Kozramva: Difference between revisions

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(Copied most stuff from my grammar doc :hotspot:)
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==Orthography==
==Orthography==


==Grammar==
==Syntax==
 
=== Sentence types ===
 
=== Internal structure of the sentence ===
 
=== Coordination ===
 
=== Negation ===
 
=== Possession ===
 
=== Emphasis ===
 
=== Other movement processes ===
 
== Morphology ==
 
=== Nouns ===
Nouns exhibit only limited inflectional morphology, with case being the sole overtly marked feature on the noun itself; gender and number are expressed through agreement on other constituents. Definiteness is not marked on any constituent.
 
==== The noun phrase ====
 
==== Noun case ====
Nouns in Kozramva can be inflected for one of 13 cases, reflecting their syntactic role in a clause.
 
===== Nominative case =====
The nominative case denotes the subject of a clause (both transitive and intransitive). Nouns are not overtly marked for the nominative case.
 
[EXAMPLE]
 
===== Accusative case =====
The accusative case denotes the object of a transitive clause. Human nouns are marked for the accusative with the suffix ''-sa'', though other nouns exhibit no overt marking.
 
[EXAMPLE]
 
===== Dative case =====
The dative case denotes the indirect object of a ditransitive verb, as well as the beneficiary of an action. It is marked using the suffix ''-chi''.
 
[EXAMPLE]
 
===== Comitative-instrumental case =====
_. In its comitative function, it is also used to conjoin noun phrases. It is marked using the suffix ''-awa''.
 
[EXAMPLE]
 
===== Abessive case =====
The abessive case is used to express a lack or absence of the marked noun. It is marked using the suffix ''-thenga''.
 
[EXAMPLE]
 
===== Translative case =====
_. It is also used in resultative constructions to mark the achieved state. _. It is marked using the suffix ''-pyunu''.
 
[EXAMPLE]
 
===== Terminative case =====
_. It is marked using the suffix ''-myeg̃i''.
 
[EXAMPLE]
 
===== Inessive case =====
The inessive case is used to express location inside the marked noun. It is marked using the suffix ''-me''.
 
[EXAMPLE]
 
===== Illative case =====
The illative case is used to express motion into the inside of the marked noun. It is marked using the suffix ''-nekha''.
 
[EXAMPLE]
 
===== Elative case =====
The elative case is used to express motion out from inside of the marked noun. It is marked using the suffix ''-neei''.
 
[EXAMPLE]
 
===== Adessive case =====
The adessive case is used to express location on, at, or adjacent to the marked noun. Additionally, it is used in possessive constructions, and can mark the standard of comparison in equative statements. It is marked using the suffix ''-tʉe''.
 
[EXAMPLE]
 
===== Allative case =====
The allative case is used to express motion onto the marked noun. It is marked using the suffix ''-tokha''.
 
[EXAMPLE]
 
===== Ablative case =====
The ablative case is used to express motion off of the marked noun. Additionally, it can mark the standard of comparison in comparative statements. It is marked using the suffix ''-pae''.
 
[EXAMPLE]
 
===== Case suffixes =====
{| class="wikitable"
|+
!Case
!Suffix
|-
!Nominative
| ''-Ø''
|-
!Accusative
| ''-Ø, -sa''
|-
!Dative
| ''-chi''
|-
!Comitative-
instrumental
| ''-awa''
|-
!Abessive
| ''-thenga''
|-
!Translative
| ''-pyunu''
|-
!Terminative
| ''-myeg̃i''
|-
!Inessive
| ''-me''
|-
!Illative
| ''-nekha''
|-
!Elative
| ''-neei''
|-
!Adessive
| ''-tʉe''
|-
!Allative
| ''-tokha''
|-
!Ablative
| ''-pae''
|}
 
==== Noun gender ====
 
===== Gender assignment =====
{| class="wikitable"
|+
!
!Masculine
!Feminine
|-
!Spirits, humans,
domesticated animals
|
* marked according to sex
|
* marked according to sex
|-
!Non-domesticated
animals
|
* large animals
* any animal explicitly marked as male
|
* small animals
* any animal explictly marked as female
|-
!Concrete entities
|
* three-dimensional
* liquids
* long and extended
|
* two-dimensional
* flat surface with little height
* round with little height
|-
!Abstract entities
|
|
* always feminine
|}
 
===== Gender marking =====
There is no overt marking for gender on the noun itself, save for sex-specific derivational affixes. Rather, gender agreement is present on other constituents, particularly adjectives and verbs. The specifics of such gender agreement will be covered in the relevant sections, but an example can be seen below.
 
