Mudeweian Stenza
Writing System
The Stenza use a logographic writing system, depicting syllables and even entire words as abstract symbols, relying on a highly developed system of determinatives to convey contextual information (such as tone, part of speech, and in the case of written names, clan and species information (the latter mostly used when discussing or addressing outsiders or other heterospecifics, such as Ta'zhen)).
Geographical Distribution
Morphology
Lexemes as Applied to Names
Most Stenza names are derived from common or uncommon terminology (and older names will have meaning that has been buried in the Collective for quite a while, and is harder to access than other information). As such, this distinguishes the lexeme related to a name from the lexeme related to the term itself, much the same as with English lexemes "EAT" and "EATER".
Affixes
Use of adjectives in Mudeweian Stenza is incredibly rare. Instead, affixes are used to convey information about a noun or verb.
Descriptive
These alter the form of the word in order to add an ending such as "-ka/-ika/-oka" and similar ("-kha/-khei" is a rare variant of this used by several clans, but is not seen in the standardized form of the language for state business). For example, a Stenza might, on learning of the Earth religion Catholicism, describe a practitioner of that religion as "Katoika", but the religion itself as "Katlite".
Plural
Plural suffixes are softer-sounding, such as "-ei/-en/-ive/etc." They are much more varied and case-specific, being highly dependent on the original spelling and sound of the root word in order to work. For an example, a Stenza might describe one pedophile as a "paška", but a group of such filth as "pašei".
The Adjectival Form ḍevúḍevú
"ḍevúḍevú" is a Stenza word which literally means "something which is itself", and describes a particular word form used to express the ineffable qualities of a given object. Typically this is applied to religious concepts ("úlêúlê", which translates to either "space has spaceyness" or simply "spaceyness" depending on context; "ùrpǒùrpǒ" is frequently used to describe those qualities of a star as a physical object that make it especially suited to house a divine entity, as well as the mere religious fact that this is what stars do in the universe as the Stenza understand it). It is especially common (to the point it's a stereotype) for religious experts to use this form a lot while attempting to convey key concepts to students.
The kela
The kela is a mark (often ' in non-Stenza writing systems) that serves as a separator, denoting two parts of a word which must be said with equal emphasis (i.e. Ta'zhen, Saeh'han, Lan'tha, Y'eṣto (and the derivative phrase "Ȟây’eṣtîkoyæ’!")). While ' may be used in transliteration for other purposes (such as for T'zu-Crae), this is distinct from a kela in function and is never used in the Stenza writing system.
Syntax
Gender as Applied to Names
Most of the Stenza dialects recognize four grammatical genders: male, female, they, and it. "Male" and "female" are reserved exclusively for deities, intelligent life, and animals (as well as their corpses and "it" is reserved for inanimate objects and plants in certain cases. "They" is a funny case in that it can apply to deities, intelligent individuals who take the pronoun up for themselves, plants in certain instances, and spacecraft. This property informs the morphological "shape" of nouns, including proper nouns. (For an example of the type of shift this can induce, a phrase such as "reṣaka ṣai", meaning something like "tiny has privileges", can be warped into the feminine "Ta'zhen", or the masculine "Šer'ka".) The four genders are used primarily to convey general information about the object or person under discussion (such as whether it is an object or a person under discussion), which is otherwise excluded, particularly in written work where determinatives are involved. Most often, the names of individuals are aligned with the gender the individual wishes to express, although individuals outside of Stenza culture have been known to inadvertently cause confusion. (Angstrom, a female Albarian, has sometimes been mischaracterized in Stenza coverage of the final Rally of the Twelve Galaxies as male or a plant of some type. Her name does not translate neatly, and standards in reporting have gotten much more lax by this point.)Phonetics
| Labials | Dentals | Retroflex | Palatals | Velars | Uvular | Glottal | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Plosives | p | t d | ʈ ɖ | c | k | q | ʔ |
| Fricatives | f v ɸ | s z ʒ š ž | ʂ ʐ | x ȟ | χ | ħ ʕ ɦ | |
| Affricates | ʦ ʣ č ǰ | ||||||
| Nasals | m | n | ɳ | ||||
| Liquids | ⱱ | l r ɾ ɬ | ʎ | ʟ | |||
| Semivowels | ɥ | ɹ | ɰ |
| Front | Central | Back | |
|---|---|---|---|
| High | i ü | ɨ ʉ | ɯ u |
| Close | e ɪ ʏ ö | ɘ ɵ | ɤ o o̞ |
| Open | ɛ œ æ | ɜ ɞ ə | ʌ ɔ |
| Low | ä ɐ | ɑ ɒ |

Comments