Tpaalha Grammar: Difference between revisions

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==Nouns==
==Nouns==
Nouns decline for case and number. There are two cases, nominative and partitive, and three numbers: singular, dual, and plural. The declension of nouns depend on the initial (and to some extent, final) sounds of the noun root. In particular, noun roots beginning with the velar stops '''k''' and '''g''' and/or consonant clusters differ in how they decline. Plural forms (especially plural partitive forms) often feature voicing of the initial consonant. Sound changes also sometimes affect the form of the dual stem.
Nouns decline for case and number. There are two cases, nominative and partitive, and three numbers: singular, dual, and plural. The declension of nouns depend on the initial (and to some extent, final) sounds of the noun root. In particular, noun roots beginning with the velar stops '''k''' and '''g''' and/or consonant clusters differ in how they decline. Plural forms (especially plural partitive forms) often feature voicing of the initial consonant of the root. Sound changes also sometimes affect the form of the dual stem.


===Vowel-initial roots===  
===Vowel-initial roots===  

Revision as of 08:56, 8 January 2024

Tpaalha Language Navigation: Home, Phonology, Grammar, Vocabulary, Orthography

Tpaalha is a fusional language. It follows nominative-accusative morphosyntactic alignment. The language is mostly head-final, with some head-initial features. The default word order is subject-object-verb (SOV). The language has postpositions, although postpositional phrases follow the nouns they modify. "True" adjectives precede the nouns they modify, however, these are few in number. Most terms that function as adjectives are instead postpositional phrases with nouns, which may indicate whether the quality described was acquired on purpose or accidentally, and follow the nouns they modify. Similarly, relative clauses follow the nouns they modify, and possessors follow their possessees.

Nouns

Nouns decline for case and number. There are two cases, nominative and partitive, and three numbers: singular, dual, and plural. The declension of nouns depend on the initial (and to some extent, final) sounds of the noun root. In particular, noun roots beginning with the velar stops k and g and/or consonant clusters differ in how they decline. Plural forms (especially plural partitive forms) often feature voicing of the initial consonant of the root. Sound changes also sometimes affect the form of the dual stem.

Vowel-initial roots

Vowel-initial roots such as uzyih "opossum" decline in the following manner:

Singular Dual Plural
Nominative uzyih uzyipsyi zguzyih
Partitive guzyih guzyipsyi uzguzyih

Consonant-initial roots

Roots beginning with gr such as graam "sap" decline somewhat differently:

Singular Dual Plural
Nominative graam gransyi zgraam
Partitive ugraam ugransyi uzgraam

Roots beginning with kn such as knaan "nose" inflect in a yet again different manner:

Singular Dual Plural
Nominative knaan knansyi zuknaan
Partitive uknaan uknansyi uzgnaan

Roots beginning with sht such as shtah "leaf" show some unique sound changes:

Singular Dual Plural
Nominative shtah shtaksyi zushtah
Partitive ushtah ushtaksyi uzzhdah