work on Avatar. In 2005, while the film was still in scriptment form, Cameron felt it needed a complete, consistent language for the alien characters to speak. He had written approximately thirty words for this alien language but wanted a linguist to create the language in full. His production company, Lightstorm Entertainment, contacted the linguistics department at the University of Southern California seeking someone who would be interested in creating such a language. Edward Finegan, a professor of linguistics at USC, thought that the project would appeal to Paul Frommer, with whom he had co-authored a linguistics textbook, and so forwarded Lightstorm's inquiry on to him. Frommer and Cameron met to discuss the director's vision for the language and its use in the film; at the end of the meeting, Cameron shook Frommer's hand and said "Welcome aboard."

Based on Cameron's initial list of words, which had a "Polynesian flavor" according to Frommer,[3] the linguist developed three different sets of meaningless words and phrases that conveyed a sense of what an alien language might sound like: one using contrasting tones, one using varying vowel lengths, and one using ejective consonants. Of the three, Cameron liked the sound of the ejectives most. His choice established the phonology that Frommer would use in developing the rest of the Naʼvi language – morphology, syntax, and an initial vocabulary – a task that took six months.

Development

The Naʼvi vocabulary was created by Frommer as needed for the script of the movie. By the time casting for Avatar began, the language was sufficiently developed that actors were required to read and pronounce Naʼvi dialogue during auditions. During shooting Frommer worked with the cast, helping them understand their Naʼvi dialogue and advising them on their Naʼvi pronunciation, stress, and intonation. Actors would often make mistakes in speaking Naʼvi. In some cases, those mistakes were plausibly explained as ones their human characters would make while learning the language in-universe; in other cases, the mistakes were incorporated into the language.

Frommer expanded the vocabulary further in May 2009 when he worked on the Avatar video game, which required Naʼvi words that had not been needed for the film script and thus had not yet been invented. Frommer also translated into Naʼvi four sets of song lyrics that had been written by Cameron in English, and he helped vocalists with their pronunciation during the recording of James Horner's Avatar score. At the time of the film's release on December 18, 2009, the Naʼvi vocabulary consisted of approximately 1000 words.

Work on the Naʼvi language has continued even after the film's release. Frommer is working on a compendium which he plans to deliver to Fox in the near future.[4] He hopes that the language will "have a life of its own,"[5] and thinks it would be "wonderful" if the language developed a following.[3] Since then, it has developed a following, as is evident through the increasing learner community of the language.[6] The community's Lexical Expansion Project, together with Frommer, has expanded the lexicon by more than 50 percent.

Frommer also maintains a blog, Na’viteri, where he regularly posts additions to the lexicon and clarifications on grammar. Naʼviteri has been the source of the vast majority of Naʼvi growth independent of Frommer's contract with 20th Century Fox.

Structure and usage

The Naʼvi language was developed under three significant constraints. First, Cameron wanted the language to sound alien but pleasant and appealing to audiences. Second, since the storyline included humans who have learned to speak the language, it had to be a language that humans could plausibly learn to speak. And finally, the actors would have to be able to pronounce their Naʼvi dialogue without unreasonable difficulty. The language in its final form contains several elements which are uncommon in human languages, such as verbal conjugation using infixes. All Naʼvi linguistic elements are found in human languages, but the combination is unique.

Phonology and orthography

Naʼvi lacks voiced plosives like [b] [d] [ɡ], but has the ejective consonants [] [] [], which are spelled px, tx, kx. It also has the syllabic consonants ll and rr. There are seven vowels, a ä e i ì o u. Although all the sounds were designed to be pronounceable by the human actors of the film, there are unusual consonant clusters, as in fngap [fŋap] "metal".[7]

Naʼvi syllables may be as simple as a single vowel, or as complex as skxawng "moron" or fngap above (both CCVC).

The fictional language Naʼvi of Pandora is unwritten. However, the actual (studio) language is written in the Latin script for the actors of Avatar. Some words include: zìsìt "year", fpeio "ceremonial challenge", ’awve "first" (’aw "one"), muiä "fair", tireaioang "spirit animal", tskxe "rock", kllpxìltu "territory", uniltìrantokx "avatar" (dream-walk-body).

Vowels

There are seven monophthong vowels:

front back
High i ⟨i⟩ u ~ ʊ ⟨u⟩
ɪ ⟨ì⟩
Mid ɛ ⟨e⟩ o ⟨o⟩
Low æ ⟨ä⟩ a ⟨a⟩

There are additionally four diphthongs: aw [aw], ew [εw], ay [aj], ey [εj], and two syllabic consonants: ll [l̩] and rr [r̩], which mostly behave as vowels.

