Saturday, 4 September 2010

To Whom I'm talking to

 Hello.

What is important to know about Akkia?

The urgent information is that there's really a secret, and the secret is To Whom I'm talking to, that is the language works differently depending on the listener, not the speaker -- try different ways to talk to yourself too! It's wonderful.

You can say: -- "Su tykkä tutu", in the Accusative.

The secret is that "Tykkä si tutu", "Tutu tykkä si", or "Su tutu tykkä" are all the same.

They all mean "I like you", but we marked the Object, so the meaning is clear! Very clear.

But now, if you say "Su tykkä tu", leaving it unmarked, it's not Accusative anymore, but Stative, and the Stative is always SVO -- so, if you say "Tu tykkä su", you changed the meaning, and now it's "You like me".

So, when should I use one and another? Do you see?

It depends on who you're talking to, in fact.

If it's a close person, you should use the Accusative, but with a more distant person, change the Alignment.

The Stative is the formal sentence, even more than the Ergative, the second Alignment, but there are also other options into rendering a sentence in Akkia which make her more and more beautiful.

The great question is that wizards usually know who are the people they're talking to, but commons get confused because they don't have Magic to reveal to whom you're talking to, so I need to get to the basics in here.

People are not important simply because of things like money, power and status.

There are things which make a person really important.

One example is what they did in the recent past.

Other is what their family have done, but in this case in the distant past.

That's difficult to know that things just looking to a person.

We use Magic to reveal these kind of things.

But if you don't have the chance, try starting a little formal, like using the Ergative and not the Accusative, marking the valency on the Verb, or using the dictionary form as the form of Past tense, normal to Ergative AND the Honorable together. Usually, the dictionary form you could call "infinitive" is ready to be used as the Present tense in the Accusative, and the Continuous form is deduced by context, or else, marked.

Then, -- "Suyer tykkäs tuta" -- is the correct Ergative sentence in the example.

Or else, you can use the Honorable -- "Shu tykkäimmeri tu".

Once you hear the language the person is using, that says a lot on a person, you can adapt yourself on the way.

Of course, we don't start a Verlaeksi (conversation) using exactly this sentence, but it's here as the example.

It ends up in people testing others to see the language they use.

Why? I can tell you the Akkia secret now.

The secret is how you talk to yourself, and use the internal dialogue to define to whom you're talking to. We cannot know this. This secret language, just to say a true little secret, is shown in conversation because people define themselves all the time, like for example using gender related words -- our language have different words of "I/me" to show gender, and this ends showing who is the person, just to start with.

If you're a male using a female gender for "I/me", it means you want people to refer to you as "she/her".

I have another language project more specific than this.

I'll talk about her in other posts, not exactly now.

The reflex of the internal dialogue can be seen in conversation all the time.

It can be seen by the words a person use, if you use the "ifu" or the "hon", that is "common language words" or "honorable words", but you can get even more specific than this and define the relation level you "want" to share with a specific person.

Of course, our language is a Topic language, by the way.

And we have a great appreciation on opinion.

We try to take a person's opinion seriously, because it shows who you are.

Opinion can set a Verlaeksi (conversation) to threat or oportunity.

I'll not spend all the day saying this to you again and again, because we all know we are measuring threat all the time, and one nice tip is to ask yourself in your internal dialogue what are the consequences of making a person more "close" than needed, or than we really want. But once you understand the secret, you'll get the right words and transform threat into oportunity.

Now we're going to see a new vocabulary.

They're words you got to know very well, because they're important.

It's a list to keep our studies going on.

Akkia basic vocabulary –– list

# addia –– (the) being

# oke –– a living being –– affix: ke

# shish –– a spirit

# anna, ovvel (ae) –– person

# nimbou –– animal

# bou –– obou –– tree

# Eah –– name of the Tree of Infinite Fruits, which exists between universes (5)

# Eahleischtrellas –– the fruits of the Tree –– new souls that shall be born

# Nekken –– the Nothingness

# eal –– idol (ealyng, lych)

# odýr –– old, elder

# utle –– young –– utlebrut –– youth

# dýr –– adult

# doad –– parents

# jijoo –– baby –– vlet –– infant

# vletkaya –– infancy

# aloa –– child –– to play

# icchi –– father

# ahka –– mother

# nanaka –– kemmyt –– family

# shafa –– boy –– khoda –– girl

# fór –– son –– téa –– daughter

# kouste –– uncle –– toaste –– aunt

# oste –– cousin (gl –– genderless)

# edé (iwei) –– grandmother –– odé (iwoi) –– grandfather

# defa –– kessiperu –– nana –– relative

# otkae –– to wish –– to like

# Otkjung, Bondkjung –– Nana –– darling

# okoro –– heart

# okoronimbou, plýt –– pet

# hame, verdyr –– horse

# ielaoh –– mount –– ieloah –– to mount

# kisseh –– cat –– or: Naekle (male), Koayli (female)

# auka –– dog

# kyot –– eagle –– iukyot –– the media

# ikyet –– marraige –– ikyat –– union –– ikyot –– festival

# ikyari –– to put together –– to unite

# hukku –– owl

# hu –– with –– or use: -lawa, which marks the possession

# hooi –– bird –– hooilyt

# käwa –– crow: a black bird

# kallammoi –– lizard

# makuhgang –– reptile

# tyker –– reptilian

These are all "ifu" words you have to know.

Don't forget the Akkia secret, and turn your internal dialogue into language all the time, so you must probably know yourself better enough to make better choices in your relations with people in general, some more specific than others.

I hope you're enjoying the reading.

Stay Plugged.

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