What led you here? A school assignment? Let me know.
Here’s an advanced puzzle straight from the Linguistics Challenege Puzzles website. My answers are in bold, my notes below the blockquote.
The following sentences are from the Orkhono-Yeniseyan language, an ancient language of Western Asia. Scrolls containing passages in this language were found between the Orkhon and Yenisey rivers.
1. Oghuling baliqigh alti. ‘Your son conquered the city.’
2. Baz oghuligh yangilti. ‘The vassal betrayed the son.’
3. Siz baliqimizin buzdingiz. ‘You all destroyed our city.’
4. Qaghanimiz oghulingin yangilti. ‘Our king betrayed your son.’
5. Oghulim barqingin buzdi. ‘My son destroyed your house.’
6. Siz qaghanigh yangiltingiz. ‘You all betrayed the king.’
7. Biz baliqigh altimiz. ‘We conquered the city.’
8. Bazim qaghanimizin yangilti . ‘My vassal betrayed our king.’
Translate the following into English:
Qaghan baliqigh alti The King conquered the city.
Men barqigh buzdim. I destroyed the house.*
Translate into the Orkhono-Yeniseyan language:
The son conquered your city. Oghul baliqingin alti.
The king betrayed the vassal. Qaghan bazigh yangilti.
Your vassal destroyed my house.Bazing barqimin buzdi.
A few notes:
As sentences 2 and 4 reveal, this is a SOV (Subject-Object-Verb) language.
Suffixes attached to the nouns indicate possession and case. Here they are:
Your -ing
My -im
Our -imiz
The suffix for our appears to be just an extension of the suffix for my.
When possessed nouns are used as a direct object, you add -in to the existing suffix. For example:
Oghuling baliqigh alti. Your son conquered the city.
Qaghanimiz oghulingin yangilti. Our king betrayed your son.
Strip away the suffixes, and let’s look at the root nouns:
Son – Oghul
King – Qaghan
House – Barq
City – Baliq
And of course, our suffix fun doesn’t end here. When used as a direct object, and with no possession, our root nouns take the suffix -igh. For example:
Qaghan baliqigh alti. The king conquered the city.
Siz qaghanigh yangiltingiz. You all betrayed the king.
Verbs are only inflected with personal pronouns. Siz is You all, and in sentence 6 the verb yangalti, to betray, becomes yangaltingiz.
-ing for you, and -iz for plural, since you all is the second person plural personal pronoun.
How about the second translation into English? Men barqigh buzdim. Well, we know that the verb is inflected with -im, and where have we seen -im before? That’s right: indicated my.
With no iz, we know it’s not plural. So, I believe Men means I, giving us the translation I destroyed the house.
Lastly, I have found no answer key for this puzzle, so I could be wrong. Have different ideas? Let me know in the comments!
Hey Travis,
I have never heard of language before, but it looks and sounds very Turkish to me. So I researched it and discovered that it is an old Turkish language and can be translated as “Orhun yazisi” which literally means “Orhun writing”. There is an Orkhon valley in Central Mongolia, and I suspect that that’s where the language originated.
I am Turkish/Azeri myself, and I think I can help you solve certain parts of the puzzle:
1. Turkish/Azeri are SOV languages indeed. And the sentences you wrote do sound right.
2. I am not sure about the “ing” for “you”, but modern Turkish/Azeri uses “im” instead. So, “menim” is how you’d say “mine”. It is also used for “ours”, so “bizim” would stand for “ours”. In Azeri, the ending “in” is used for “second and third person”, so “yours” would be “senin” and “onun” for his/hers.
3. To this day, “oghul” is used for “son”, but I have never heard of qaghan, barq or baliq used with their respective meanings. In Azeri, “baliq” is for fish. Turks use the same word but with a “k” in the end – “balik”.
4. Verb “Alti” has a lot of meanings in Azeri, including – conquering, taking, buying. “Men aldim” – mean “I bought, took, etc”
5. “Men” does stand for “I” indeed.
Hope this helped a little!