[EXAMPLE]
 
===== Classifiers =====
 
=== Pronouns ===
There are no free personal pronouns; all pronominal morphemes are in the form of bound affixes. Distinctions are made in person and gender, but not number, with additional forms for unspecified objects (i.e. “someone” or “something”).
 
==== Oblique prefixes ====
Oblique pronominal prefixes are the most wide-reaching form of pronominal affix in Kozramva, being used in multiple contexts, most notably as possessive prefixes on nouns and direct object prefixes on verbs. Notably, in addition to the established person and gender distinctions, there is a prefix used to indicate both reflexivity and reciprocity.
{| class="wikitable"
|+
!
!Prefix
|-
!1st person
|''naN-''
|-
!2nd person
|''lhiG-''
|-
!3rd person masc.
|''eS-''
|-
!3rd person fem.
|''uS-''
|-
!Unspecified object
|''ʉgʉG-''
|-
!Reflexive/reciprocal
|''koṽaS-''
|}
 
==== Subject suffixes ====
Subject suffixes are restricted to use in verbal agreement, where they express the subject of a clause. _.
{| class="wikitable"
|+
!
!Suffix
|-
!1st person
|''-amʉN''
|-
!2nd person
|''-avyʉS''
|-
!3rd person masc.
|''-ngaN''
|-
!3rd person fem.
|''-ruS''
|-
!Unspecified subject
|''-koG''
|}
 
==== Interrogative pronouns ====
 
==== Indefinite pronouns ====
 
=== Verbs ===
 
==== The verb phrase ====
 
==== Verbal template ====
{| class="wikitable"
|+
! colspan="8" |Slot
|-
!-2
!-1
!0
!1
!2
!3
!4
!5
|-
| rowspan="3" |Object prefix
| rowspan="3" |Negation
| rowspan="3" |'''STEM'''
| rowspan="3" |Voice suffix
| rowspan="3" |Mood/negation
| rowspan="2" |Tense suffix
|Subject suffix
|Plural suffix
|-
| colspan="2" |Relative suffix
|-
| colspan="3" |Converb suffix
|}
 
==== Voice ====
 
===== Active =====
 
===== Passive =====
 
===== Causative =====
 
===== Applicative =====
 
==== Mood and negation affixes ====
_
{| class="wikitable"
|+
!Mood
!Positive
!Negative
|-
!Indicative
|''-Ø''
|''maS-⟩...⟨-pʉG''
|-
!Desiderative
|''-kichaS''
|''maS-⟩...⟨-toaS''
|-
!Necessitative
|''-nhiaS''
|''maS-⟩...⟨-manheS''
|-
!Potential
|''-ruS''
|''maS-⟩...⟨-ruzʉG''
|-
!Suggestive
|''-muN''
|''maS-⟩...⟨-muN''
|-
!Imperative-
Jussive
|''-soN''
|''maS-⟩...⟨-soN''
|-
!Irrealis
|''-nguS''
|''maS-⟩...⟨-nguS''
|}
 
