Pankristie/Lexicography: Difference between revisions

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(Created page with "Words in '''Pankristia''' come from the languages of humanity, but reflect the largely European and African origins of Christianity. == Names vs. Roots == Drawing on many lan...")
 
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Words in '''Pankristia''' come from the languages of humanity, but reflect the largely European and African origins of Christianity.
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== Names vs. Roots ==
Drawing on many languages for its vocabulary, some words are already ready to be used as nouns, because they end in a consonant.  These are assumed to be nouns, but they can be clarified with the '''-e''' ending as needed.  (e.g. '''maw''' and '''mawe''' are both ''cat''.)
 
Most words are not ready to be used as anything because they end in a consonant cluster.  These require an affix to make clear what part of speech they are.  These are listed in the dictionary as ending in a hyphen, even though they are not prefixes.  Not all suffixes make sense in every context.
 
* Nouns end in '''-e'''
* Adjectives end in '''-i''
* Adverbs end in '''-o'''
* Active verbs end in '''-a'''
* Passive verbs end in '''-u'''
 
For example, '''abl-''' is a root in the dictionary, but not a word by itself.  '''able'' is ''an ability'' and ''abla'' is ''to be able to''.
 
=== Exceptions ===
The first major exception to this rule is numerals
 
# 0 '''nol'''
# 1 '''un'''
# 2 '''dul'''
# 3 '''tin'''
# 4 '''car'''
# 5 '''lim'''
# 6 '''sis'''
# 7 '''sem'''
# 8 '''bal'''
# 9 '''naw'''
 
These exist in the plain form when used as predicates, and take an '''-i''' (on the final element) when used as adjectives.
 
[[Category:Pankristia]]

Latest revision as of 14:54, 20 January 2024

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