User:Nicolasstraccia/afghanisketch: Difference between revisions

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==Morphology and syntax==
==Morphology and syntax==
===Morphology===
Split ergativity. In the present tense or future tense, the subject is marked as nominative, and the object is marked as accusative. In the past tense, however, the subject of a transitive verb is marked as oblique, and the verb agrees with the object.
====Nouns====
{|class="bluetable lightbluebg"
!Case
! colspan="2"|Marker
|-
!Nominative
|colspan="2" align="center" | ∅
|-
!Accusative
| -NA
| -në, -na, -ϑë, -ϑa, -të, -da, -xwe, -ṇwe, -ϑe-, -ṣe-, -te-, -se
|-
!Genitive
| -NEK
| -nëk, -niǵ, -ϑëk, -ϑik, -tëk, -diǵ, -nek, -neǵ, -ϑek, -ϑeǵ, -tek, -teǵ
|-\
!Dative
| -KA
| -ka, -xwa, -ge, -xwe, -ko, -xo, -kä, -xwä
|-
!Locative
| -TA
| -ta, -te, -da, -de, -to, -tä, -do, -dä
|-
!Ablative
| -TAn
| -tan, -ton, -dan, -don, -ϑон, -ϑän, -tun, -ϑun
|-
!Oblique
| -SuN
| -sū, -ṣun, -zum, -ẓō, -son
|-
|}
====Verbs====
Verbs are conjugated for singular and plural number and first, second, and third persons. There are 11 verb tenses: present comprehensive (long and short form), present perfect (regular and negative), future certain, future indefinite, conditional, past definite, obligatory, imperative, and intentional.
There are two types of verbs distinguished by their infinitive forms: those ending in the suffix [...1] and those ending in [...2].
=====Evidentiality=====
{| class="bluetable lightbluebg"
|-
| style="background:LightSteelBlue"|‹ › || style="background:LightSteelBlue"|// || style="background:LightSteelBlue"|[] || style="background:LightSteelBlue"|
|-
| colspan="3"| ∅ || Unmarked
|-
| -dir || -dir || -diʐ || direct evidence
|-
| -ëp-dir || -əp-dir || -əp-ɖiʐ || hearsay
|-
| -dir-më-näm || -dir-mə-næm || -diɾ-mə-næm || indirect evidence
|-
| -mëṣ || -məʃ || -məʧ || rumour
|-
|}
====Negation====
One way to express negation is with the negative verb [...]. This verb does not inflect for person or number.
The phonetically similar suffix [...1] is another option: it attaches to the verb which it negates. It comes after the stem and before the tense suffix. In addition to [...1] there is another suffix [...2a] or [...2b]. It appears [...2] is used when dealing with one event, [...1] for more habitual or lasting states:
===Syntax===
The normal word order is subject–object–verb.