Note that the e is open-mid while the o is close-mid, and that there is no *oy. The rr is strongly trilled, and the ll is "light" (plain), never a "dark" (velarized) *[ɫ̩].

These vowels may occur in sequences, as in the Polynesian languages, Swahili, and Japanese. Each vowel counts as a syllable, so that tsaleioae has six syllables, [tsa.lɛ.i.o.a.e], and meoauniaea has eight, [mɛ.o.a.u.ni.a.ɛ.a].

Naʼvi does not have vowel length or tone, but it does have contrastive stress: túte "person", tuté "female person". Although stress may move with derivation, as here, it is not affected by inflection (case on nouns, tense on verbs, etc.). So, for example, the verb lu ("to be") has stress on its only vowel, the u, and no matter what else happens to it, the stress stays on that vowel: lolú "was" (l⟨ol⟩u), lolängú "was (ugh!)" (l⟨ol⟩⟨äng⟩u), etc.

Consonants

There are twenty consonants. There are two Latin transcriptions: one that more closely approaches the ideal of one letter per phoneme, with the c and g for [ts] and [ŋ] (the values they have in much of Eastern Europe and Polynesia, respectively), and a modified transcription used for the actors, with the digraphs ts and ng used for those sounds. In both transcriptions, the ejective consonants are written with digraphs in x, a convention that appears to have no external inspiration, but could potentially be inspired by the Esperanto convention of writing x as a stand-in for the circumflex.

Labial Alveolar Palatal Velar Glottal
Nasal m ⟨m⟩ n ⟨n⟩ ŋ ⟨ng (g)⟩
Plosive plain p ⟨p⟩ t ⟨t⟩ k ⟨k⟩ ʔ ⟨ʼ⟩
ejective ⟨px⟩ ⟨tx⟩ ⟨kx⟩
Affricate ts ⟨ts (c)⟩
Fricative voiceless f ⟨f⟩ s ⟨s⟩ h ⟨h⟩
voiced v ⟨v⟩ z ⟨z⟩
Approximant central w ⟨w⟩ ɾ ⟨r⟩ j ⟨y⟩
lateral l ⟨l⟩

The fricatives and the affricate, f v ts s z h, are restricted to the onset of a syllable; the others may occur at the beginning or at the end (though w y in final position are considered parts of diphthongs, as they only occur as ay ey aw ew and may be followed by another final consonant, as in skxawng "moron"). However, in addition to appearing before vowels, f ts s may form consonant clusters with any of the unrestricted consonants (the plosives and liquids/glides) apart from , making for 39 clusters. Other sequences occur across syllable boundaries, such as Naʼvi [naʔ.vi] and ikran [ik.ɾan] "banshee".

The plosives p t k are tenuis, as in Spanish or French. In final position, they have no audible release, as in Indonesian and other languages of Southeast Asia, as well as in many dialects of English in words such as "bat". The r is flapped, as in Spanish and Indonesian; it sounds a bit like the tt or dd in the American pronunciation of the words latter / ladder.

Sound change

The plosives undergo lenition after certain prefixes and prepositions. The ejective consonants px tx kx become the corresponding plosives p t k; the plosives and affricate p t ts k become the corresponding fricatives f s h; and the glottal stop disappears entirely. For example, the plural form of po "s/he" is ayfo "they", with the p weakening into an f after the prefix ay-.

Lenition has its own significance when the plural prefix can optionally be omitted. In the above example, ayfo can be shortened to fo. Similarly, the plural of tsmukan "brother" can be smukan (from aysmukan).

Grammar

Naʼvi has free word order. For example, the English "I see you" (a common greeting in Naʼvi), can be as follows in Naʼvi:

Oel ngati kameie
Ngati oel kameie
Oel kameie ngati

All forms of "I see you" in Naʼvi are completely correct. As sentences become more complex though, some words, like adjectives and negatives, will have to stay in a more or less fixed position in the sentence, depending on what the adjective or negative is describing.

"Today is a good day"
Fìtrr lu sìltsana trr
Sìltsana trr fìtrr lu

In this case, the adjective sìltsan(a) (good) will need to stay with the noun trr (day), therefore limiting the sentence to fewer combinations on the construction of the sentence, but as long as it follows or precedes the noun, the sentence is fine. By putting the attributive a before the adjective, the adjective can be put after the noun:

Fìtrr lu trr asìltsan

More information about this can be found in the Adjectives section.

