Jump to content

Outlander

From The Lonely Galaxy Wiki
Revision as of 18:50, 6 February 2026 by Lurker (talk | contribs)

This article is about the language. For a resident of the Outer Belt or Moonlitter, see The Outlands

Outlander Grammar

Phonology

Like all yinrih languages, Outlander possesses a very small phoneme inventory when analyzed from a human perspective. The language relies instead on subtle changes in pitch and volume to carry most of the meaning.

ItΓÇÖs mostly a CTRL+C, CTRL+V of Commonthroat with the following changes:

  • Gemination is allowed within morphemes, not just at morpheme boundaries. Yips may not be geminated.
  • In addition to short, long, early, and late, there is an overlong timing. Overlong syllables occur in a few restricted environments.
  • Two new tone contours: peaking (low high low) and dipping (high low high)
  • Two new strength contours: cresting (weak strong weak) and troughing (strong weak strong)
  • Overlong syllables may only occur alongside one of these new contours.

Vowels

short weak short strong long weak long strong
High Whines d f D F
Low Whines b c B C
High Growls j k J K
Low Growls g h G H
High Grunts n p N P
Low Grunts l m L M

Contour Midpoints

Sound Symbol
a low
e high
o weak
u strong

Consonants

Sound symbol
huff q
chuff r
yip s

Grammar

Outlander uses a symmetric voice system. Focus is marked by syntax, with the focus coming first in the sentence. Verbs are marked for the role of the focus, with actor, object, benefactor, reason, being indicated. Other possible forms include locative and instrumental.

Word order is FVA (focus verb arguments).

Order is Actor, Object, Benefactor,

Pronouns

Much like Spanish or French, Outlander uses a politeness distinction in its pronouns. This distinction is used in the third person as well as the second person as is seen in Spanish or French.

The Outlander term for this is qghrh /huff, short low strengthening growl; chuff, short low strong growl/, which means obligation or duty. It conveys the social relationship between the speaker and the referent of the pronoun.

The lowest form of obligation is transactional. This is the default form you use when youΓÇÖre not sure what else to use.

The next form is the amicable. ItΓÇÖs used between friends. In some more pious corners of Moonlitter, and especially in the indipendent spacer city-state WayfarersΓÇÖ Haven, humans are always addressed with amicable pronouns even in situations where the transactional form would be appropriate. The transactional/amicable distinction is quickly evolving into a species distinction.

The highest form is the familial, which is used between parents and their pups and between litter mates. Some groups of very good friends may use familial pronouns among themselves, but this is not universal. It usually occurs when friends meet as pups and stay close into adulthood.

ItΓÇÖs very important to note that obligation is seen as a reciprocal relationship. Addressing someone with familial pronouns doesnΓÇÖt jsut mean ΓÇ£I think of you as familyΓÇ¥ but also ΓÇ£I expect you to treat me like familyΓÇ¥. Using more familiar pronouns when a less familiar form is expected is often seen as rude or even vulgar in some contexts, especially when a customer addresses an employee, or when employees of a business address one another. ItΓÇÖs seen as burdening the listener with unwelcome obligations or implying a level of closeness that hasnΓÇÖt yet been earned.

Personal Pronouns

1st person

SINGULAR PLURAL INCLUSIVE PLURAL EXCLUSIVE (Moonlitter only)
lum pan lumq

2nd and 3rd person

Transactional

Person SINGULAR PLURAL
2ND PERSON rb rB
3RD PERSON rc rC

Amicable

Person SINGULAR PLURAL
2ND PERSON sg sG
3RD PERSON sj sJ

Familial

Person SINGULAR PLURAL
2ND PERSON qm qM
3RD PERSON qp qP

Reverential

Person SINGULAR PLURAL
2ND PERSON rgr rgr
3RD PERSON rkr rkr

Demonstrative Pronouns

DEIXIS SINGULAR PLURAL
PROXIMAL Lr Lrl
DISTAL Mr Mrm

Nouns

Attributive and possessive postpositions.

Ooutlander distinguishes possession and attribution. possession is marked with the postposition n /short high weak grunt/, and attribution is marked with the attributive postposition g /short low weak growl/. g covers situations such as composition and association, while n refers specifically to possession. As a rough rule, you use n whenever English would use -ΓÇÖs.

sPL    g   mrrBqqb
animal ATT healer
veterinarian

Jh    g   sFb
grass ATT sea
steppe 

Mr   khqkh n   gqqgh
that guy   POS tail
That guy's tail

Verbs

Verbs inflect for the semantic role of the main noun in the clause, called the focus or the subject. This is different from its syntactic role. In the English sentence The dog bit the man, the dog is the syntactic subject and the semantic agent, while the man is the syntactic object and the semantic patient. In English, we flip this relationship by using the passive voice. The man was bitten by the dog. Here, The man is the syntactic subject but the semantic patient. The dog is now an optional oblique argument syntacticlaly, but itΓÇÖs still the semantic agent.

verb paradigm

Focus NON-PAST PAST
Actor - -qJ
Object -sd -sD
Benefactor -rn -rN
Reason -qln -qLN
Locative -sfb -sFB
Instrumental -rjk -rJK

Nonpast Tense Actor Focus

bfb gkg lpl
bfb gkg-0     lpl
pup climb-ACT tree
The pup climbs the tree

Past Tense Actor Focus

bfb gkgqJ  lpl
bfb gkg-qJ lpl
pup climb-ACT.P tree
The pup climbed the tree.
The pup was climbing the tree.

Nonpast Tense Object Focus

lpl gkgsd bfb
lpl  gkg-sd       bfb
tree climb-OBJ    pup
the tree is climbed by the pup.

