Eyalian nouns: Difference between revisions

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! [[w:Grammatical person|Person]] !! [[w:Grammatical number|Number]] !! Ending !! colspan=2| Example !! Translation
! [[w:Grammatical person|Person]] !! [[w:Grammatical number|Number]] !! Ending !! colspan=2| Example !! Translation
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| rowspan="3" | first person || singular || zė- || '''''zė'''kono'' ||  ''''''''ilo''  || ''my house'', "my horse"
| rowspan="3" | first person || singular || zė- || '''''zė'''kono'' ||  '''''ze'''ilo''  || ''my house'', "my horse"
|-
|-
| dual || za- || '''''za'''kono'' || '''''za'''ilo'' || ''our (du.) house'', ''our (du.) horse''
| dual || za- || '''''za'''kono'' || '''''za'''ilo'' || ''our (du.) house'', ''our (du.) horse''

Revision as of 07:55, 26 September 2020

Eyalian is a moderately inflected language with four cases and three numbers (singular, plural, dual). All nouns also have two forms: independent and conjunct, though for many nouns these two forms are identical in the standard. In this article only the Tarnan variety is described, since Eyalian nowadays mostly refers to this variety only.

Nouns are grouped into "declensions", which are sets of nouns that form their cases in a similar manner. In this article they are divided into five declensions. The declension to which a noun belongs is determined largely by its nominative ending.

Cases

Eyalian nouns have four cases (hieppala): nominative, dative, genitive and vocative. In Tarmana ("the Book of Words"), which is the oldest known Eyalian text about grammar, the four cases are described as follows:

  1. Xattane "direct": "that which is free in action". This is the equivalent to the nominative case, but is only used when a subject performs its action voluntarily.
  2. Ohuonne "relative": "one that depends on others". This is similar to the genitive case, but can be used as the accusative too, when signifies an object of an action.
  3. O'xattane "indirect" "that which effects most." This in most cases is equivalent to the dative, which signifies a recipient, but can also mark a subject of an involuntary action.
  4. Eilėke "that is called": This is equivalent to the vocative case and is used in the same context.

Possessive prefixes

Instead of separate possessive pronouns, like "my" or "her", Eyalian uses prefixes. The number of possessors and their person are distinguished.

Person Number Ending Example Translation
first person singular zė- kono zeilo my house, "my horse"
dual za- zakono zailo our (du.) house, our (du.) horse
plural zin- zikono zinilo our house, our horse
second person singular jė- kono jeilo your (sing.) house, your (sing.) horse
dual ėji- ėjikono ėjilo your (du.) house, your (du.) horse
plural in- ikono inilo your (pl.) house, your (sing.) horse
third person an. singular hė- kono heilo his/her house, his/her horse
dual ha- hakono hailo their (du.) house, their (du.) horse
plural ho- hokono hoilo their house, their horse
third person inan. singular ko- kokono koilo its house, its horse
dual ki- kikono keilo their (du.) house, their (du.) horse
plural kȯn- kono kunilo their house, their horse
reciprocal ea- eakono eailo each other's house, each other's horse

Declensions

a-stems

e- and o-stems

i- and u- stems

consonant stems