Nouns

Nouns in Naʼvi show greater number distinctions than those in most human languages do: besides singular and plural, they not only have special dual forms for two of an item (eyes, hands, lovers, etc.), which are common in human language (English has a remnant in "both"), but also trial forms for three of an item, which on Earth are only found with pronouns. Gender is only occasionally (and optionally) marked.

The plural prefix is ay+, and the dual is me+. Both trigger lenition (indicated by the "+" signs rather than the hyphens that usually mark prefix boundaries). In nouns which undergo lenition, the plural prefix may be dropped, so the plural of tokx "body" is either aysokx or just sokx.

Masculine and feminine nouns may be distinguished by suffix. There are no articles (words for "a" or "the").

Nouns are declined for case in a tripartite system, which is rare among human languages. In a tripartite system, there are distinct forms for the object of a clause, as in "he kicks the ball"; the agent of a transitive clause which has such an object, as in "he kicks the ball"; and the subject of an intransitive clause, which does not have an object, as in "he runs". An object is marked with the accusative suffix -ti, and an agent with the ergative suffix -l, while an intransitive subject has no case suffix. The use of such case forms leaves the word order of Naʼvi largely free.

There are two other cases—genitive in -yä, dative in -ru—as well as a topic marker -ri. The latter is used to introduce the topic of the clause, and is somewhat equivalent to Japanese wa and the much less common English "as for". It preempts the case of the noun: that is, when a noun is made topical, usually at the beginning of the clause, it takes the -ri suffix rather than the case suffix one would expect from its grammatical role. For example, in,

Oe-ri

I-TOP

ontu

nose

teya

full

l⟨äng⟩u

be⟨PEJ

Oe-ri ontu teya l⟨äng⟩u

I-TOP nose full be⟨PEJ

"My nose is full (of his distasteful smell)", lit. "As for me, (my) nose is full"

since the topic is "I", the subject "nose" is associated with "me": That is, it's understood to be "my nose". "Nose" itself is unmarked for case, as it's the subject of the intransitive verb "to be". However, in most cases the genitive marker -yä is used for this purpose.

Besides case, the role of a noun in a clause may be indicated with adpositions. Any adposition may occur as either as a preposition before the noun, or as an enclitic after the noun, a greater degree of freedom than English allows. For example, "with you" may be either hu nga or ngahu. When used as enclitics, they are much like the numerous cases found in Hungarian and Finnish. When used as prepositions, more along the lines of what English does, certain of them trigger lenition. One of the leniting prepositions is "in", as in mì sokx "in the body". This may cause some ambiguity with short plurals: mì sokx could also be short for mì aysokx "in the bodies".[8]

Naʼvi pronouns encode clusivity. That is, there are different words for "we" depending on whether the speaker is including his/her addressee or not. There are also special forms for "the two of us" (with or without the addressee), "the three of us", etc. They do not inflect for gender; although it is possible to distinguish "he" from "she", the distinction is optional.

The deferential forms of "I" and "you" are ohe and ngenga. Possessive forms include ngeyä "your" and peyä "her/his". "He" and "she" can optionally be differentiated as poan and poé.

The grammatical distinctions made by nouns are also made by pronouns.

Adjectives

Naʼvi adjectives are uninflected—that is, they do not agree with the noun they modify—and may occur either before or after the noun. They are marked by a syllable a, which is attached on the side closest to the noun. For example, "a long river" can be expressed either as,

ngim-a

long-ATTR

kilvan

river

ngim-a kilvan

long-ATTR river

"a long river"

or as,

kilvan

river

a-ngim

ATTR-long

kilvan a-ngim

river ATTR-long

"a long river"

The free word order holds for all attributives: Genitives (possessives) and relative clauses can also either precede or follow the noun they modify. The latter especially allows for great freedom of expression.

The attributive affix a- is only used when an adjective modifies a noun. Predicative adjectives instead take the "be" verb lu:

kilvan

river

ngim

long

lu

be

kilvan ngim lu

river long be

"The river is long"

Verbs

Verbs are conjugated for tense and aspect, but not for person. That is, they record distinctions like "I am, I was, I would", but not like "I am, we are, s/he is". Conjugation relies exclusively on infixes, which are like suffixes but go inside the verb. "To hunt", for example, is taron, but "hunted" is t⟨ol⟩aron, with the infix ⟨ol⟩.

There are two positions for infixes: after the onset (optional consonant(s)) of the penultimate syllable, and after the onset of the final syllable. Because many Na’vi verbs have two syllables, these commonly occur on the first and last syllable. In monosyllabic words like lu "be", they both appear after the initial onset, keeping their relative order.