==== Tense suffixes ====
There is a wide range of tense-marking suffixes, with distinctions between past, present, and future, and in remoteness. There is minimal encoding of aspect in these tense suffixes, with the exception of past and present forms for the habitual aspect.
{| class="wikitable"
|+
!Tense
!Suffix
!Meaning
|-
!Remote past
|''-toppaS''
|"more than a few days ago"
|-
!Far past
|''-leaS''
|"a few days ago"
|-
!Near past
|''-loG''
|"yesterday"
|-
!Immediate past
|''-wuN''
|"happened today"
|-
!Past habitual
|''-tattaS''
|"used to"
|-
!Present
|''-Ø''
|"now", "will today"
|-
!Present habitual
|''-sʉlaS''
|"usually"
|-
!Near future
|''-sigeS''
|"will tomorrow"
|-
!Remote future
|''-siN''
|"will after tomorrow"
|}
Below is an example of ''kuvaS'' (“to go”) conjugated for tense:
{| class="wikitable"
|+
!Tense
!Form of ''kuvaS-''
(“to go”)
!Meaning
|-
!Remote past
|''kuvazoppa''
|"went more than a few days ago"
|-
!Far past
|''kuvalea''
|"went a few days ago"
|-
!Near past
|''kuvalo''
|"went yesterday"
|-
!Immediate past
|''kuvawu''
|"went today"
|-
!Past habitual
|''kuvazatta''
|"used to go"
|-
!Present
|''kuva''
|"going now", "going today"
|-
!Present habitual
|''kuvahʉla''
|"usually go"
|-
!Near future
|''kuvahige''
|"will go tomorrow"
|-
!Remote future
|''kuvahi''
|"will go after tomorrow"
|}
 
==== Finite and nonfinite forms ====
 
==== Person and number marking ====
Person marking on verbs is accomplished through oblique prefixes, used to mark direct objects, and subject prefixes (see [[Kozramva#Pronouns|Pronouns]] section). Below is an example paradigm with the verb ''tevaS'' "to see" in the present tense:
{| class="wikitable"
|+
! colspan="2" rowspan="2" |
! colspan="5" |Subject
|-
!1
!2
!3M
!3F
!UNSP
|-
! rowspan="6" |Object
!1
|'''na'''z̃eva'''amʉ'''
|'''na'''z̃eva'''avyʉ'''
|'''na'''z̃eva'''nga'''
|'''na'''z̃eva'''ru'''
|'''na'''z̃eva'''go'''
|-
!2
|'''lhi'''tteva'''amʉ'''
|'''lhi'''tteva'''avyʉ'''
|'''lhi'''tteva'''nga'''
|'''lhi'''tteva'''ru'''
|'''lhi'''tteva'''go'''
|-
!3M
|'''e'''zeva'''amʉ'''
|'''e'''zeva'''avyʉ'''
|'''e'''zeva'''nga'''
|'''e'''zeva'''ru'''
|'''e'''zeva'''go'''
|-
!3F
|'''u'''zeva'''amʉ'''
|'''u'''zeva'''avyʉ'''
|'''u'''zeva'''nga'''
|'''u'''zeva'''ru'''
|'''u'''zeva'''go'''
|-
!UNSP
|'''ʉgʉ'''tteva'''amʉ'''
|'''ʉgʉ'''tteva'''avyʉ'''
|'''ʉgʉ'''tteva'''nga'''
|'''ʉgʉ'''tteva'''ru'''
|'''ʉgʉ'''tteva'''go'''
|-
!REFL/RECP
|'''koṽa'''zeva'''amʉ'''
|'''koṽa'''zeva'''avyʉ'''
|'''koṽa'''zeva'''nga'''
|'''koṽa'''zeva'''ru'''
|'''koṽa'''zeva'''go'''
|}
To indicate that either the subject, direct object, or indirect object are plural, the suffix ''-thu'' is applied immediately after subject person marking. The specific argument triggering number agreement on the verb is inferred through context. This can be illustrated by modifying the previous examples:
 
* ''lhittevaamʉ'' "I see you" → ''lhittevaamʉ'''r̃u''''', either "we see you (sg.)", "I see you (pl.)", or "we see you (pl.)"
* ''naz̃evaavyʉ'' "You see me" → ''naz̃evaavyʉ'''zhu''''', either "you (pl.) see me", "you (sg.) see us", or "you (pl.) see us"
* ''naz̃evago'' "Someone/something sees me" → ''naz̃evago'''tthu''''', generally (though not exclusively) understood to be "someone/something sees us"
 
