1,855
edits
No edit summary |
|||
Line 343: | Line 343: | ||
|} | |} | ||
-m object | |||
d̀- adverbial | |||
ĉ adjectival | |||
-(ə)- stemless conveys base info; nf́ (life) | |||
-i- stem one "alters to basic verbs meaning ""to be [root]""" nf́ (life) - inf́ (to be living) | |||
-a- stem two "Alters to verbs meaning ""to experience"" (life>to be alive (as in 'I feel so alive!')" | |||
-e- stem three "Alters meaning to ""to cause""" | |||
-o- stem four conveys agency | |||
-ö- stem five (nouns) conveys 'if' like verbs | |||
-e nom | |||
dat | |||
-s Possessive alienable physical | |||
-ṣ́ alienable non-physical | |||
-s̀ inalienable physical | |||
-ṣ̀ inalienable nonphysical | |||
-ŝ possessed | |||
essence-tense-specifications-C1-stem-C2-person/acc-C3-plural-aspect-mood-valency | |||
ḱəkîpīp | |||
ẓnəʒiʒā' | |||
ənigoṣ | |||
əxísīl | |||
ə 1st s | |||
ə̄ 2nd s | |||
ī 3rd s | |||
ï̄ 1st o | |||
ȫ 2nd o | |||
ǖ 3rd o/acc | |||
a 1st so | |||
ā 1st s 2nd o | |||
o 1st s 3rd o | |||
ō 2nd so | |||
ö 2nd s 1st o | |||
i 2nd s 3rd o | |||
ï 3rd so | |||
u 3rd s 1st o | |||
ü 3rd s 2nd o | |||
person tone | |||
Low tone Marks that the speaker is in a state of distress or poor health | |||
o plural s | |||
ö plural o | |||
ō plural so | |||
q́- past (normal) | |||
x- past (mirative) | |||
- present | |||
ṫ- future (definite) | |||
ṫ̂- future (generic) | |||
ḱ- Past perfect | |||
ŋ̀- Perfect | |||
ł́- Future perfect | |||
ṡ́o habitual | |||
ri iterative | |||
kse potential | |||
əq́ìħə' | |||
valency | |||
-(i) monoactive separately, not necessarily the same Two children are playing on the floor.’ [the implication being that the two children are not playing with each other nor are they necessarily playing the same game] | |||
-ï parallel Two children are playing on the floor.’ [they are playing the same kind of game but separately from each other] | |||
-u corollary Two children are playing on the floor.’ [they are playing at the same time, but each is playing a different game] | |||
-ü Reciprocal Two children are playing on the floor.’ [they are playing with another, unnamed party, presumably other children] | |||
-e Complementary an activity different from that of the first party, but necessary to complete the whole of the joint activity Two children are playing on the floor.’ [they are playing a coplementary game/activity with each other, where one performs one half/side of the activity and the other performs the other half] | |||
-ë Duplicative Two children are playing on the floor.’ [where one child performs a play activity and the second child then copies/duplicates the same activity] | |||
-o Demonstrative Two children are on the floor and one is showing the other how to play (a game).’ | |||
-ö Participative Two children are on the floor taking part in the play activity | |||
mood | |||
- Factual For fully objective statements | |||
-ṡ imperative Commands | |||
-b subjunctive For subjective facts | |||
-v Subjunctive 2 For wishes and the like | |||
-r Assumptive (conditional) indicates that factuality depends upon the happening or existance of something else | |||
-s Speculative Subjectivity and Factuality are unknown | |||
Counterfactive The presumption is false but the factuality is otherwise true | |||
-g Hypothetical Regardless of the presumption, the factuality would be uncertain | |||
-c Imaginative Indicates the factuality is false in reality but refers to a hypotgetical non-reality | |||
also used for made up things like conlangs | |||
əṡí'ï' əfə̏tǖ' | |||
əfə̏tǖ' | |||
bəsàsus | |||
Degree of Consent | |||
deliberately against the expressed wishes/will of the affected party | |||
without the affected party’s knowledge and against their implied/presumed wishes/will | |||
without the consent or knowledge of the affected party [their expressed or implied wishes/will being unknown or undetermined] | |||
-q̇̀ with the affected party’s knowledge but without their consent | |||
with the affected party’s consent obtained under pressure, threat, coercion | |||
-t with the affected party’s reluctant consent | |||
- with the affected party’s full consent; willingly | |||
with the affected party’s enthusiastic approval and support | |||
by request of the affected party | |||
əfìlək̇q̇̀ | |||
Reason for an Emotional State or Motivation for an Action | |||
for no reason | |||
for foolish or naïve reason | |||
out of curiosity/to see what happens | |||
in defense/for protection | |||
to provoke/elicit reaction | |||
to entice | |||
to show appreciation | |||
for appropriate reasons / for good reason | |||
for virtuous, healthy/beneficial reasons | |||
Degree of Deliberateness/Agency | |||
accidental(ly) / inadvertent(ly) and unaware of consequences | |||
unintended / unintentional(ly) / without meaning to and unaware of consequences | |||
accidental(ly) / inadvertent(ly) but now aware of consequences | |||
