Řeuŋnie: Difference between revisions

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Inflectional morphology is Slavic and Germanic-inspired; clitics and syntax are Japanese-inspired
Inflectional morphology is Slavic and Germanic-inspired; clitics and syntax are Japanese-inspired
===Nouns===
===Nouns===
*-a declension
Ouřefr nouns are classified into two genders: animate and inanimate, and they inflect for case. Similarly to Slavic languages, the case affixes are fusional, encoding both case and number.
*-e declension
 
*hard consonant declension
The cases are stolen from Japanese:
*soft consonant declension (default for loans ending in a consonant)
*nominative (Japanese ''ga'')
*accusative (Japanese ''wo'')
*genitive (Japanese ''no'')
*dative (Japanese ''ni'')
*locative/allative (Japanese ''e'')
*comitative/"and" (Japanese ''to'')
*instrumental/locative (Japanese ''de'')
*ablative (Japanese ''kara'')
====Declension classes====
The declension classes are:
*-a declension (usually animate)
*-e declension (usually animate)
*hard consonant declension (usually inanimate)
*soft consonant declension (usually inanimate, but default for loans ending in a consonant)
*Inanimate vowel nouns (default for loans ending in a vowel)
*Inanimate vowel nouns (default for loans ending in a vowel)
*-ŕ declension
*-ŕ declension  
*-ýn/-ín declension
*-ýn/-ín declension (adjectival noun)
*-é/-ie declension (adjectival noun)
There are more declension classes than in related languages such as [[Nabbrzé]].


===Verbs and adjectives===
===Verbs and adjectives===
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