Old Shalaian/Syntax: Difference between revisions
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The syntax ''vair'' + form of ''cha'' is used when comparing clauses: | The syntax ''vair'' + form of ''cha'' is used when comparing clauses: | ||
:'''''Ashfíl'azhal, lōkh tirṓj thols vair chakh | :'''''Ashfíl'azhal, lōkh tirṓj thols vair chakh lidanróo'k.''''' | ||
:''Congrats, you did [it] better than I expected.'' | :''Congrats, you did [it] better than I expected.'' | ||
The syntax ''vair'' + possessed form of the infinitive is used for clauses of the form "too ADJ for NOUN to VERB". | The syntax ''vair'' + possessed form of the infinitive is used for clauses of the form "too ADJ for NOUN to VERB". | ||
:'''''Khom ħi qōv lirwhálan vair shéerishawh | :'''''Khom ħi qōv lirwhálan vair shéerishawh thóols.''''' | ||
:be_at.3SG.I DEF.SG.I death COMP-evil than neglect-INF-1PL from-3SG.I | :be_at.3SG.I DEF.SG.I death COMP-evil than neglect-INF-1PL from-3SG.I | ||
:''Death is too evil for us to neglect.'' (lit. more evil than our neglecting it) | :''Death is too evil for us to neglect.'' (lit. more evil than our neglecting it) |
Revision as of 04:07, 10 April 2020
Prose Shalaian
Constituent order
Finite clauses are VOS and use ergative syntax:
preverb verb dir_obj subj ind_obj place manner time.
Infinitive clauses are VSO and accusative; the preposition mi must be used before a direct object in infinitive clauses.
Noun phrase
The structure of a Old Shalaian/Syntax noun phrase is maximally
article numeral NOUN adjective demonstrative genitive relative_clause.
Genitive noun phrases use possessive affixes on the possessed noun:
- ni chaasts rái'chal = Rachel's friend (weak possession)
- in-lásh rái'chal = Rachel's hand (strong possession)
Nominal sentences
Old Shalaian/Syntax is zero-copula for nominal sentences and for predicative adjuncts such as lar roft 'at home'. Nominal sentences in the present tense are negated with the preverb thoor.
- Am shaanft lánameen swid?
- Q.PRES woman-3SG.AN lánameen 2SG
- Are you lánameen's wife/girlfriend?
- Thoor, sháanfalna fin.
- not.COP, woman-1SG-EMPH 3SG.A
- No, she's *my* girlfriend.
- Am lar roft Inthar? Thoor.
- Is Inthar home? No, they're not.
Questions
Yes-no questions
Yes-no questions are answered using preverbs.
Wh-questions
The interrogative word always comes first in the sentence.
Predicative wh-questions are simpler:
- Yakh swid?
- who 2SG
- Who are you?
- laib lōkh swid?
- where PST 2SG
- Where have you been?
Verbal wh-questions are always cleft sentences: The material after the wh-word becomes a relative clause with the wh-word as the head. The relative clause can be a cha-clause vs. a vi-clause:
- Yan vi tálti?
- yan vi ta-lát-i
- what VI.PRES 2SG.S-see-INF
- What do you see? (lit. What is that which you see?)
- Yakh lan do'ch alt vikh rṓzhas?
- yakh lan do'ch a-lát-0 vikh rōzh-as
- who here CHA.NEG.PRES 3SG.A-see-3SG.I VI.PST do.INF-3SG.H
- Who here does not see what she (hon.) has done? (lit. Who here is it that does not see that which she has done?)
'There is' and 'have'
'There is' clauses use the word whid at the beginning of the word, and have-possessives use the structure whid + the thing possessed + the preposition lar + possessor. The negative of whid is yaan'ch 'there is not' (etymologically from an interrogative *yan cha' whid "where is..."), and the negative interrogative form is maand.
- Yaan'ch vózhleedash lar áifer.
- There is no justice in this (fact or situation).
Transitivity
Finite verbs index the arguments ergatively: the absolutive personal affixes are suffixes and the ergative affixes are prefixes.
