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| triradical and biradical forms
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| asakata > asíta
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| a'adama > ādáma (not *a'āma)
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| the edenic form ignores the two intermediary vowel and vocalizes the medial consonant, except when there is a glottal stop
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| With the exception of verbs, the most fundamental word categories are encompassed by the Edenic Patterns. Through them, roots are easily morphed into practical terms, such as the lemma ''ādama'' "ancestry" out of the root ''-’-d-m-'' "ancestry" (inspired by the Hebrew name ''Adam'').
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| | The most fundamental layers of meaning are encompassed by the Edenic Patterns. Through them, roots are easily morphed into practical terms, such as the lemma ''ādáma'' "ancestry" out of the root ''-’-d-m-'' "ancestry". There is also a shorter form available |
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| | the edenic form ignores the two intermediary vowel and vocalizes the medial consonant, except when there is a glottal stop |
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| {| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center;" | | {| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center;" |
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| :{{note|4|4}} Incorporations may equal to adverbs (''-/-'') before consonants, as prefixes may equal to adjectives (''/-/'') before vowels. Those two word classes distinguish themselves in Adamic by the fact that incorporations modify nouns while prefixes modify verbs. Vide ''ādūqáfl'' "proto-language" and ''’āmúqul'' "to foretell since the beginning".
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| =====Prediluvian Patterns===== | | =====Prediluvian Patterns===== |