==== Converb suffixes ====
Clause subordination is achieved through the use of converbial forms, these being formed through a series of suffixes. These suffixes cannot coexist with tense, subject, or number suffixes, but may occur with object marking.
{| class="wikitable"
|+
!
!Same subject
!Different subject
!Meaning
|-
!Imperfective
|''-ma''
|''-tama''
|"and", "during", "while", "that"
|-
!Perfective
|''-cha''
|''-tacha''
|"having done", "after", "since"
|-
!Purposive
|''-uho''
|''-tuho''
|"in order to", "so that"
|-
!Causal
|''-rega''
|''-tarega''
|"because"
|-
!Conditional
|''-mye''
|''-tamye''
|"if"
|-
!Concessive
|''-ivi''
|''-tivi''
|"although", "but"
|-
!Terminative
|''-tattho''
|''-tazattho''
|"until"
|-
!Preparitive
|''-uara''
|''-tuara''
|"before"
|}
[EXAMPLES]
 
==== Relative suffix ====
 
=== Adjectives ===
 
==== The adjective phrase ====
 
==== Comparison ====
 
==== Equatives ====
 
==== Substantive form ====
 
=== Demonstratives ===
 
=== Numerals and quantifiers ===
 
==== Classifiers ====
 
=== Adpositionals ===
 
=== Adverbs ===
 
==== The adverb phrase ====
 
=== Derivational morphology ===
 
==== Nominalisers ====
 
==== Verbal compounds ====


==Vocabulary==
==Vocabulary==


[[Category:Language]]
[[Category:Language]]

Revision as of 10:26, 11 August 2024

Kozramva
Language familyNanu-Keezhu languages
Writing systemKozlahu
Official status
Spoken inKozdenen
Regulated byDoge Peleṽa Thoa-Saevakki
Speaker
EndonymKeezhʉ Raṽa ['kø̞:ʐɨ 'raᵐβa]
ExonymKozramva
Number of speakers1
Technical information
Language codeKZR


Kozramva (Keezhʉ Raṽa ['kø̞:ʐɨ 'raᵐβa]) is the majority and official language of Kozdenen.

Classification

Kozramva is a member of the Nanu-Keezhu language family.

Name

History

Varieties

Phonology

Consonants

Kozramva has 28 consonants:

Labial Alveolar Retroflex Velar Glottal
Plain Palatal.
Nasal /m/ ⟨m⟩ /mʲ/ ⟨my⟩ /n/ ⟨n⟩ /ɳ/ ⟨nh⟩ /ŋ/ ⟨ng⟩
Plosive /p/ ⟨p⟩ /pʲ/ ⟨py⟩ /t/ ⟨t⟩ /ʈ/ ⟨th⟩ /k/ ⟨k⟩
Affricate /ʈ͡ʂ/ ⟨ch⟩
Fricative Voiceless /s/ ⟨s⟩ /x/ ⟨kh⟩ /h/ ⟨h⟩
Voiced /β/ ⟨v⟩ /βʲ/ ⟨vy⟩ /z/ ⟨z⟩ /ʐ/ ⟨zh⟩ /ɣ/ ⟨g⟩
Prenasal. /ᵐβ/ ⟨ṽ⟩ /ᵐβʲ/ ⟨ṽy⟩ /ⁿz/ ⟨z̃⟩ /ᵑɣ/ ⟨g̃⟩
Approximant /w/ ⟨w⟩ /l/ ⟨l⟩ /ɭ/ ⟨lh⟩
Trill Plain /r/ ⟨r⟩
Prenasal. /ⁿr/ ⟨r̃⟩
  • Consonants can be geminated, but this is restricted to a certain subset of consonants, consisting of voiceless stops and affricates, voiceless fricatives (excluding /h/), and /r, w, l, ɭ/. Consonants outside this set are never geminated. Gemination is represented in orthography by doubling the consonant grapheme; for digraphs, the first part is doubled.
  • Prenasalised fricatives /ᵐβ, ᵐβʲ, ⁿz, ⁿr, ᵑɣ/ are realised as stops [ᵐb, ᵐbʲ, ⁿd, ⁿɖ~ⁿɟ, ᵑɡ] word-initially.
  • Retroflexes /ɳ, ʈ, ʈ͡ʂ, ʂ, ʐ, ɭ/ are realised as palatal [ɲ, c, t͡ɕ, ɕ, ʑ, ʎ] before front vowels; this same pattern applies to [ⁿɖ~ⁿɟ] mentioned in the previous point.
  • Aside from its typical word-initial realisation, /ⁿr/ [insert whatever i was writing here]

