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The grammar of Grekelin is generally very simple and consistent. It is very conservative compared to Greek (Or dialects of it). | The grammar of Grekelin is generally very simple and consistent. It is very conservative compared to Greek (Or dialects of it). | ||
# Grekelin has two articles, a and egy. a becomes e (Remnant of Greek genders) if the subject or object ends with -i. | # Grekelin has two articles, a and egy. a becomes e (Remnant of Greek genders) if the subject or object ends with -i. | ||
# Grekelin has also lost it's grammatical genders, although traces of it still remain in the language. The loss of | # Grekelin has also lost it's grammatical genders, although traces of it still remain in the language. The loss of genders was seen during the shift to Proto-Grekelin, which did not distinguish inflections as much as Greek, leading to gender endings merging together. | ||
# Fusional verb inflection for person, number and tense. | # Fusional verb inflection for person, number and tense. | ||
# Grekelin has 4 cases: Nominative, genitive, accusative and vocative. In the Slavic dialect, another case persists (Although different from the one in Proto-Grekelin), the dative case: | # Grekelin has 4 cases: Nominative, genitive, accusative and vocative. In the Slavic dialect, another case persists (Although different from the one in Proto-Grekelin), the dative case: |
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