Væyne Zaanics Grammar: Difference between revisions

From The Languages of David J. Peterson
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
Line 32: Line 32:
|We will discuss it.}}
|We will discuss it.}}


As seen above, the ''-aw'' suffix appears exclusively when there is no overt object mentioned in the clause{{AOLIref|page=172}}.
As seen above, the ''-aw'' suffix appears exclusively when the clause does not have an overt object{{AOLIref|page=172}}.


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 10:27, 2 September 2023

Væyne Zaanics Language Navigation: Home, Phonology, Grammar, Vocabulary, Orthography, Dialogue

Væyne Zaanics is an inflected language, with both fusional and agglutinative features. It is a constructed language both in-universe and out-of-universe, and has a fairly regular morphosyntax.

Parts of speech

Nouns

Nouns are declined by case and number, and belong to one of two main declension classes: 'light' and 'dark'.

Pronouns

Pronouns generally have a comparatively regular declension, with the exception of personal pronouns, and much the same features as nouns.

Adjectives

Adjectives agree with nouns in class, case and number.

Verbs

Verbs are conjugated for tense, and have finite, infinitive and participle forms, and like nouns fall into two main conjugation classes: 'light' and 'dark'.

Morphosyntax

Væyne Zaanics features head-marking on its verbs, in the form of object marking. Object marking differs from object agreement. In agreement, the morphological markers must appear whether or not the clause contains a standalone object. This is not the case in Væyne Zaanics, where the object is marked on the verb only when the clause lacks a standalone object. An illustration of this can be observed by contrasting the two examples below:

Template:Fs interlinear

Template:Fs interlinear

As seen above, the -aw suffix appears exclusively when the clause does not have an overt object[1].

References