Carpathian nouns: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 21:45, 18 February 2023
Most of the Proto-Indo-European declensional classes were retained, with the exception of the consonant-stems, which were gradually falling out of use, being replaced by other, more productive classes.
Carpathian nouns have three grammatical categories: gender (masculine, feminine, common and neuter), number (singular, dual and plural) and seven cases: nominative, genitive, dative, accusative, instrumental, locative and vocative with only three different case forms being distinguished in the dual number.
Accent classes
All Carpathian nouns belong to one of the three accent classes:
- AS (acute stative) – acute accent (tone-1) fixed on (usually) the initial syllable.
- CS (circumflex stative) – fixed circumflex accent (tone-2) or grave accent (tone-3) on any syllable. For neuter stems it is the final syllable, while for all other genders it is typically the first or the second syllable.
- M (mobile) – the pitch (tone-2 or tone-3) alternates between final and non-final (usually initial) position.
Classes
There are seven main stem classes in Carpathian, being defined by their specific case endings: a-stem, u-stem, i-stem ā-stem, ī-stem, ū-stem, and consonant-stem, the latter consisting of several subclasses. The following tables are examples of Eastern Carpathian noun-class paradigms, Western Carpathian has the same noun classes, so for the sake of brevity only the Eastern forms are shown. The example words belong to the M-paradigm, because the pitch pattern of the other two paradigms is predictable.
a-stem nouns
There are two subclasses: masculine "as"-nouns (deiwas “god”) and neuter "a"-nouns (àzera “lake”). In some dialects the nominative singular of the "as"-nouns is stressed, e.g. deiwàs instead of standard deĩwas, the latter being an innovation. In dialects the dative singular and the instrumental plural have the "ui"-diphthong instead of standard ai: deiwúi and deiwúis respectively. This is common for both Western and Eastern dialects and predate the original split.
Case | Singular | Dual | Plural | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Masculine | Neuter | Masculine | Neuter | Masculine | Neuter | |
Nominative | deĩwas | àzera | deĩwū | àzerai | deĩwai | azerā̃ |
Genitive | deĩwā | àzerā | deiwáu | azeráu | deiwū̃n | azerū̃n |
Dative | deiwái | azerái | deiwamā̃ | azeramā̃ | deiwàmas | azeràmas |
Accusative | deĩwun | àzerun | deĩwū | àzerai | deĩwōn | azerā̃ |
Instrumental | deĩwū | àzerū | deiwamā̃ | azeramā̃ | deiwáis | azeráis |
Locative | deĩwai | àzerai | deiwáu | azeráu | deiwáišu | azeráišu |
Vocative | deĩwe | àzera | deĩwū | àzerai | deiwaĩ | azerā̃ |
ā-stem nouns
The "ā"-stem nouns are feminine. An example of this class is rasā “dew”. The Western dialects have tone-2 in the M-type nouns, while the Eastern dialects keep the original tone-1 (Western rasā̃ Eastern rasā́). Tone-1 was analogically eliminated from the M-paradigm in most Western Carpathian dialects, being replaced by circumflex, thus being restricted to the AS-type exclusively.
Case | Singular | Dual | Plural |
---|---|---|---|
Feminine | |||
Nominative | rasā́ | ràsāi | ràsās |
Genitive | rasā̃s | rasáus | rasū̃n |
Dative | rasái | rasā́mā | rasā́mas |
Accusative | ràsān | rasái | ràsānas |
Instrumental | rasā́n | rasā́mā | rasámīs |
Locative | rasái | rasáus | rasā́su |
Vocative | ràsa | rasái | rasás |
*i-stem nouns
There are two subclasses: common "is"-stem (angilis “coal”), and neuter "i"-stem (mari “sea”). The "i"-stem class consists of a few words and is obsolete in most dialects, being replaced by either "a"-stem (maria) or "is"-stem (maris).
Case | Singular | Dual | Plural | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Common | Neuter | Common | Neuter | Common | Neuter | |
Nominative | angilìs | marì | ànglī | màrī | àngiliīs | màriī |
Genitive | angiléis | maréis | angiliáu | mariáu | angiliū̃n | mariū̃n |
Dative | àngilei | màrei | angilimā̃ | marimā̃ | angilìmas | marìmas |
Accusative | àngilin | màrin | ànglī | màrī | àngilinis | màrī |
Instrumental | angilimì | marimì | angilimā̃ | marimā̃ | angilìmīs | *marìmīs |
Locative | angiléi | maréi | angiliáu | mariáu | angilišù | marišù |
Vocative | ànglei | màri | ànglī | màrī | àngiliīs | màriī |