Past Tense Object Focus

lpl gkgsD bfb
lpl  gkgsD       bfb
tree climb-OBJ.P pup
The tree was climbed by the pup.

Nonpast Tense Benefactor Focus

lpl gkgrn bfb
lpl  gkg-rn bfb
tree climb-BEN.NP pup
For the tree, the pup climbs [something].

Past Tense Benefactor Focus

lpl gkgrN bfb
lpl  gkg-rN bfb
tree climb-BEN.P pup
For the tree, the pup climbed [something]

The order of arguments

I donΓÇÖt think IΓÇÖve mentioned this before, but hereΓÇÖs how the different verb endings change syntax.

agent verb-ACT patient benefactor/indirect object patient verb-OBJ agent benefactor benefactor verb-BEN agent patient cause verb-CAU agent(?) patient benefactor

Marking Uncertainty

Outlander marks uncertainty, which covers both interrogatives and a mood similar to CommonthroatΓÇÖs nonauthoritative.

Uncertainty is marked with a particle placed at the beginning of the sentence, it is a reduplicated and reduced form of the following syllable, phonologically separate from the following word.

The particle consists of the onset consonant, if any, of the following syllable, followed by a single short plain vowel nearest to the start of the vowel of the following syllable. Rising strengthening vowels will become low weak, dipping weakening vowels will become high strong, and so on. When the following word is already a single short plain syllable, the particle is a reduplication of the whole word.

Etymologically, this particle may have evolved out of a characteristic stutter when the speaker is unsure of what theyΓÇÖre saying.

rb sPsPqJ lum
rb     sPsP-qJ    lum
2sg.TR seek-ACT.P 1sg
You were looking for me.
rb rb sPsPqJ lum
rb   rb     sPsP-qJ    lum
UNC  2sg.TR seek-ACT.P 1sg
Were you looking for me?
You were looking for me?
l lum sPsPsD rb?
l   lum sPsP-sD    rb
UNC 1sg seek-OBJ.P 2sg.TR
You were looking for ME?

Reflexive phrases

A reflexive meaning can be given to a noun phrase by using the word beb /overlong peaking weak whine/ which means self or soul along with the possessive postposition n.

rb     n   beb
2sg.TR POS self
yourself

Yip Stems

Yips cannot end a syllable, but some words and affixes end in an implied yip that manifests in different ways when an affix is added.

For example the word rgug(s) (mud volcano, geyser) is pronounced and written rgug when in the singular (which is unfortunately identical to the word for cloaca, which many pups and pups at heart find amusing.) In the plural, we would expect *rgugq, but because of the implied yip, the word takes the form of the plural suffix used for words ending in a consonant, -ql, yielding rgugqql.

So for yip stems, if a following suffix ends in a vowel, the yip is pronounced. If the suffix begins with a huff or chuff, the huff or chuff is geminated.

Imperatives

The imperative is formed with a special imperative pronoun kr /short high strong growl, chuff/. It is in the 2nd person and does not reflect obligation or number in either the standard Moonlitter or Partisan dialects, but the dialect spoken at PilgrimsΓÇÖ Rest, and subsequently at WayfarersΓÇÖ Haven, has innovated a plural form krql.

kr qjK sg n rKGq
kr    qjK-0    sg      n   rKG-q
2.IMP wash-ACT 2sg.AMI POS paw-PL
Wash your paws.

Verbs in imperative sentences can be in the past tense. In this case they carry the notion that something should have been done but wasnΓÇÖt.

kr qjKqJ sg n rKGq
kr    qjK-qJ     sg      n   rKG-q
2.IMP wash-ACT.P 2sg.AMI POS paw-PL
You should have washed your paws.

Verbs can also be inflected for other focuses besides the actor focus.

sg n rKGq qjKsd kr
sg      n   rKG-q  qjK-sd   kr
2sg.AMI POS paw-PL wash-OBJ 2.IMP
Your paws must be washed.
Your paws, wash them.

sg n rKGq qjKsD kr
sg      n   rKG-q  qjK-sD kr
2sg.AMI POS paw-PL wash-OBJ 2.IMP
Your paws should have been washed.
Your paws, you should have washed them.

Expressing similes

mlem /short low strong grunt; overlong peaking strengthening grunt/ means likeness or image or ΓÇ£something similar to something elseΓÇ¥. To express similes, you follow a noun phrase with g mlem eg mrBqqb g mlem literally ΓÇ£healer likenessΓÇ¥ means ΓÇ£like a healerΓÇ¥.

To say ΓÇ£X is like YΓÇ¥ you use the copula sb, which per an earlier post is actually transitive. It means that the actor is among the set of entities denoted by the object.

mqgrrgsdq sb rgugq g mlem
mqgrrgsd-q sb-0    rgug-q    g   mlem
opinion-PL COP-ACT cloaca-PL ATT likeness
Opinions are like Cloacas.

g mlem may have fossilized into a postpositive that can be appended to whole sentences and not just noun phrases to simply mean ΓÇ£likeΓÇ¥

More uses for the attributive postposition

The locative focus may be used with time phrases

verb-verb compounds

expressing inclination or desire

You can use the verb qlem to smell like, to feel an emotion in front of a subordinate verb to mean to be inclined to. Unlike CommonthroatΓÇÖs serial verb constructions, the second verb is inflected in the subordinate state.

lum qlem bqrMr sjGq
lum qlem-0         SUB-rMr-0  sjGq
1sg smell_like-ACT bq-eat-ACT fruit
I smell like eating fruit.

The verb endings must match (for now).

sjGq qlemsd bqrMrsd lum
sjGq  qlem-sd        SUB-rMr-sd lum 
fruit smell_like-OBJ bq-eat-OBJ 1sg
It's fruit a smell like eating.