Vowels

Kozramva has 6 phonemic vowel qualities:

Front Central Back
High /i/ ⟨i⟩ /ɨ/ ⟨ʉ⟩ /u/ ⟨u⟩
Mid /e/ ⟨e⟩ /o/ ⟨o⟩
Low /a/ ⟨a⟩
  • Kozramva has a phonological contrast between short and long vowels; vowel lengthening is represented in orthography by doubling the vowel grapheme.
  • Sequences of two short vowels in hiatus of identical quality are realised as a long vowel, e.g. /i.i/ [i:]/
  • Unrounded vowels /i, ɨ, e, a/ are realised as rounded [y, ʉ, ø, ɒ] when preceding a retroflex consonant (excluding their palatal allophones).
  • The mid vowels are phonetically true mid [e̞~ø̞, o̞].

Phonotactics

The maximal syllable structure is CVG, where C represents any consonant, V any vowel, and G the first half of a geminated consonant. Individual morphemes may end in a consonant, but a phonological word may not.

Vowels are permitted to occur in hiatus, with only limited restrictions on which vowels and vowel sequences may co-occur. The sole known exception is that no more than two short phonetic vowels of identical quality may occur in hiatus; furthermore, a long and short vowel of identical quality may not exist in hiatus.

Consonant mutation

Kozramva features a productive process of consonant mutation, with four mutation grades: radical, spirantised, nasalised, and geminated. Individual morphemes may trigger either spirantisation, nasalisation, or gemination of an immediately following consonant, the type of mutation present being lexically specified for each morpheme. The three types of mutation are typically annotated with a capital S, N, or G respectively, e.g. kakkoaS “leaf”, which triggers spirantisation on a following suffix (e.g. [insert example]).

Radical Sprantised Nasalised Geminated
m- -m:- -m:-
mʲ- -mʲ:- -mʲ:-
n- -n:- -n:-
ɳ- -ɳ:- -ɳ:-
ŋ- -ŋ:- -ŋ:-
p- -β- -ᵐβ- -p:-
pʲ- -βʲ- -ᵐβʲ- -pʲ:-
t- -z- -ⁿz- -t:-
ʈ- -ʐ- -ⁿr- -ʈ:-
ʈ͡ʂ- -ʈ͡ʂ:-
k- -ɣ- -ᵑɣ- -k:-
s- -h- -ⁿz- -s:-
r- -ⁿr- -r:-
x- -ᵑɣ- -x:-
h- -Ø- -ŋ- -x:-
w- -m- -w:-
l- -n- -l:-
ɭ- -ɳ- -ɭ:-

Prosody

Kozramva has fixed, non-phonemic stress, occurring on the penultimate mora.

Orthography

Syntax

Sentence types

Internal structure of the sentence

Coordination

Negation

Possession

Emphasis

Other movement processes

Morphology

Nouns

Nouns exhibit only limited inflectional morphology, with case being the sole overtly marked feature on the noun itself; gender and number are expressed through agreement on other constituents. Definiteness is not marked on any constituent.

The noun phrase

Noun case

Nouns in Kozramva can be inflected for one of 13 cases, reflecting their syntactic role in a clause.

Nominative case

The nominative case denotes the subject of a clause (both transitive and intransitive). Nouns are not overtly marked for the nominative case.

[EXAMPLE]

Accusative case

The accusative case denotes the object of a transitive clause. Human nouns are marked for the accusative with the suffix -sa, though other nouns exhibit no overt marking.

