Hi! I'm just taking my first look at High Valyrian and I have some noob questions:
Rytsas, Leoboiko
s (*Liobaeko·s, maybe?). Sorry it's taken me so long to reply: I rarely read the forums, and only noticed your questions because Qvaak drew my attention to this thread.
1. When should the aorist tense be used, as opposed to perfect? Is it the thing where aorist is punctual, and perfect implies continuing state? Or something else?
The name "aorist" is confusing if you only know it through Greek grammar (which, admittedly, most people who know the word do). Outside of Greek it tends to be used quite diferently: it refers to something which is a general truth. So, if we're talking about Greek, it's specifically like the
gnomic aorist, or more commonly the present tense. This distinction is actually quite easy to get in English: as a (simplistic) rule of thumb, the Valyrian present tense is our "present continuous," and the Valyrian aorist is our "simple present." So:
- Dakon "I am running" (e.g. "... from a horde of wights; I suggest you do the same!")
- Dakossin "I run" (e.g. "... every morning, to stay in shape.")
This is also the verb form in the infamous
Valar Morghūlis/Dohaeris, conventionally glossed "All men must die/serve." Because the aorist implies something is always true, it can sometimes be translated with "must," especially when used with a collective noun. Let's play with that a bit:
- Valar morghūlis (col, aor) "All men (must) die."
- Valar morghūljas (col, pres) "All men are dying."
- Vala morghūlis (sing, aor) "A man dies."
- Vala morghūljas (sing, pres) "A man is dying."
I thought I explain at least the material in my first paragraph over at
[[High Valyrian Verb Conjugation]]. I should look it over again to see how it can be made more clear. Any suggestions? It's difficult, since I am essentially the only writer on the Valyrian languages over at the wiki, so it can be difficult for me to tell if I'm being clear or not.
2. Quoting the wiki:
The vast majority of Class II stems end in j, l, n, ñ, or r. There seem to be some rare exceptions to this rule, but thus far none are known. Stems may end in multiple consonants, e.g. mirre "any," morghe "dead."
2a. In morgh-, cited in the same paragraph, the "two consonants" are /r/ and /ɣ/, right? So when we say that "no exceptions are known" to the /j, l, n, ñ, r/ rule, do we mean just one of the consonants of the cluster?
2b. Litse "beautiful" in the vocabulary is listed as a Class II stem. Is that correct? If so, isn't it one of the exceptions?
Hmm, I think I intended that list to refer specifically to stems that end in one consonant, and for consonant clusters to be treated separately. But difficult to be sure at this point.
3. I'm in doubt about where the stem ends to form diminutives. Please tell me that zaldrīzes + ītsos becomes cute Spanish-like zaldrīzītsos
That is correct, so far as I know. Take off everything from the "stem vowel" on, then add
-ītsos.
4.
From the wiki vocabulary:
zokla, 1☽ → zoklītsos, 2☉
riña, 1☽ → riñītsos, 3☉
I love that you're using the ☽/☉-symbol system! That was originally my idea, and even DJP thought it was cool, but I decided it was safer to use abbreviations on the wiki.
Is the class of zoklītsos a mistake, given that "second declension nouns have the stem vowel -y"?
Since third declension has -o, it looks better for -ītsos nouns…
Absolutely! Again, since I'm virtually the only one working on this, I don't get a lot of proofreading. So if you see what appears to be a mistake, then it probably is one! In particular, I think I make a lot of mistakes regarding noun declension class number. There is no possible way for
zoklītsos to be second declension, sorry about that.
Assuming 3. above is correct, would Dænerys' three little dragons in nom. paucal be zaldrizītsun?
Formally that is correct. But I warn you that we know very little about how the paucal is used. I don't think we've seen any examples that weren't "relexes." When I did my
Valun Jomorghūlis joke, David said that was iffy because I "was using 'some' to mean 'certain'" (he felt the joke would only work with the contrast to
valar morghūlis right there). That's about all we know about how the paucal behaves "in the wild." Feel free to ask DJP if
zaldrizītsun will work for "Dænerys' three little dragons," and let us know what he says!
Also, I just noticed tāemitsos which is stated to be a diminutive, and it's 3☉ as I'd expect. But why short -itsos and not -ītsos…?
Yeah, another mistake on my part: that
i is definitely long!