Contionary:et: Difference between revisions
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[[Category:Contionary]][[Category:Nanyse words]][[Category:Nanyse nouns]][[Category:Bearlandic verbs]] [[Category:Bearlandic words]] | [[Category:Contionary]][[Category:Nanyse words]][[Category:Nanyse nouns]][[Category:Bearlandic verbs]] [[Category:Bearlandic words]] | ||
==[[Niemish]]== | |||
===Pronunciation=== | |||
* [[Guide:IPA|IPA]]: /ə/ (before a consonant), /ən/ (before a vowel) | |||
{{nm-got|𐌰𐌹𐌽𐍃|áins}} | {{nm-got|𐌰𐌹𐌽𐍃|áins}} | ||
===Article=== | ===Article=== | ||
''' | '''⁰''' '''et''' ''n.n. hard stem'' | ||
# a, an | # a, an | ||
===Declension=== | ===Declension=== | ||
{| class="wikitable collapsible collapsed" style="width: 400px; text-align: center;" | {| class="wikitable collapsible collapsed" style="width: 400px; text-align: center;" | ||
! colspan="4" | declension of '' | ! colspan="4" | declension of ''et'' (indefinite only) | ||
|- | |- | ||
| | |||
| colspan="3" style="text-align: center;" | '''singular''' | | colspan="3" style="text-align: center;" | '''singular''' | ||
|- | |- | ||
Line 96: | Line 101: | ||
| style="text-align: center;" | e | | style="text-align: center;" | e | ||
|} | |} | ||
===Notes=== | ===Notes=== | ||
In deliberately archaising speech, ''et'', ''en'', ''es'', ''em'', ''e'' are pronounced /ɛt, ɛn, ɛm, ɛ/, however in ordinary speech these have all fallen together as /ə/. Use of the indefinite article is also optional if an adjective appears before the noun, and the decision to use it or not usually depends on euphonic considerations (e.g. it is rare to use the article if the previous word in the utterance ends in a vowel). | In deliberately archaising speech, ''et'', ''en'', ''es'', ''em'', ''e'' are pronounced /ɛt, ɛn, ɛm, ɛ/, however in ordinary speech these have all fallen together as /ə/ (/ən/ before a vowel). Use of the indefinite article is also optional if an adjective appears before the noun, and the decision to use it or not usually depends on euphonic considerations (e.g. it is rare to use the article if the previous word in the utterance ends in a vowel). | ||
[[Category:Niemish words]] | [[Category:Niemish words]] | ||
[[Category:Niemish nouns]] | [[Category:Niemish nouns]] |
Latest revision as of 23:48, 3 December 2022
Avendonian
Pronunciation
Etymology
From Proto-Germanic *it.
Pronoun
et
- third-person singular pronoun; it
See also
Avendonian personal pronouns | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
personal pronouns | possessive pronoun | ||||
subjective | objective | ||||
first person |
singular | eo | me | mede | |
plural | vi | nos | nosde | ||
second person |
singular | familiar | tu | te | tede |
formal | Si | Side | |||
plural | i | vos | vosde | ||
third person |
singular | masculine | e | si | side |
feminine | si | ||||
neuter | et | ||||
plural | si |
Bearlandic
Pronunciation
(Bearlandic) IPA: /ˈeːt/
Verb
et
- to eat
- Hi ati a appoll.
- He ate an apple.
- Hi ati a appoll.
Inflection
Present | et |
---|---|
Past | ati |
Perfect | giotē |
Byform | ytē |
Present participle | etnē |
Past participle | giotnē |
Nanyse
Alternative Forms
ɔϯ (Dumun script)
Etymology
From the Hittite word wett, meaning year.
Pronunciation
- (Nanyse Proper) IPA: /ɛt/
- (Kote Dialect) IPA: /ɛð/
- (Jara Dialect) IPA: /ɛd/
- (Yrem Dialect) IPA: /ɛtʃ/
Noun
et i (plural: etz; etza; etet)
- A year
- The orbital period of Kisar moving around Sol.
- A measurement of time made up of twelve ytyt, or months
Derived Terms
Niemish
Pronunciation
- IPA: /ə/ (before a consonant), /ən/ (before a vowel)
Etymology
From Gothic áins.
Article
⁰ et n.n. hard stem
- a, an
Declension
declension of et (indefinite only) | |||
---|---|---|---|
singular | |||
neuter | masculine | feminine | |
nominative | et | en | |
genitive | es | ||
dative | em | e |
Notes
In deliberately archaising speech, et, en, es, em, e are pronounced /ɛt, ɛn, ɛm, ɛ/, however in ordinary speech these have all fallen together as /ə/ (/ən/ before a vowel). Use of the indefinite article is also optional if an adjective appears before the noun, and the decision to use it or not usually depends on euphonic considerations (e.g. it is rare to use the article if the previous word in the utterance ends in a vowel).