[EXAMPLE]

Dative case

The dative case denotes the indirect object of a ditransitive verb, as well as the beneficiary of an action. It is marked using the suffix -chi.

[EXAMPLE]

Comitative-instrumental case

_. In its comitative function, it is also used to conjoin noun phrases. It is marked using the suffix -awa.

[EXAMPLE]

Abessive case

The abessive case is used to express a lack or absence of the marked noun. It is marked using the suffix -thenga.

[EXAMPLE]

Translative case

_. It is also used in resultative constructions to mark the achieved state. _. It is marked using the suffix -pyunu.

[EXAMPLE]

Terminative case

_. It is marked using the suffix -myeg̃i.

[EXAMPLE]

Inessive case

The inessive case is used to express location inside the marked noun. It is marked using the suffix -me.

[EXAMPLE]

Illative case

The illative case is used to express motion into the inside of the marked noun. It is marked using the suffix -nekha.

[EXAMPLE]

Elative case

The elative case is used to express motion out from inside of the marked noun. It is marked using the suffix -neei.

[EXAMPLE]

Adessive case

The adessive case is used to express location on, at, or adjacent to the marked noun. Additionally, it is used in possessive constructions, and can mark the standard of comparison in equative statements. It is marked using the suffix -tʉe.

[EXAMPLE]

Allative case

The allative case is used to express motion onto the marked noun. It is marked using the suffix -tokha.

[EXAMPLE]

Ablative case

The ablative case is used to express motion off of the marked noun. Additionally, it can mark the standard of comparison in comparative statements. It is marked using the suffix -pae.

[EXAMPLE]

Case suffixes
Case Suffix
Nominative
Accusative -Ø, -sa
Dative -chi
Comitative-

instrumental

-awa
Abessive -thenga
Translative -pyunu
Terminative -myeg̃i
Inessive -me
Illative -nekha
Elative -neei
Adessive -tʉe
Allative -tokha
Ablative -pae

Noun gender

Gender assignment
Masculine Feminine
Spirits, humans,

domesticated animals

  • marked according to sex
  • marked according to sex
Non-domesticated

animals

  • large animals
  • any animal explicitly marked as male
  • small animals
  • any animal explictly marked as female
Concrete entities
  • three-dimensional
  • liquids
  • long and extended
  • two-dimensional
  • flat surface with little height
  • round with little height
Abstract entities
  • always feminine
Gender marking

There is no overt marking for gender on the noun itself, save for sex-specific derivational affixes. Rather, gender agreement is present on other constituents, particularly adjectives and verbs. The specifics of such gender agreement will be covered in the relevant sections, but an example can be seen below.

[EXAMPLE]

Classifiers

Pronouns

There are no free personal pronouns; all pronominal morphemes are in the form of bound affixes. Distinctions are made in person and gender, but not number, with additional forms for unspecified objects (i.e. “someone” or “something”).

Oblique prefixes

Oblique pronominal prefixes are the most wide-reaching form of pronominal affix in Kozramva, being used in multiple contexts, most notably as possessive prefixes on nouns and direct object prefixes on verbs. Notably, in addition to the established person and gender distinctions, there is a prefix used to indicate both reflexivity and reciprocity.

Prefix
1st person naN-
2nd person lhiG-
3rd person masc. eS-
3rd person fem. uS-
Unspecified object ʉgʉG-
Reflexive/reciprocal koṽaS-

Subject suffixes

Subject suffixes are restricted to use in verbal agreement, where they express the subject of a clause. _.

