TolsianR: Difference between revisions

1,311 bytes added ,  16 June 2015
no edit summary
No edit summary
Line 229: Line 229:
====Nouns====
====Nouns====


Nouns have definiteness, gender, number, and case. The case system is actually very reduced, with only three cases, corresponding to two forms : nominative, accusative, and oblique, the lattest having formally merged with nominative (it is considered Oblique mostly out of grammatical tradition). Definiteness is marked by definite and indefinite articles which agree in gender and number with the nouns. There are two numbers, singular and plural. Finally, the gender system is fairly complicated, as it consists of two dimensions interacting : masculine vs feminine on the one hand and animate vs inanimate on the other. However, different parts of speech agree with these two gender systems : articles and adjectives will take masculine or feminine markings, while verbs are conjugated differently depending upon whether the nouns is animate or inanimate. Nouns themselves are marked for gender, and for animatedness when in the accusative case. Also, when an adjective qualifies several nouns which are not all masculine or feminine, they take a neutral plural suffix ; but beyond those special cases, neutral has disappeared from TolsianR.
Nouns have definiteness, gender, number, and case. The case system is actually very reduced, with only three cases : nominative, accusative, and dative. Definiteness is marked by definite and indefinite articles which agree in gender and number with the nouns. There are two numbers, singular and plural. Finally, the gender system is fairly complicated, as it consists of two dimensions interacting : masculine vs feminine on the one hand and animate vs inanimate on the other. However, different parts of speech agree with these two gender systems : articles and adjectives will take masculine or feminine markings, while verbs are conjugated differently depending upon whether the nouns is animate or inanimate. Nouns themselves are marked for gender, and for animatedness when in the accusative or dative case. Also, when an adjective qualifies several nouns which are not all masculine or feminine, they take a neutral plural suffix ; but beyond those special cases, neutral has disappeared from TolsianR.


=====''Definiteness''=====
=====''Definiteness''=====
Line 250: Line 250:
=====''Gender''=====
=====''Gender''=====


On many nouns ending in a vowel, gender is identifiable as -''e'' and -''o'' are masculine markers, while -''a'' is a feminine marker. But nouns ending with a consonant don't provide such cues.  Animatedness is marked in the accusative case as the prefix will be ''ke''- (or ''k''- before a vowel) in the case of an inanimate noun, and ''dake''- (or ''dak''- before a vowel) in the case of an animate noun. Also, "natural" gender is usually reflected in the grammatical gender (nous which refer to male beings usually are masculine, and vice-versa) ; and "natural" animatedness is usually reflected in grammatical animatedness as well : people, animals and, it is worth noticing, plants, are usually animate, while objects, concepts etc are usually inanimate.
On many nouns ending in a vowel, gender is identifiable as -''e'' and -''o'' are masculine markers, while -''a'' is a feminine marker. But nouns ending with a consonant don't provide such cues.  Animatedness is marked in the accusative case as the prefix will be ''ke''- (or ''k''- before a vowel) in the case of an inanimate noun, and ''dake''- (or ''dak''- before a vowel) in the case of an animate noun ; and in the genitive case, with a suffix ''-o'' for inanimate nouns (transformed into [w] after a vowel) and ''-do'' for animate nouns (see section on cases for more details). Also, "natural" gender is usually reflected in the grammatical gender (nous which refer to male beings usually are masculine, and vice-versa) ; and "natural" animatedness is usually reflected in grammatical animatedness as well : people, animals and, it is worth noticing, plants, are usually animate, while objects, concepts etc are usually inanimate.


Articles and adjectives agree in gender with nouns depending on their being masculine or feminine, while verbs have a different conjugation depending on the animate vs inanimate opposition, and the accusative marker differs as well. In the plural there is a neutral form if masculine and feminine nouns are under the scope of the same modifier ; in adjectives, the vowel associated with neutral is -''i''. If a verb has a complex subject comprised of animate and inanimate nouns, most usually the animate conjugation will be used.
Articles and adjectives agree in gender with nouns depending on their being masculine or feminine, while verbs have a different conjugation depending on the animate vs inanimate opposition, and the accusative and genitive markers differ as well. In the plural there is a neutral form if masculine and feminine nouns are under the scope of the same modifier ; in adjectives, the vowel associated with neutral is -''i''. If a verb has a complex subject comprised of animate and inanimate nouns, most usually the animate conjugation will be used.


=====''Number''=====
=====''Number''=====
Line 260: Line 260:
=====''Case''=====
=====''Case''=====


Nominative and so-called oblique are unmarked, while accusative is marked with a prefix which is different depending on the animatedness status of the noun : the prefix will be ''ke''- (or ''k''- before a vowel) in the case of an inanimate noun, and ''dake''- (or ''dak''- before a vowel) in the case of an animate noun.
Nominative is unmarked, and corresponds to the functions of subject, attribute of the subject, but also other functions which are not covered by accusative and dative cases. Accusative is marked with a prefix which is different depending on the animatedness status of the noun : the prefix will be ''ke''- (or ''k''- before a vowel) in the case of an inanimate noun, and ''dake''- (or ''dak''- before a vowel) in the case of an animate noun. Genitive is marked with a suffix ''-o'' for inanimate nouns (transformed into [w] after a vowel) and ''-do'' for animate nouns, although if the stem ends in a consonant diverse morphophonological changes take place depending on that consonant : aspirated plosives lose their aspiration ; voiceless obstruents become voiced ; the palatal nasal gets partially assimilated and turns into ''n'' ; the voiced velar fricative gets partially assimilated and turns into the plosive ''g'' (its distribution being limited to V_V contexts) ; prenasalised occlusives get totally nasalised (their distribution being limited to _V contexts) ; the bilabial fricative becomes a labio-velar approximan [w] ; and there's gemination with the dental occlusives : [dd]. Those changes are usually not reflected in the orthography.


====Verbs====
====Verbs====
Line 347: Line 347:


Some write instead : ''vekitqmo, vekitqi , vekitqne'' (imperfect animate), ''vekitqa, vekitqac, vekitqat, vekitqimo, vekitqitc, vekitqan, vekitqe'' (imperfect inanimate).
Some write instead : ''vekitqmo, vekitqi , vekitqne'' (imperfect animate), ''vekitqa, vekitqac, vekitqat, vekitqimo, vekitqitc, vekitqan, vekitqe'' (imperfect inanimate).
'''Participles'''
Verbs have present and past participles :
{| class="wikitable"
|-
!  !! Class A - Animate !! Class A - Inanimate !! Class B - Animate !! Class B - Inanimate
|-
| Present Participle || stemV-tɑ̃ || stemV-taɲ || stem-ɑ̃ || stem-aɲ
|-
| Past Participle || stemV-d || stemV-ʒ || stem-id || stem-iʒ
|}


====Adjectives====
====Adjectives====
103

edits