User:Ceige/Something Germanic
Grammar
Nouns
Gender
There are 3 genders, which are applied with semantic intent:
- Male:
- Male-gendered animals, things being emphasised in a masculine way*, and technically the -er suffix.
- e.g. ram, soldier
- Male-gendered animals, things being emphasised in a masculine way*, and technically the -er suffix.
- Female
- Female-gendered animal, things being emphasised in a feminine way*, romanticised concepts and abstractions, most derivational suffixes
- e.g. ewe, valkyrie
- Female-gendered animal, things being emphasised in a feminine way*, romanticised concepts and abstractions, most derivational suffixes
- Neuter
- Animals (in a collective or non-individualistic sense), vehicles (but personified vehicles are typically female), machines (see prev., female gender can act as a respectful familiar diminutive), diminutives suffixes, etc.
- e.g. sheep, land
- Animals (in a collective or non-individualistic sense), vehicles (but personified vehicles are typically female), machines (see prev., female gender can act as a respectful familiar diminutive), diminutives suffixes, etc.
*The use of emphasis is determined by the speaker's intent and background.
Number
Nouns form the plural with:
- -er if they end in a consonant, are unaffixed, and are male,
- -en if they end in a consonant or suffix, and are female,
- and -s if they end in a (phonemic) vowel.
These affixes also have secondary and tertiary partitive and derivational meanings.
Neuter nouns do not need to mark for plurality, but often employ umlauting, sometimes with a final dummy vowel (-e).