Kämpya: Difference between revisions

860 bytes added ,  2 December 2013
Revised negation
(Added bit about emphatic accusative pronouns being used with prepositions)
(Revised negation)
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====With Pronouns====
====With Pronouns====


The nominative pronouns discussed earlier can also be the subject of transitive verbs, with no restrictions other than the time of the action must be made clear (on the pronoun) e.g.
The nominative pronouns discussed earlier can also be the subject of transitive verbs. However, after the verb, there needs to be a particle that marks whether or not the object of the transitive verb belongs to the subject, and, if so, whether the possession is alienable or inalienable. These are:
 
{| class="wikitable"
|-
| Subject Possesses Object Inalienably || sè
|-
| Subject Possesses Object Alienably || sḛ́
|-
| Subject does not Possess Object || ðì
|}
 
/sè/ and /ðì/ are both clitics that attach phonologically to the preceding word.
 
 
Here are some examples:
 
/jéi=káiʔk=ðì gáʔɾ/
 
2PS.NOM=bite=TRANS lizard
 
You are biting the lizard (which doesn't belong to you).
 
 
/jéi=káiʔk sḛ́ gáʔɾ/
 
2PS.NOM=bite own.ALIENABLE lizard
 
You are biting your lizard.


/jéi=káiʔk gáʔɾ/


2PS.NOM=bite lizard
/jéi=káiʔk sḛ́ áˈjòṳ̤/
 
2PS.NOM=bite own.ALIENABLE bone
 
You are biting your bone (as in a dish on the table, not in your own body).
 
 
/jéi=káiʔk=sè áˈjòṳ/
 
2PS.NOM=bite=own.INALIENABLE bone
 
You are biting your bone (in your body).


You are biting the lizard.




As before, the object can be fronted as a topic e.g.
As before, the object can be fronted as a topic e.g.


/gáʔɾ jéi=káiʔk/
/gáʔɾ jéi=káiʔk=ðì/


lizard 2PS.NOM=bite
lizard 2PS.NOM=bite=TRANS


You are biting the lizard.
You are biting the lizard.




However, the subject pronoun still come immediately before the verb, so sentences like */jéi gáʔɾ káiʔk/ are ungrammatical.
However, the subject pronoun still come immediately before the verb, so sentences like */jéi gáʔɾ káiʔk ðì/ are ungrammatical.




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When both the subject and the object of a verb are pronouns, the subject comes first e.g.
When both the subject and the object of a verb are pronouns, the subject comes first, and there is no particle that indicates whether or not the subject possesses the object e.g.


jéi=swí=káiʔk
jéi=swí=káiʔk
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===Basic Pattern===
===Basic Pattern===


The basic way to negate something is to place the particle /na/ immediately before it, and the particle /bu/ immediately after it. These are clitics i.e. they become phonologically part of whatever word they attach to e.g. from the sentence
The basic way to negate something is to place the clitic /na/ immediately before it e.g. from the sentence


/jéi=ˈdè̤sì ˈkà̤mpjà/
/ŋí=káiʔk kʰwèi̤/


2PS.NOM=speak Kämpya
2PS.ACC=bite dog.


You speak Kämpya.
You were bitten by the dog.




We can say
We can say


/jéi=ná=ˈdè̤sì=bù ˈkà̤mpjà/
/ŋí=ná=káiʔk kʰwèi̤/


2PS.NOM=NEG=speak=NEG Kämpya
2PS.ACC=NEG=bite dog


You don't speak Kämpya
You weren't bitten by the dog.




as well as
as well as


/ná=jéi=bú=ˈdè̤sì ˈkà̤mpjà/
/ná=ŋí=káiʔk kʰwèi̤/


NEG=2PS.NOM=NEG=speak Kämpya
NEG=2PS.ACC=bite dog


'''You''' don't speak Kämpya. / It's not you that speaks Kämpya.
'''You''' weren't bitten by the dog. / It's not you that was bitten by the dog.




and
and


/jéi=ˈdè̤sì ná=ˈkà̤mpjà=/
/ŋí=káiʔk ná=kʰwèi̤/
 
2PS.ACC=bite NEG=dog
 
You weren't bitten by '''the dog'''. / It wasn't the dog that bit you.


2PS.NOM=speak NEG=Kämpya=NEG


You don't speak '''Kämpya'''. / It's not Kämpya that you speak.
However, when a noun is topicalised, it cannot be attached to /na/. So */ná́=kʰwèi̤ ŋí=káiʔk/ is ungrammatical.




As we can see, the particles can attach to either nouns or verbs. They can also attach to adjectives e.g.
As we can see, /na/ can attach to either nouns or verbs. It can also attach to adjectives e.g.


/ŋí=káiʔk ná=nòuʔp kʰwèi̤/


/jéi=ˈdè̤sì ná=kàṳŋ=bù ˈkà̤mpjà/
2PS.ACC=bite NEG=small.REST dog


2PS.NOM=speak NEG=good.REST=NEG Kämpya
You weren't bitten by the '''small''' dog (i.e. you were bitten by the big one)


You don't speak good Kämpya.




They can also attach to adverbs e.g.
And adverbs e.g.


/ŋí=káiʔk nà=néʔk kʰwèi̤/


/jéi=ˈdè̤sì nà=kǎṳŋ=bù ˈkà̤̀mpjà/
2PS.ACC=bite NEG=deep.ADV dog


2PS.NOM=speak NEG=good.ADV=NEG Kämpya
You weren't bitten '''deeply''' by the dog.


You don't speak Kämpya '''well'''.




However, if the word after /na/ begins with a vowel, an epenthetic /w/ is inserted e.g.
However, if the word after /na/ begins with a vowel, an epenthetic /w/ is inserted e.g.


/jéi=náw=áˈlôṵn=bù/
/ŋí=náw=áˈlôṵn kʰwèi̤/


2PS.NOM=NEG=alone=NEG
2PS.ACC=NEG=abandon dog


You are not alone.
You weren't abandoned by the dog.