6,435
edits
Tardigrade (talk | contribs) (→Verbs) |
Tardigrade (talk | contribs) (→Verbs) |
||
| Line 1,118: | Line 1,118: | ||
Niemish verbs maintain the Germanic categories of strong, weak and preterite-present. All verbs have two aspects, imperfective (bare stem) and perfective (marked by a ''gy-'' prefix if intransitive, by a ''by-'' prefix if transitive). As in Slavic languages, the morphological perfect present has a future meaning. | Niemish verbs maintain the Germanic categories of strong, weak and preterite-present. All verbs have two aspects, imperfective (bare stem) and perfective (marked by a ''gy-'' prefix if intransitive, by a ''by-'' prefix if transitive). As in Slavic languages, the morphological perfect present has a future meaning. | ||
The Gothic subjunctive mood has been repurposed into two set of dependent verb forms (perfective and imperfective); these cannot occur without subordinating | The Gothic subjunctive mood has been repurposed into two set of dependent verb forms (perfective and imperfective); these cannot occur without the subordinating particle ''i''. There is no infinitive, although the present participle is often used in situations where other European languages use an infinitive, and is often misidentified as one. | ||
The conjugation of regular verbs can be seen in the table below. | The conjugation of regular verbs can be seen in the table below. | ||
edits