The first infix position is taken by infixes for tense, aspect, mood, or combinations thereof; also appearing in this position are participle, reflexive, and causative forms, the latter two of which may co-occur with a tense/aspect/mood infix by preceding it. Tenses are past, recent past, present (unmarked), future, and immediate future; aspects are perfective (completed or contained) and imperfective (ongoing or uncontained). The aspectual forms are not found in English but are somewhat like the distinction between 'having done' and 'was doing'.

taron [hunt] "hunts"
t⟨ìm⟩aron [hunt⟨REC⟩] "just hunted"
t⟨ay⟩aron [hunt⟨FUT⟩] "will hunt"
t⟨er⟩aron [hunt⟨IMPV⟩] "hunting"
t⟨ol⟩aron [hunt⟨PFV⟩] "hunted"
t⟨ì⟨r⟩m⟩aron [hunt⟨RECIMPV⟩⟩] "was just hunting"

Tense and aspect need not be marked when they can be understood by context or elsewhere in the sentence.

The second infix position is taken by infixes for affect (speaker attitude, whether positive or negative) and for evidentiality (uncertainty or indirect knowledge). For example, in the greeting in the section on nouns, Oel ngati kameie "I See you", the verb kame "to See" is inflected positively as kam⟨ei⟩e to indicate the pleasure the speaker has in meeting you. In the subsequent sentence, Oeri ontu teya längu "My nose is full (of his smell)", however, the phrase teya lu "is full" is inflected pejoratively as teya l⟨äng⟩u to indicate the speaker's distaste at the experience. Examples with both infix positions filled:

t⟨ìrm⟩ar⟨ei⟩on [hunt⟨REC.IMPV⟩⟨LAUD⟩] "was just hunting": The speaker is happy about it, whether due to success or just the pleasure of the hunt
t⟨ay⟩ar⟨äng⟩on [hunt⟨FUT⟩⟨PEJ⟩] "will hunt": The speaker is anxious about or bored by it

Lexicon

The Naʼvi language currently has over 2,600 words. These include a few English loan words such as kunsìp "gunship". The complete dictionary, including the odd inflectional form, is available online at http://dict-navi.com. Additionally, the community of speakers is working with Dr. Frommer to further develop the language. Naʼvi is a very modular language and the total number of usable words far exceeds the 2,600 dictionary words. For example: rol "to sing" → tìrusol "the act of singing" or ngop "to create" → ngopyu "creator". Workarounds using existing words also abound in the Naʼvi corpus, such as eltu lefngap "metallic brain" for "computer" and palulukantsyìp "little thanator" for "cat".

See also

References

  1. ^ "Do You Speak Na'vi? Giving Voice To 'Avatar' Aliens". NPR. December 15, 2009. Retrieved 16 December 2009.
  2. ^ "DictNa'vi Online Dictionary". Retrieved 30 June 2020.
  3. ^ a b Milani, Matteo (November 24, 2009). "An interview with Paul Frommer, Alien Language Creator for Avatar". Unidentified Sound Object. Retrieved January 9, 2010.
  4. ^ Sancton, Julian (December 1, 2009). . Vanity Fair. Archived from the original on January 8, 2010. Retrieved January 16, 2010.
  5. ^ Boucher, Geoff (November 20, 2009). "USC professor creates an entire alien language for 'Avatar'". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved January 16, 2010.
  6. ^ "Language of Avatar under study". UBC Media Releases. July 28, 2011. Retrieved October 25, 2011.
  7. ^ "Na'vi, la langue d'Avatar", L'express, 1 December 2009
  8. ^ When is used as an enclitic, however, the noun is not lenited: tokxmì "in the body", xokxmì "in the bodies".

Further reading

  • Frommer, Paul; Zimmer, Benjamin (December 19, 2009). "Some highlights of Na'vi". Language Log. Retrieved January 9, 2010.
  • Milani, Matteo (November 24, 2009). "An interview with Paul Frommer, Alien Language Creator for Avatar". Unidentified Sound Object. Retrieved January 9, 2010.
  • Sancton, Julian (December 1, 2009). . Vanity Fair. Archived from the original on January 8, 2010. Retrieved January 9, 2010.
  • Wilhelm, Maria; Mathison, Dirk (2009). James Cameron's Avatar: A Confidential Report on the Biological and Social History of Pandora. New York City: !t (HarperCollins). ISBN 978-0-06-189675-0.
  • Zimmer, Benjamin (December 4, 2009). "Skxawng!". The New York Times. Retrieved January 9, 2010. This includes a sound recording of Frommer saying several phrases in Naʼvi.