Suffix
1st person -amʉN
2nd person -avyʉS
3rd person masc. -ngaN
3rd person fem. -ruS
Unspecified subject -koG

Interrogative pronouns

Indefinite pronouns

Verbs

The verb phrase

Verbal template

Slot
-2 -1 0 1 2 3 4 5
Object prefix Negation STEM Voice suffix Mood/negation Tense suffix Subject suffix Plural suffix
Relative suffix
Converb suffix

Voice

Active
Passive
Causative
Applicative

Mood and negation affixes

_

Mood Positive Negative
Indicative maS-⟩...⟨-pʉG
Desiderative -kichaS maS-⟩...⟨-toaS
Necessitative -nhiaS maS-⟩...⟨-manheS
Potential -ruS maS-⟩...⟨-ruzʉG
Suggestive -muN maS-⟩...⟨-muN
Imperative-

Jussive

-soN maS-⟩...⟨-soN
Irrealis -nguS maS-⟩...⟨-nguS

Tense suffixes

There is a wide range of tense-marking suffixes, with distinctions between past, present, and future, and in remoteness. There is minimal encoding of aspect in these tense suffixes, with the exception of past and present forms for the habitual aspect.

Tense Suffix Meaning
Remote past -toppaS "more than a few days ago"
Far past -leaS "a few days ago"
Near past -loG "yesterday"
Immediate past -wuN "happened today"
Past habitual -tattaS "used to"
Present "now", "will today"
Present habitual -sʉlaS "usually"
Near future -sigeS "will tomorrow"
Remote future -siN "will after tomorrow"

Below is an example of kuvaS (“to go”) conjugated for tense:

Tense Form of kuvaS-

(“to go”)

Meaning
Remote past kuvazoppa "went more than a few days ago"
Far past kuvalea "went a few days ago"
Near past kuvalo "went yesterday"
Immediate past kuvawu "went today"
Past habitual kuvazatta "used to go"
Present kuva "going now", "going today"
Present habitual kuvahʉla "usually go"
Near future kuvahige "will go tomorrow"
Remote future kuvahi "will go after tomorrow"

Finite and nonfinite forms

Person and number marking

Person marking on verbs is accomplished through oblique prefixes, used to mark direct objects, and subject prefixes (see Pronouns section). Below is an example paradigm with the verb tevaS "to see" in the present tense:

Subject
1 2 3M 3F UNSP
Object 1 naz̃evaamʉ naz̃evaavyʉ naz̃evanga naz̃evaru naz̃evago
2 lhittevaamʉ lhittevaavyʉ lhittevanga lhittevaru lhittevago
3M ezevaamʉ ezevaavyʉ ezevanga ezevaru ezevago
3F uzevaamʉ uzevaavyʉ uzevanga uzevaru uzevago
UNSP ʉgʉttevaamʉ ʉgʉttevaavyʉ ʉgʉttevanga ʉgʉttevaru ʉgʉttevago
REFL/RECP koṽazevaamʉ koṽazevaavyʉ koṽazevanga koṽazevaru koṽazevago

To indicate that either the subject, direct object, or indirect object are plural, the suffix -thu is applied immediately after subject person marking. The specific argument triggering number agreement on the verb is inferred through context. This can be illustrated by modifying the previous examples:

  • lhittevaamʉ "I see you" → lhittevaamʉr̃u, either "we see you (sg.)", "I see you (pl.)", or "we see you (pl.)"
  • naz̃evaavyʉ "You see me" → naz̃evaavyʉzhu, either "you (pl.) see me", "you (sg.) see us", or "you (pl.) see us"
  • naz̃evago "Someone/something sees me" → naz̃evagotthu, generally (though not exclusively) understood to be "someone/something sees us"

Converb suffixes

Clause subordination is achieved through the use of converbial forms, these being formed through a series of suffixes. These suffixes cannot coexist with tense, subject, or number suffixes, but may occur with object marking.

Same subject Different subject Meaning
Imperfective -ma -tama "and", "during", "while", "that"
Perfective -cha -tacha "having done", "after", "since"
Purposive -uho -tuho "in order to", "so that"
Causal -rega -tarega "because"
Conditional -mye -tamye "if"
Concessive -ivi -tivi "although", "but"
Terminative -tattho -tazattho "until"
Preparitive -uara -tuara "before"

[EXAMPLES]

Relative suffix

Adjectives

The adjective phrase

Comparison

Equatives

Substantive form

Demonstratives

Numerals and quantifiers

Classifiers

Adpositionals

Adverbs

The adverb phrase

Derivational morphology

Nominalisers

Verbal compounds

Vocabulary