Chlouvānem/Morphology: Difference between revisions

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Chlouvānem verbs also conjugate for seven '''voices''' (''tadgeroe'', pl. ''tadgerenī''), each one putting one of seven different core elements as the ''direct-case argument'', usually for means of topicalization or definiteness; they reflect the Austronesian-type morphosyntactical alignment of the language. The seven voices are, for exterior verbs:
Chlouvānem verbs also conjugate for seven '''voices''' (''tadgeroe'', pl. ''tadgerenī''), each one putting one of seven different core elements as the ''direct-case argument'', usually for means of topicalization or definiteness; they reflect the Austronesian-type morphosyntactical alignment of the language. The seven voices are, for exterior verbs:
* '''patient-trigger '''or ''patientive'' (''dṛṣokas tadgeroe'') (unmarked);
* '''patient-trigger''' (''dṛṣokas tadgeroe'') (unmarked);
* '''agent-trigger '''or ''agentive'' (''darīnūkas tadgeroe'') (transitive and ditransitive verbs only);
* '''agent-trigger''' (''darīnūkas tadgeroe'') (transitive and ditransitive verbs only);
* '''benefactive-trigger '''or simply ''benefactive'' (''chārimęlīnūkas tadgeroe'');
* '''benefactive-trigger''' (''chārimęlīnūkas tadgeroe'');
* '''antibenefactive-trigger '''or simply ''antibenefactive'' (''tatflunsusūkas tadgeroe'');
* '''antibenefactive-trigger''' (''tatflunsusūkas tadgeroe'');
* '''locative-trigger '''or simply ''locative'' (''yutiūkas tadgeroe'');
* '''locative-trigger''' (''yutiūkas tadgeroe'');
* '''dative-trigger''' or simply ''dative'' (''męliausis tadgeroe'') (mostly ditransitive verbs);
* '''dative-trigger''' (''męliausis tadgeroe'') (mostly ditransitive verbs);
* '''instrumental-trigger''' or simply ''instrumental'' (''drausis tadgeroe'') (morphologically possible for all verbs, but not always meaningful).
* '''instrumental-trigger''' (''drausis tadgeroe'') (morphologically possible for all verbs, but not always meaningful).
Interior verbs only have six voices, as they do not have an agentive voice; the patientive, unmarked voice, is here called '''common voice'''.
Interior verbs only have six voices, as they do not have an agentive voice; the patientive, unmarked voice, is here called '''common voice''' (''tailьcārṣusas tadgeroe'')<ref>For simplicity's sake, voices' names are most often rendered as ''patientive'', ''agentive'', ''benefactive'' ''antibenefactive'', ''locative'', ''dative'', ''instrumental'', and ''common''.</ref>.


Chlouvānem verbs also conjugate for four different '''tense-aspect combinations''' (simply ''tenses'' (''avyāṣa'' - pl. ''avyāṣai'')): '''present''' (''kaminænikah avyāṣa''), '''past''' (''dāṃdeniah avyāṣa''), '''perfect''' (''mīraṃnajauseh avyāṣa''), and '''future''' (''lallāmiti avyāṣa''); other distinctions may be built periphrastically (most notably ''imperfect'', ''pluperfect'' and ''future perfect''). Tenses are the “basic unit” verbs conjugate in: all tenses conjugate for nine persons (1st-2nd-3rd in singular, dual and plural; note though that 3rd singular and 3rd plural are identical in the perfect). Note that some moods do only distinguish between imperfective and perfective aspect.
Chlouvānem verbs also conjugate for four different '''tense-aspect combinations''' (simply ''tenses'' (''avyāṣa'' - pl. ''avyāṣai'')): '''present''' (''kaminænikah avyāṣa''), '''past''' (''dāṃdeniah avyāṣa''), '''perfect''' (''mīraṃnajauseh avyāṣa''), and '''future''' (''lallāmiti avyāṣa''); other distinctions may be built periphrastically (most notably ''imperfect'', ''pluperfect'' and ''future perfect''). Tenses are the “basic unit” verbs conjugate in: all tenses conjugate for nine persons (1st-2nd-3rd in singular, dual and plural; note though that 3rd singular and 3rd plural are identical in the perfect). Note that some moods do only distinguish between imperfective and perfective aspect.
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