External links

  • Naviteri.org - Paul Frommer's blog about the Naʼvi language
  • LearnNavi.org - Community forums, Na'vi language learning resources, dictionary (multilingual), grammar guide, and more.
  • Kelutral.org - Modern resources, lessons, and community for learning the Na’vi Language.
  • Dict-Na'vi.com - Naʼvi/English online dictionary (multilingual)
  • BBC interview from December 2009 in which Frommer recites part of the Hunt Song (0818 broadcast: 3'30")


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The Naʼvi language Naʼvi Liʼfya leNaʼvi is a fictional constructed language originally made for the 2009 film Avatar In the film franchise the language is spoken by the Naʼvi a race of sapient humanoids indigenous to the extraterrestrial moon Pandora The language was created by Paul Frommer a professor at the USC Marshall School of Business with a doctorate in linguistics Naʼvi was designed to fit moviemaker James Cameron s conception of what the language should sound like in the film It had to be realistically learnable by the fictional human characters of the film and pronounceable by the actors but also not closely resemble any single human language NaʼviLiʼfya leNaʼviPronunciationˈnaʔviCreated byPaul FrommerDate2005Setting and usageAvatar and Avatar The Way of WaterPurposeconstructed languages artistic languagesfictional languagesNaʼviWriting systemnone in universe Latin scriptSourcesconstructed languages a priori languagesLanguage codesISO 639 3None mis Linguist List08nGlottologNoneIETFart x naviThis article contains IPA phonetic symbols Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols instead of Unicode characters For an introductory guide on IPA symbols see Help IPA When the film was released in 2009 Naʼvi had a growing vocabulary of about a thousand words but understanding of its grammar was limited to the language s creator 1 However this has changed subsequently as Frommer has expanded the lexicon to more than 2600 words 2 and has published the grammar thus making Naʼvi a relatively complete learnable and serviceable language Contents 1 Roots 2 Development 3 Structure and usage 3 1 Phonology and orthography 3 1 1 Vowels 3 1 2 Consonants 3 1 3 Sound change 3 2 Grammar 3 2 1 Nouns 3 2 2 Adjectives 3 2 3 Verbs 3 3 Lexicon 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksRoots EditThe Naʼvi language has its origins in James Cameron s early work on Avatar In 2005 while the film was still in scriptment form Cameron felt it needed a complete consistent language for the alien characters to speak He had written approximately thirty words for this alien language but wanted a linguist to create the language in full His production company Lightstorm Entertainment contacted the linguistics department at the University of Southern California seeking someone who would be interested in creating such a language Edward Finegan a professor of linguistics at USC thought that the project would appeal to Paul Frommer with whom he had co authored a linguistics textbook and so forwarded Lightstorm s inquiry on to him Frommer and Cameron met to discuss the director s vision for the language and its use in the film at the end of the meeting Cameron shook Frommer s hand and said Welcome aboard Based on Cameron s initial list of words which had a Polynesian flavor according to Frommer 3 the linguist developed three different sets of meaningless words and phrases that conveyed a sense of what an alien language might sound like one using contrasting tones one using varying vowel lengths and one using ejective consonants Of the three Cameron liked the sound of the ejectives most His choice established the phonology that Frommer would use in developing the rest of the Naʼvi language morphology syntax and an initial vocabulary a task that took six months Development EditThe Naʼvi vocabulary was created by Frommer as needed for the script of the movie By the time casting for Avatar began the language was sufficiently developed that actors were required to read and pronounce Naʼvi dialogue during auditions During shooting Frommer worked with the cast helping them understand their Naʼvi dialogue and advising them on their Naʼvi pronunciation stress and intonation Actors would often make mistakes in speaking Naʼvi In some cases those mistakes were plausibly explained as ones their human characters would make while learning the language in universe in other cases the mistakes were incorporated into the language Frommer expanded the vocabulary further in May 2009 when he worked on the Avatar video game which required Naʼvi words that had not been needed for the film script and thus had not yet been invented Frommer also translated into Naʼvi four sets of song lyrics that had been written by Cameron in English and he helped vocalists with their pronunciation during the recording of James Horner s Avatar score At the time of the film s release on December 18 2009 the Naʼvi vocabulary consisted of approximately 1000 words Work on the Naʼvi language has continued even after the film s release Frommer is working on a compendium which he plans to deliver to Fox in the near future 4 He hopes that the language will have a life of its own 5 and thinks it would be wonderful if the language developed a following 3 Since then it has developed a