unintended / unintentional(ly) / without meaning to but now aware of consequences | |||
unforeseeable / unpredictable; unforeseeably / unpredictably | |||
without realizing or considering potential consequences | |||
thinking one can get away without reaping consequences / furtive(ly) | |||
realizing potential risks or consequences / cognizant of potential risks or consequences | |||
intentional(ly) / deliberate(ly) / on purpose / by choice; choose to | |||
Expectation of Outcome | |||
shockingly unexpected; without precedent or rumour | |||
surprise X / unexpected X; completely by surprise/ completely unexpected(ly) | |||
manage to X despite inadequacy of preparation or effort; harder than thought to be due to poor planning and/or execution | |||
manage to X despite underestimating hindrances or obstacles; harder than initially thought to be | |||
managed to X despite hindrance(s) or obstacles; hard-won | |||
manage to X due to hindrances or obstacles being overestimated; easier than thought to be | |||
manage to X due to excellent preparation / planning / execution | |||
completely as expected / totally as anticipated / as predicted | |||
pat; outcome pre-ordained or predetermined | |||
Means of Enablement | |||
1 by inadvertent gesture/word/sign taken as order or permission | |||
2 by granting of permission | |||
3 by cajoling or persuasion | |||
4 by direct request or imploring | |||
5 by direct order based on one’s real or perceived authority | |||
6 by inadvertent removal of hindrance | |||
7 by inadvertent action that initiates a chain of events | |||
8 by deliberate removal of hindrance | |||
9 by deliberate action that initiates a chain of events | |||
Degree of Impact on Patient/Target or Enablement of Outcome | |||
1 target can do nothing - utterly inevitable | |||
2 target chooses to do nothing - resigned to fate | |||
3 target tries to prevent/avoid but fails | |||
4 target tries to prevent/avoid and does so partially or mitigates impact somewhat | |||
5 target tries to prevent/avoid and succeeds | |||
6 target helps/enables outcome inadvertently | |||
7 target helps/enables outcome against own interest (i.e., without thinking) | |||
8 target helps/enables outcome intentionally despite negative consequences | |||
9 target helps/enables outcome intentionally for own benefit | |||
Degree of Agency, Intent or Effectiveness | |||
1 with the anticipated max. resulting effect possible | |||
2 with the anticipated resulting effect to a high degree | |||
3 with the anticipated resulting effect to a moderate degree | |||
4 with the anticipated resulting effect but only to a marginal, superficial or barely noticeable degree | |||
5 with no noticeable effect or resulting change | |||
6 with only marginal, superficial, or barely noticeable effect or resulting change unanticipated | |||
7 with moderate effect or resulting change — unanticipated | |||
8 with the resulting effect to a high degree — unanticipated | |||
9 with the max. resulting effect possible — unanticipated | |||
Status of Inferred Arguments | |||
1 Only explicitly stated arguments are implied; no unstated arguments should be inferred | |||
2 Only logically required arguments are implied or should be inferred (e.g., a STIMULUS for a state of external sensory input, a RECIPIENT for an act of transferring possession); unstated arguments that are logically unnecessary but possible should not be inferred | |||
3 Logically required arguments should be inferred; logically unnecessary but possible arguments (e.g., INSTRUMENTAL, SITUATIVE, DEPENDENT, or Temporal) may be inferred | |||
4 Logically unnecessary but possible arguments may be inferred; logically required arguments are ONLY those explicitly stated | |||
5 OK to infer an affective STIMULUS only; no other unstated arguments implied | |||
6 OK to infer an ERG or EFF agent only; no other unstated arguments implied | |||
7 OK to infer a temporal context/argument plus any logically required arguments | |||
8 OK to infer an INSTRUMENTAL argument plus any logically required arguments | |||
9 OK to infer a SITUATIVE or a DEPENDENT argument (i.e., a context describable via the SITUATIVE or DEPENDENT case or case-frame) plus any logically required arguments | |||
essence | |||
The morphological category of Essence explicitly distinguishes real-world actualities from their alternative, imagined or potential counterparts. The two essences are termed NORMAL and REPRESENTATIVE, the former being the default essence denoting real-world nouns and verbs, the latter denoting alternative counterparts. By marking such counterparts explicitly, a speaker can express any noun or verb as referring to a real-world versus alternative manifestation, without having the listener infer such from an explanatory context. | |||
- normal | |||
ü- representative | |||
====Adjectives==== | ====Adjectives==== | ||
====Adverbs==== | ====Adverbs==== |
edits