Harākti/Conjugation: Difference between revisions

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|-
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! rowspan="2" | Gerund !! Present
! rowspan="2" | Gerund !! Present
| colspan="9" | ahuantsi
| colspan="9" | huantsi
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! Past
! Past
| colspan="9" | ahuese
| colspan="9" | huese
|-
|-
! colspan="2" | Supine
! colspan="2" | Supine
| colspan="9" | ahuan
| colspan="9" | huan
|-
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! colspan="2" | Verbal noun
! colspan="2" | Verbal noun

Revision as of 15:07, 15 September 2013

Harākti verbal system is in general simpler than that of Latin or Sanskrit, but still a bit more complex than its Anatolian sister language, Hittite. This page covers most of the various congjugation parradigms of Harākti.

Basic conjugation


Other tenses, aspects and moods:

  • future: -s (added to the present forms)
  • progressive-iterative: -re-
  • habitual-durative: -sk-
  • causative: -nen- (→ -ne-/-nu-/-neu-)
  • conditional: mān (plus normally conjugated verb)
  • optative: mēn (plus normally conjugated verb)
  • reputative: kān (plus normally conjugated verb)

Impersonal forms:

  • present active gerund: -(a)uantsi (indeclinable)
  • past active gerund: -vese/-uese (indeclinable)
  • present active participle: -(a)man (declined as adjectives)
  • past active participle verbal: -(a)nt- (forming tenses)
  • past active participle adjectival: -(a)mantsi (declined as adjectives)
  • past passive participle: -it/-id (declined as adjectives)
  • infinitives: -ā/-ī (active), -hī (mediopassive), -rī (passive)
  • supine: -(a)uan
  • verbal noun: -atar/-(e)shar (7th declension)

Types of conjugation

Type vēdī

Verbs: vēdī see, vādī know

Testing area

Testing area 1

Testing area 2

Testing area 3

Testing area 4

Testing area 5