following as is evident through the increasing learner community of the language 6 The community s Lexical Expansion Project together with Frommer has expanded the lexicon by more than 50 percent Frommer also maintains a blog Na viteri where he regularly posts additions to the lexicon and clarifications on grammar Naʼviteri has been the source of the vast majority of Naʼvi growth independent of Frommer s contract with 20th Century Fox Structure and usage EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Naʼvi language was developed under three significant constraints First Cameron wanted the language to sound alien but pleasant and appealing to audiences Second since the storyline included humans who have learned to speak the language it had to be a language that humans could plausibly learn to speak And finally the actors would have to be able to pronounce their Naʼvi dialogue without unreasonable difficulty The language in its final form contains several elements which are uncommon in human languages such as verbal conjugation using infixes All Naʼvi linguistic elements are found in human languages but the combination is unique Phonology and orthography Edit Naʼvi lacks voiced plosives like b d ɡ but has the ejective consonants pʼ tʼ kʼ which are spelled px tx kx It also has the syllabic consonants ll and rr There are seven vowels a a e i i o u Although all the sounds were designed to be pronounceable by the human actors of the film there are unusual consonant clusters as in fngap fŋap metal 7 Naʼvi syllables may be as simple as a single vowel or as complex as skxawng moron or fngap above both CCVC The fictional language Naʼvi of Pandora is unwritten However the actual studio language is written in the Latin script for the actors of Avatar Some words include zisit year fpeio ceremonial challenge awve first aw one muia fair tireaioang spirit animal tskxe rock kllpxiltu territory uniltirantokx avatar dream walk body Vowels Edit There are seven monophthong vowels front backHigh i i u ʊ u ɪ i Mid ɛ e o o Low ae a a a There are additionally four diphthongs aw aw ew ew ay aj ey ej and two syllabic consonants ll l and rr r which mostly behave as vowels Note that the e is open mid while the o is close mid and that there is no oy The rr is strongly trilled and the ll is light plain never a dark velarized ɫ These vowels may occur in sequences as in the Polynesian languages Swahili and Japanese Each vowel counts as a syllable so that tsaleioae has six syllables tsa lɛ i o a e and meoauniaea has eight mɛ o a u ni a ɛ a Naʼvi does not have vowel length or tone but it does have contrastive stress tute person tute female person Although stress may move with derivation as here it is not affected by inflection case on nouns tense on verbs etc So for example the verb lu to be has stress on its only vowel the u and no matter what else happens to it the stress stays on that vowel lolu was l ol u lolangu was ugh l ol ang u etc Consonants Edit There are twenty consonants There are two Latin transcriptions one that more closely approaches the ideal of one letter per phoneme with the c and g for ts and ŋ the values they have in much of Eastern Europe and Polynesia respectively and a modified transcription used for the actors with the digraphs ts and ng used for those sounds In both transcriptions the ejective consonants are written with digraphs in x a convention that appears to have no external inspiration but could potentially be inspired by the Esperanto convention of writing x as a stand in for the circumflex Labial Alveolar Palatal Velar GlottalNasal m m n n ŋ ng g Plosive plain p p t t k k ʔ ʼ ejective pʼ px tʼ tx kʼ kx Affricate ts ts c Fricative voiceless f f s s h h voiced v v z z Approximant central w w ɾ r j y lateral l l The fricatives and the affricate f v ts s z h are restricted to the onset of a syllable the others may occur at the beginning or at the end though w y in final position are considered parts of diphthongs as they only occur as ay ey aw ew and may be followed by another final consonant as in skxawng moron However in addition to appearing before vowels f ts s may form consonant clusters with any of the unrestricted consonants the plosives and liquids glides apart from making for 39 clusters Other sequences occur across syllable boundaries such as Naʼvi naʔ vi and ikran ik ɾan banshee The plosives p t k are tenuis as in Spanish or French In final position they have no audible release as in Indonesian and other languages of Southeast Asia as well as in many dialects of English in words such as bat The r is flapped as in Spanish and Indonesian it sounds a bit like the tt or dd in the American pronunciation of the words latter ladder Sound change Edit The plosives undergo lenition after certain prefixes and prepositions The ejective consonants px tx kx become the corresponding plosives p t k the plosives and affricate p t ts k become the corresponding fricatives f s h and the glottal stop disappears entirely For example the plural form of po s he is ayfo they with the p weakening into an f after the prefix ay Lenition has its own significance when the plural prefix can optionally be omitted In the above example ayfo can be shortened to fo Similarly the plural of tsmukan brother can be smukan from aysmukan Grammar Edit Main article Na vi