The Kit language, or Kit-h’za (literally “Home-Law”), is the primary tonal, Verb, Object, Subject (VOS)-ordered language spoken by the Kit, an intelligent vulpine-like species inhabiting the subterranean cities of their desolated home world. The language is characterized by its high frequency of glottal stops, clicks, and nasal hums, reflecting the biological constraints of the species' vocal apparatus.
| Nativename | Nix’hza-k’nit-h’za |
|---|---|
| Family | Subterranean Vulpanoid |
| Speakers | ~4 Billion (Est. 2421) |
| System | Verb-Object-Subject (VOS) |
| Morphology | Agglutinative / Portmanteau-heavy |
| Tones | 4 Age-based Tones (Rising, Steady, Rising-Falling, Falling) |
| Phonology | Non-labial, Guttural, Click-based |
| Status | Official Language of the Kit Commune |
The Kit vocal apparatus is similar to that of Vulpes vulpes, featuring limited lip flexibility which renders many human phonemes impossible.
The following sounds cannot be produced by Kit:
| Labials/Labiodentals | b, f, m (standard), p, v (standard). |
| Postalveolars/Liquids | ch, q, r, sh. |
| Rounded Vowels | o, u |
The following are Kit-specific sounds Romanized for the purposes of writing:
| b' | A sharp click made behind the teeth. |
| m | A throaty growl (often used in words indicating high-threat). |
| p' | A popping click on the roof of the mouth. |
| v | A nasal hum/growl indicating discomfort or annoyance. |
| y | A single yip (affirmation). |
| yyy | Chittering/laughter. |
| ' | An apostrophe indicates a deliberate, sharp glottal stop. |
Kit-h’za is strictly Verb-Object-Subject (VOS).
| English | Kit-h’za |
|---|---|
| “I went to the store.” | Tlak ta k’nit-nix, ka i’tzi. |
| (Go to den-energy, [Subject] I.) |
Particles are single-syllable markers used to define the roles of words within the VOS structure.
| zi | Object marker. |
| ka | Subject marker. |
| ksk | Possessive suffix (e.g., zi’ka-ksk, “the Matron's”). |
| n’na | The Proximity Particle. Essential for social cohesion; it is added to the end of sentences to confirm the speaker is within safe distance of another Kit. |
Tonality is used to describe the state or age of a noun or pronoun. Diacritics appear on the first vowel.
| Rising (á) |
| Steady (ā) |
| Rising-Falling (â) |
| Falling (à) |
| No Diacritic |
New concepts are built by joining roots. Long compounds undergo “syllabic collapse” to ease speech.
* H’z’knit (The Great Burrow/Capital City)
* Lixnixtlak (Spaceship)
The language reflects a rigid, pressively matriarchal society.
Non-comprehensive list of words in Kit-h’za.
| Kit Word | English | Role | Root/Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| dzat | Water | Noun | Primary resource. |
| zl’ax | The World | Noun | zl'a (ground) + nix (life). |
| h’za | Law / Matriarch | Noun | Core of social order. |
| k’nih’ztla | Den Mother | Noun | Home-Law-See (Secret Police). |
| v’zl'a | Anxiety | Adj/Verb | v (hum) + zl'a (heavy ground). |
| na | Past | Particle | Indicates prior action. |
| ti | Present | Particle | Indicates current action. |
| se | Future | Particle | Indicates future action. |
| ta / si | To / From | Particle | Directional markers. |
“Zl'àlak na zi Zl’ax, ga h’zay’ni na zi, ka zi’ka n’na.” “When the world fell, it was the Matrons who caught it.”