💾 Archived View for yujiri.xyz › spem › demonstrative-quantifier.gmi captured on 2023-01-29 at 16:58:16. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content

View Raw

More Information

⬅️ Previous capture (2022-06-03)

➡️ Next capture (2024-07-09)

-=-=-=-=-=-=-

yujiri.xyz

The Spem conlang

The Spem conlang: demonstrative- and quantifier-type compounds

Demonstrative is the technical term for words like 'this' and 'that'. English has only the two; where 'this' denotes something near or associated with the speaker and 'that' denotes something not so. Most other languages that I've seen (Spanish, Latin, Japanese) separate 'that' into one that denotes something near or associated with the listener, and one that denotes something distant from both of you. So basically a first, second and third person.

Spem has four person-distinctions for this. A first person, a second person, a third person, and a "first and second" person, which denotes something near or associated with both the speaker and the listener.

There's also a time axis. In English (and as far as I can tell the other languages I've seen with three) this/that has a connotation of "the present or the near future" versus the past. For example:

Note also the existence of *place* versions of the demonstratives: *here* and *there*. There are also time versions: *now* and *then*.

Spem uses a prefix-suffix structure for these words: there are prefixes for each of the demonstrative persons, and suffixes for thing, place, time, and a couple others. There are also quantifier prefixes, which allow building words like "everywhere", "somewhere", "often" and "never".

Prefixes

For demonstrative persons, remove the initial *d* to form the past version.

Suffixes

Examples

Here are some use examples for the demonstrative persons:

contact

subscribe via RSS