grammar Naʼvi has free word order For example the English I see you a common greeting in Naʼvi can be as follows in Naʼvi Oel ngati kameie Ngati oel kameie Oel kameie ngatiAll forms of I see you in Naʼvi are completely correct As sentences become more complex though some words like adjectives and negatives will have to stay in a more or less fixed position in the sentence depending on what the adjective or negative is describing Today is a good day Fitrr lu siltsana trr Siltsana trr fitrr luIn this case the adjective siltsan a good will need to stay with the noun trr day therefore limiting the sentence to fewer combinations on the construction of the sentence but as long as it follows or precedes the noun the sentence is fine By putting the attributive a before the adjective the adjective can be put after the noun Fitrr lu trr asiltsanMore information about this can be found in the Adjectives section Nouns Edit Nouns in Naʼvi show greater number distinctions than those in most human languages do besides singular and plural they not only have special dual forms for two of an item eyes hands lovers etc which are common in human language English has a remnant in both but also trial forms for three of an item which on Earth are only found with pronouns Gender is only occasionally and optionally marked The plural prefix is ay and the dual is me Both trigger lenition indicated by the signs rather than the hyphens that usually mark prefix boundaries In nouns which undergo lenition the plural prefix may be dropped so the plural of tokx body is either aysokx or just sokx Masculine and feminine nouns may be distinguished by suffix There are no articles words for a or the Nouns are declined for case in a tripartite system which is rare among human languages In a tripartite system there are distinct forms for the object of a clause as in he kicks the ball the agent of a transitive clause which has such an object as in he kicks the ball and the subject of an intransitive clause which does not have an object as in he runs An object is marked with the accusative suffix ti and an agent with the ergative suffix l while an intransitive subject has no case suffix The use of such case forms leaves the word order of Naʼvi largely free There are two other cases genitive in ya dative in ru as well as a topic marker ri The latter is used to introduce the topic of the clause and is somewhat equivalent to Japanese wa and the much less common English as for It preempts the case of the noun that is when a noun is made topical usually at the beginning of the clause it takes the ri suffix rather than the case suffix one would expect from its grammatical role For example in Oe riI TOPontunoseteyafulll ang ube PEJ Oe ri ontu teya l ang uI TOP nose full be PEJ My nose is full of his distasteful smell lit As for me my nose is full since the topic is I the subject nose is associated with me That is it s understood to be my nose Nose itself is unmarked for case as it s the subject of the intransitive verb to be However in most cases the genitive marker ya is used for this purpose Besides case the role of a noun in a clause may be indicated with adpositions Any adposition may occur as either as a preposition before the noun or as an enclitic after the noun a greater degree of freedom than English allows For example with you may be either hu nga or ngahu When used as enclitics they are much like the numerous cases found in Hungarian and Finnish When used as prepositions more along the lines of what English does certain of them trigger lenition One of the leniting prepositions is mi in as in mi sokx in the body This may cause some ambiguity with short plurals mi sokx could also be short for mi aysokx in the bodies 8 Naʼvi pronouns encode clusivity That is there are different words for we depending on whether the speaker is including his her addressee or not There are also special forms for the two of us with or without the addressee the three of us etc They do not inflect for gender although it is possible to distinguish he from she the distinction is optional The deferential forms of I and you are ohe and ngenga Possessive forms include ngeya your and peya her his He and she can optionally be differentiated as poan and poe The grammatical distinctions made by nouns are also made by pronouns Adjectives Edit Naʼvi adjectives are uninflected that is they do not agree with the noun they modify and may occur either before or after the noun They are marked by a syllable a which is attached on the side closest to the noun For example a long river can be expressed either as ngim along ATTRkilvanriverngim a kilvanlong ATTR river a long river or as kilvanrivera ngimATTR longkilvan a ngimriver ATTR long a long river The free word order holds for all attributives Genitives possessives and relative clauses can also either precede or follow the noun they modify The latter especially allows for great freedom of expression The attributive affix a is only used when an adjective modifies a noun Predicative adjectives instead take the be verb lu kilvanriverngimlonglubekilvan ngim luriver long be The river is long Verbs Edit Verbs are conjugated for tense and aspect but not for person That is they record distinctions like I am I was I would but not like I am we are s he is Conjugation relies exclusively