and

Conjunctions in Hanian can at times be fun. This is true with the few words used to say and; used to combine concepts together with each other in a sentence. In Hanian ke is a base. It’s used as a combiner, meaning to add without applying force, energy or effort. If one isn’t sure which one to use, simply use ke.

ke“and else”; used as conventional and – [ke]

kezand second, and also; used for groups as connection [kez]
* husband and wife; planet and moonall groups regardless of equal or non equal.

keadand now, and immediately, and this time [ke ; ad]

daukenand then, and after  [dau ; ken]

kenarnow and then, now this and then that, now and later [ke ; nar]

ekevaand / or [e ; ke ; va]
* do both / all, or this is the result; also used as an “and do, or get out of the way”
this is rude.

ekez – and / or also [e ; kez]
*this is kind of to say you can have either or, but you can also choose both.

 

Mods

A few quick Hanian modifiers:

In Hanian suffixes and prefixes do not exist, yet modifiers do. Plenty of them in fact. So here are a few of them dealing with categorizing in a very specific manner.

zlish – enable, enabled, something which makes something happen or helps

vad – doing it now; at this very moment, is now, being, etc (used for emphasis with verbs)
taulotau ; lo in the past; was in the past
oltaol ; ta– in the future, will be or become in the future

ratara ; ta thing which belongs to someone, mod for mine, yours, etc

end – to or of (location)
ond – location modifier

dovodo ; vo person who does

tapt – thing that does (on it’s own) like a program…
taptotap ; to machine, thing that lets you do X

The most famous modifier? That would have to be she, which means to take any concept and change it to the opposite meaning, usually for emphasis. So to say anti – love is to say hate with a bit of extra flair to it. It’s not pronounced like he or she though, but rather like sheh.  The e sounds like in the beginning of Shelby or Sherlock. Stick an eh on it and you’re doing great!

All of these are placed before the word they modify. It’s just a small sample of what’s going to be available when it is all said and done. Not sure if this exists in other languages or if it’s a new word form.

ten bases

The first ten bases:

What is a base? It’s the smallest fragment of Hanian, each taking several meanings. They are used to create and define words in the language. Without it, you will have a harder time learning the language since about 85% of the words have most of their meaning encoded in these bases. Think of it this way, you use the bases to discover obvious and hidden meanings from words you find in the dictionary. Cool isn’t it?

ti – shining, bright, obvious – pronounce: tih
In many cases ti implies something bright and shining or that is bigger or more obvious.

o – individuality, me, I, voluntary – pronounce oh
o stands for the individual and for actions which are voluntary and not involving force.

va – go, move forward, motion, progress, movement – pronounce vah
It’s a movement and motion base, but is often also used to denote going and progressing.

uz – dark, darkness, night, black – pronounce uz
Anything involving darkness or night or the coloration of black; or the absence of light

ch – awareness, focus, paying attention – pronounce ch
ch base is also used for all elements such as water / fluids, earth / solids, dry, and so forth.

au – time, frequency, vibration, ripples – pronounce ow or au
In all cases it’s involving timing and vibrations, in some cases it can also denotes dimensions / alternatives.

iz – chaos, disorganized, messy – pronounce is
It is everything which is opposite of order; loud and disorderly, crazy and scattered about, damage.

bo – sweet, grow, farm; classification “grower” – pronounce boh
This involves everything with being sweet as well as farming and growing things.

eg – out, exclusive, external, without, out of, pushed out of – pronounce eg
Everything involving the location or determination of out as compared to in or pushed instead of pulled.

dj – structure, building, home, house. architecture – pronounce deye or di (diana)
Anything involving buildings and ones home as well as architectural things.

Learn these bases and you’ll find it much easier to work with words in Hanian. The list also gives you an idea of how diverse the base fragments are in the language. The whole list of bases is called the hoala (ho ; a ; la) which basically means source, beginning, end. Simply: the source / basis from beginning to end.

I’ll post more bases over a period of time to make them easier to learn and will show pronunciations better in Hanian. Once done I’ll show some cool stuff in regards to them, such as how even on larger scales they relate to each other.

Again, if you like this, comment and find two people you think might be interested in this language and send them here.