Intransitives
Transitives
Transitive verbs (such as 'to hit') mark both persons on the verb. Passive verbs formed from transitives behave like intransitives and take the absolutive argument for the "patient" just like the active counterpart does. The antipassive turns the agent into the absolutive argument and uses lar with the patient.
Ditransitives
Ditransitives use tripersonal agreement:
- Causer: Ergative
- Agent: Ergative
- Patient: Absolutive
Relative clauses
Shalaian uses two different types of relative clauses, depending on the syntactic position of the head in the relative clause.
vi-clauses
Forms of the preverb vi are used when the head of the relative clause is absolutive or when relativizing a non-verbal predicate.
Headless relative clauses (indicated by that which or what in English) can be formed simply by omitting the head.
A verbal vi-clause has the form
(when intransitive) vi-preverb + verb.INF + other constituents
or
(when transitive) vi-preverb + POSSESSIVE_i-verb.INF + ergative noun_i + other constituents.
Note that:
- The infinitive form of the verb is used.
- When there is an ergative noun phrase, the strong possessive affix is used and agrees with the ergative noun phrase.
A non-verbal predicate vi-clause has a simpler form:
vi-preverb predicate.
cha-clauses
Forms of cha are used when the head of the relative clause is NOT absolutive. Unlike vi-clauses, cha-clauses use finite verbs and are more syntactically straightforward. Resumptive pronouns (referring back to the head) are usually used in a cha-clause, either on the verb or on other constituents.
Complement clauses
Like many other clause types in Shalian, complement clauses have two possible syntaxes: either finite, using forms of the preverb ith, or an infinitive construction, formed with the preposition mi + infinitive. With infinitive complement clauses, the tense is usually assumed to be the same tense as the main clause.
Conditional
Conditional clauses that indicate a general truth use the present form of the "if" preverb. A preverb need not be used in the apodosis.
- Sher syóokh ładéem, ħónath ni jalm sikht.
- if.PRES fall_precipitation snow, become DEF road cold
- If it snows, the road becomes cold.
Conditional clauses that are conditioned on a possible future event use the future form of the "if" preverb:
- Wher't syóokh ładéem, kháiral roftas.
- if.FUT fall_precipitation snow, go-1SG to_home
- If it snows, I'll go home.
Time clauses
There are conjunctions for time clauses.
However, the infinitive construction lar + infinitive is more commonly used:
- lar zhá'unal = when I awake/have awakened
- zhar't lidanzháis láathvai, chōns lar kháir't. (FUT 1SG-APP-come-3SG.A together every LOC go-3SG.A = Whenever she goes, I'm going together with her.)
In infinitive clauses, the possessor of the infinitive is the absolutive noun, and mi is used in front of the ergative noun.
todo: "while", "as soon as", "before", "after", "until"
Comparison clauses
The syntax vair + form of cha is used when comparing clauses:
- Ashfíl'azhal, lōkh tirṓj thols vair chakh lidanróo'k.
- Congrats, you did [it] better than I expected.
The syntax vair + possessed form of the infinitive is used for clauses of the form "too ADJ for NOUN to VERB".
- Khom ħi qōv lirwhálan vair shéerishawh thóols.
- be_at.3SG.I DEF.SG.I death COMP-evil than neglect-INF-1PL from-3SG.I
- Death is too evil for us to neglect. (lit. more evil than our neglecting it)
Method clauses
inst + inf + abs
Purpose clauses
ben + inf + abs
Result clauses
"result" + inf + abs
Reason clauses
from/because + inf + abs
Topicalization
Topicalization involves placing the topic after the comment clause.
Cleft constructions
In cleft sentences, the present tense preverb is used before the fronted constituent.
- Vor sowh vikh qonár'ads.
- PRES 1PL VI.PST choose.INF-2SG.H
- It's us whom you have chosen.
Poetic Shalaian
Topicalization used more often, preverbs and articles often omitted, word order freer
e.g. wairdí'nal laħchái't = I shall praise her with my song