on infixes which are like suffixes but go inside the verb To hunt for example is taron but hunted is t ol aron with the infix ol There are two positions for infixes after the onset optional consonant s of the penultimate syllable and after the onset of the final syllable Because many Na vi verbs have two syllables these commonly occur on the first and last syllable In monosyllabic words like lu be they both appear after the initial onset keeping their relative order The first infix position is taken by infixes for tense aspect mood or combinations thereof also appearing in this position are participle reflexive and causative forms the latter two of which may co occur with a tense aspect mood infix by preceding it Tenses are past recent past present unmarked future and immediate future aspects are perfective completed or contained and imperfective ongoing or uncontained The aspectual forms are not found in English but are somewhat like the distinction between having done and was doing taron hunt hunts t im aron hunt REC just hunted t ay aron hunt FUT will hunt t er aron hunt IMPV hunting t ol aron hunt PFV hunted t i r m aron hunt REC IMPV was just hunting Tense and aspect need not be marked when they can be understood by context or elsewhere in the sentence The second infix position is taken by infixes for affect speaker attitude whether positive or negative and for evidentiality uncertainty or indirect knowledge For example in the greeting in the section on nouns Oel ngati kameie I See you the verb kame to See is inflected positively as kam ei e to indicate the pleasure the speaker has in meeting you In the subsequent sentence Oeri ontu teya langu My nose is full of his smell however the phrase teya lu is full is inflected pejoratively as teya l ang u to indicate the speaker s distaste at the experience Examples with both infix positions filled t irm ar ei on hunt REC IMPV LAUD was just hunting The speaker is happy about it whether due to success or just the pleasure of the hunt t ay ar ang on hunt FUT PEJ will hunt The speaker is anxious about or bored by itLexicon Edit The Naʼvi language currently has over 2 600 words These include a few English loan words such as kunsip gunship The complete dictionary including the odd inflectional form is available online at http dict navi com Additionally the community of speakers is working with Dr Frommer to further develop the language Naʼvi is a very modular language and the total number of usable words far exceeds the 2 600 dictionary words For example rol to sing tirusol the act of singing or ngop to create ngopyu creator Workarounds using existing words also abound in the Naʼvi corpus such as eltu lefngap metallic brain for computer and palulukantsyip little thanator for cat See also EditKiliki language Fictional language List of constructed languagesReferences Edit Do You Speak Na vi Giving Voice To Avatar Aliens NPR December 15 2009 Retrieved 16 December 2009 DictNa vi Online Dictionary Retrieved 30 June 2020 a b Milani Matteo November 24 2009 An interview with Paul Frommer Alien Language Creator for Avatar Unidentified Sound Object Retrieved January 9 2010 Sancton Julian December 1 2009 Brushing up on Na vi the Language of Avatar Vanity Fair Archived from the original on January 8 2010 Retrieved January 16 2010 Boucher Geoff November 20 2009 USC professor creates an entire alien language for Avatar Los Angeles Times Retrieved January 16 2010 Language of Avatar under study UBC Media Releases July 28 2011 Retrieved October 25 2011 Na vi la langue d Avatar L express 1 December 2009 When mi is used as an enclitic however the noun is not lenited tokxmi in the body xokxmi in the bodies Further reading Edit Wikinews has related news Elvish Klingon and Na vi Constructed languages gain foothold in film Frommer Paul Zimmer Benjamin December 19 2009 Some highlights of Na vi Language Log Retrieved January 9 2010 Milani Matteo November 24 2009 An interview with Paul Frommer Alien Language Creator for Avatar Unidentified Sound Object Retrieved January 9 2010 Sancton Julian December 1 2009 Brushing up on Na vi the Language of Avatar Vanity Fair Archived from the original on January 8 2010 Retrieved January 9 2010 Wilhelm Maria Mathison Dirk 2009 James Cameron s Avatar A Confidential Report on the Biological and Social History of Pandora New York City t HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 06 189675 0 Zimmer Benjamin December 4 2009 Skxawng The New York Times Retrieved January 9 2010 This includes a sound recording of Frommer saying several phrases in Naʼvi External links Edit Language portal Wikimedia Commons has media related to Na vi language Wikibooks has a book on the topic of Na vi Naviteri org Paul Frommer s blog about the Naʼvi language LearnNavi org Community forums Na vi language learning resources dictionary multilingual grammar guide and more Kelutral org Modern resources lessons and community for learning the Na vi Language Dict Na vi com Naʼvi English online dictionary multilingual BBC interview from December 2009 in which Frommer recites part of the Hunt Song 0818 broadcast 3 30 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Naʼvi language amp oldid 1138214556, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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