Ravkan Grammar: Difference between revisions

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==Nouns==
==Nouns==
Nouns in Ravkan decline for case and number, according to their grammatical gender. The cases are  nominative, accusative, partitive, dative, and instrumental. There are three genders: masculine, feminine and neuter.  
Nouns in Ravkan decline for case and number, according to their grammatical gender. The cases are  nominative, accusative, partitive, dative, and instrumental. There are three genders: masculine, feminine and neuter.  
===Noun possession===
Possessors are marked with the partitive case, and follow the possessee, e.g. ''Soldat '''Sol''''' ("Soldiers '''of the Sun'''").


===Noun declension===
===Noun declension===

Latest revision as of 02:08, 14 May 2024

Ravkan Language Navigation: Home, Phonology, Grammar, Vocabulary, Orthography, Dialogue

Ravkan is a fusional language. Adjectives precede the nouns they modify, while possessors follow their possessees.

Nouns

Nouns in Ravkan decline for case and number, according to their grammatical gender. The cases are nominative, accusative, partitive, dative, and instrumental. There are three genders: masculine, feminine and neuter.

Noun possession

Possessors are marked with the partitive case, and follow the possessee, e.g. Soldat Sol ("Soldiers of the Sun").

Noun declension

Masculine

Masculine nouns end in a consonant in the nominative singular, and have a plural in -i. Masculine nouns merge the nominative and accusative in the singular and plural, respectively:

Singular Plural
Nominative borov borovi
Accusative borov borovi
Partitive borovi borovya
Dative borovan borovin
Instrumental borovash borovisi
Palatal-final masculine

Masculine nouns with an underlying root ending in -y (a palatalized consonant) decline in a somewhat irregular fashion, the nominative singular itself lacking the -y which appears in other forms:

Singular Plural
Nominative prats pratsyi
Accusative pratsy pratsyi
Partitive pratsyi pratsya
Dative pratsyan pratsyin
Instrumental pratsyash pratsyisi

Feminine

Feminine nouns end in -a, and have a plural in -ai. They merge the nominative and partitive singular, as well as the accusative singular, the accusative plural and the partitive plural:

Singular Plural
Nominative madra madrai
Accusative madre madre
Partitive madra madre
Dative madrat madres
Instrumental madrash madresi

Neuter count

Neuter nouns differ in their declension for count and mass nouns, respectively. Neuter count nouns end in a consonant, and have a plural in -a. They merge the nominative, accusative and partitive singular; the nominative and accusative plural; and the dative singular and plural:

Singular Plural
Nominative arman armana
Accusative arman armana
Partitive arman armani
Dative armane armane
Instrumental armanash armanisi

Neuter mass

Neuter mass nouns end -i in the nominative, and do not have separate plural forms. They merge the nominative, accusative and partitive:

Singular Plural
Nominative masi masi
Accusative masi masi
Partitive masi masi
Dative mase mase
Instrumental masisi masisi
Irregular neuter mass

An exception is the irregular noun gresu (beer), a Fjerdan borrowing:

Singular Plural
Nominative gresu greswi
Accusative greswi greswi
Partitive greswi greswi
Dative greswe greswe
Instrumental greswisi greswisi

Noun derivation

Abstract nouns may be derived from adjectives with the suffix -ost (-ness), which then take neuter gender, for example yolost (gratefulness) from yol (grateful), whence yolostash (thanks, literally “with gratefulness”), an instrumental form.