Cerian: Difference between revisions

1,244 bytes added ,  28 April 2020
m
mNo edit summary
Line 89: Line 89:
===Morphophonology===
===Morphophonology===
==Morphology==
==Morphology==
===Nouns===
<!-- ===Nouns===
Cerian nouns have lost most of the inflections of Íscégon, leaving only a predictable agglutinative pattern, regular for almost all nouns. Cerian nouns distinguish two cases - one called "nominative" (but also used as accusative), and an "indirect" (<small>AKA</small> oblique) case used after all prepositions and as the object of some verbs.<br/>
Cerian nouns have lost most of the inflections of Íscégon, leaving only a predictable agglutinative pattern, regular for almost all nouns. Cerian nouns distinguish two cases - one called "nominative" (but also used as accusative), and an "indirect" (<small>AKA</small> oblique) case used after all prepositions and as the object of some verbs.<br/>
Nouns also distinguish between singular and plural, but the two forms are identical for all nouns ending in a vowel; to avoid ambiguity, Cerian has developed a marked plural (usually called the "indefinite plural") used when the plurality is important but not otherwise shown in a sentence. Every noun has the indefinite plural (which is completely regular), even nouns ending in ''-n'' which do mark plural normally. The indefinite plural, however, is never used in the indirect case, as indirect plurals are always marked.
Nouns also distinguish between singular and plural, but the two forms are identical for all nouns ending in a vowel; to avoid ambiguity, Cerian has developed a marked plural (usually called the "indefinite plural") used when the plurality is important but not otherwise shown in a sentence. Every noun has the indefinite plural (which is completely regular), even nouns ending in ''-n'' which do mark plural normally. The indefinite plural, however, is never used in the indirect case, as indirect plurals are always marked.
Line 334: Line 334:
:: ton+šo = ''tójo'', ton+šen = ''tójen''
:: ton+šo = ''tójo'', ton+šen = ''tójen''
* ''toro'' – to (dative)
* ''toro'' – to (dative)
:: toro+šo = ''tóšo'', toro+šen = ''tóšen''
:: toro+šo = ''tóšo'', toro+šen = ''tóšen'' -->


===Verbs===
===Verbs===
Cerian verbs may be said to be more morphologically complex than Íscégon ones, as grammaticalization added a completely new tense - the future - and a new aspect - the habitual. On the other hand, the older past continuous has been replaced in form by the shorter non-continuous past, as the two perfective tenses (future and past) are now analytic. On the other hand, the subjunctive of all verbs except "to be" (''íso'') is now analytically formed by the participle plus the subjunctive of ''íso''. Note that the "present perfective" is semantically past, and the "past perfective" is a pluperfect.
Like other descendants of Íscégon, Cerian radically restructured the Íscégon verbal system. While Íscégon had a system of mostly prefixing inflections that mainly changed aspect or valency, these inflections have with time transformed into self-standing verbs, becoming a derivational process rather than an inflectional one (cf. Ísc. ''táso'' "I walk", ''máentáso'' "I start walking" → Cer. ''tóson'' "to go, walk", ''méntón'', earlier ''méntóson'' "to depart"). These aspectual inflections and valency changes are now marked by auxiliary verbs or adverbs (with few exceptions); meanwhile, Cerian (and other descendants of Íscégon, as well as some languages influenced by it in a sprachbund covering various parts of central Evandor, most notably Nordûlaki) started cliticizing at the end of the verb various adverbs that served to indicate tense; later on, in Cerian (excluding some Southern dialects) and Péigu only, final ''-n'' in some of those adverbs started being analyzed as a feminine marker, which led to it being added to those verbs that did not have it, resulting in the present system that morphologically marks tense and gender.


Conjugation of "to be" ''(íso)'' — where two forms are given, the first is masculine and the other is feminine.
Morphologically, Cerian verbs are simple and agglutinative, however they are used in various auxiliary constructions in order to mark aspect, mood, and valency.
 
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align: center;"
|-
! rowspan=2 | Tense !! rowspan=2 | Suffix !! colspan=2 | ''čeléton'' "to read"
|-
! Masculine !! Feminine
|-
! Remote past
| -re(n), -e(n) || čeléto'''re''' || čeléto'''ren'''
|-
! Hesternal past
| -(m)óni(n) || čelét'''óni''' || čelét'''ónin'''
|-
! Hodiernal past
| -aše(n) || čelétu'''aše''' || čelétu'''ašen'''
|-
! Present
| -∅ || colspan=2 | čeléto
|-
! Near future
| -útei(n) || čelét'''útei''' || čelét'''´útein'''
|-
! Distant future<br/>Speculative future
| -tuéle(n) || čeléto'''tuéle''' || čeléto'''tuélen'''
|}
 
<!-- Conjugation of "to be" ''(íso)'' — where two forms are given, the first is masculine and the other is feminine.
{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable"
|-
|-
Line 371: Line 398:


Example conjugation of another verb - ''čéléton'' "to read" (stem ''čélét-''):
Example conjugation of another verb - ''čéléton'' "to read" (stem ''čélét-''):
{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable"  
|-
|-
! rowspan=2 | ↓ Tense / → Aspect !! colspan=3 | Indicative !! colspan=3 | Subjunctive
! rowspan=2 | ↓ Tense / → Aspect !! colspan=3 | Indicative !! colspan=3 | Subjunctive
Line 402: Line 429:
|}
|}


Passive forms are formed by using the passive participles instead of the active ones; habitual and continuous indicative use the participles with the respective forms of ''íso'' (e.g. ''čeletótín'' → ''čéleté esítin'', ''zončéléti'' → ''čéleté zoníso/zoníten'').
Passive forms are formed by using the passive participles instead of the active ones; habitual and continuous indicative use the participles with the respective forms of ''íso'' (e.g. ''čeletótín'' → ''čéleté esítin'', ''zončéléti'' → ''čéleté zoníso/zoníten''). -->
 
<!-- Here are some example subcategories:
 
Nouns
Adjectives
Verbs
Adverbs
Particles
Derivational morphology
 
-->


==Syntax==
==Syntax==
8,624

edits