Valmoric morphology
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Nouns
Gender
There are three genders: Masculine, feminine and neuter. Each gender has multiple inflectional paradigms governing case-number endings.
Cases
- See also Valmoric semiotics for more information on morphosyntactic alignment.
Valmoric has 10 cases, detailed below.
The nominative case is principially unmarked. It is used to denote:
- The subject of an accusative-aligned intransitive clause: The woman read.
- The subject of an accusative-aligned transitive clause: The woman read a book.
- In ergative-aligned clauses, it functions as the genitive case (see below).
The accusative case is used to denote:
- The object of an accusative-aligned monotransitive clause: The woman read a book.
- The theme of an accusative-aligned ditransitive clause: The woman read the child a book.
- Prepositional objects of motion: He went into the house.
- In ergative-aligned clauses, it also functions as the instrumental case (see below).
The dative case is used to denote:
- The recipient of a ditransitive clause: The woman read the child a book.
- A generic indirect object: The woman read (to) the child.
- Static prepositional objects: He was inside the house.
- A compulsory autobenefactive: I will lay me down. (Modern English: I will lie down. / I will lay myself down.)
The genitive case is used to denote:
- A possessor in an accusative-aligned clause: That is someone's house.
- In ergative-aligned clauses, the genitive case acts as the ergative case, which is then used to denote:
- The subject of an intransitive clause: The woman read.
- The object of a transitive clause: The woman read a book.
The instrumental case is used to denote:
- An instrument using which something was done in an accusative-aligned clause: I diced the onions with a knife.
- An object or person with which something was done in an accusative-aligned clause: I diced the onions with my friend.
- A manner in which something was done in an accusative-aligned clause: I diced the onions with haste.
- In ergative-aligned clauses, the instrumental case acts as the absolutive case, which is used to denote the subject of a transitive clause: The woman read a book.
The ablative case indicates:
- Motion from a place: I came from work.
- A cause: I lost my job because of laziness.
- The agent of a passive clause: He was dearly loved by his brothers.
The allative case indicates:
- Motion to a place: I am going to work.
- A goal: I applied for a job.
- A benefactive: I would do anything for him.
The partitive case is used for:
- A subset: I met some of them.
- A distinction: I am different from them.
- A superlative comparison: I am the best in my class.
- Certain objects of intransitive verbs: I drank of the water. (Also used in Valmoric with such verbs as "forget", "know" and "remember".
The comparative case is used for:
- Equative comparisons: I am as good as them.
- Differentiating comparisons: I am better than them.
The essive case is used for:
- A state of being: Being a composer I know a lot about music.
- A period of time: I often went swimming as a child.
The vocative case expresses direct address: Hello, world!
Number
- See also: #Attributive numerals
Declension paradigms
Compounding and affixes
Verbs
Copula
Nonfinite forms
Infinitive
Aspect-tense nouns
Inflectional endings
Person-number-tense
2nd aorist
Voice and valency
Auxiliary verbs
Defective verbs
Existential verb
Verbs of manner
Patient clitics
Verbal particles
Derivational morphology
Pronouns and determiners
- For more detail on deixis and anaphora see Valmoric semiotics.
Definite article
Personal pronouns
Possessives
Demonstratives
Indefinites
Relatives
Interrogatives
Quantifiers
Prepositions
Declension
Case
Adjectives
- See also Valmoric semiotics for further information on the predicative and attributive use of adjectives.
Attributive
Predicative
Degrees of comparison
Adverbs
Formation
Verbal adverbs
Adjectival adverbs
Numerals
Attributive numerals
Cardinals
Ordinals
Cardinal particles
Numeral nouns
Ordinal noun
Collective animate
Collective inanimate
Other numerals
Multipliers
Multiplicative adverbs
Distributive adverbs
Conjunctions
- See Valmoric semiotics for information on dependent clauses.