User:Aegon/High Valyrian Tutorial/1-5

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Lesson 5| The Accusative

Grammar: The Accusative

As you learned in the last lesson, the verb 'sagon' (to be) usually takes the nominative case. Most other verbs take the 'accusative' case.

In a sentence, the accusative is the "what" - in English grammar, this is known as the direct object.

For example: The girl sells the sword.

What did the girl sell? The sword. Thus, sword is the direct object, and when we translate it into High Valyrian:

Example
High Valyrian: Riña korzī liorza.
English: [The, a] girl [the] sword [she] sells.
Explanation: NOMINATIVE ACCUSATIVE VERB

Korze, then, is in the accusative, because it is the direct object.

Again, when an adjective describes a noun in the accusative case, the adjective must agree in number, case, and gender.

Example
High Valyrian: Riña korzī rōve liorza.
English: [The, a] girl [the, a] sword big [she] sells.
Explanation: NOMINATIVE NOUN ACCUSATIVE ADJECTIVE ACCUSATIVE VERB

Because High Valyrian uses cases to mark the subject and the object of a sentence, word order does not matter although it is common to see the accusative immediately before the verb (or a pre-verbal adjective). Consider:

taoba riñe urnes The boy sees the girl
riña taobe urnes The girl sees the boy
riñe taoba videt The boy sees the girl
taobe riña videt The girl sees the boy

Examples of Adjectives Agreeing with the Nominative and Accusative Case

Explanation- Daenerys is taking her powerful dragons to the wicked city.
High Valyrian: Daenerys va oktiot kōrē zȳhī zaldrīzī kostōbī jiōrza
English: Daenerys to [the, a] city wicked her dragon(s) powerful [she] brings.

Kōrē, a class II adjective, is lunar/solar, locative, and singular to agree with oktiot, the word in the locative case it is describing. The locative occurs due to the preposition va; thusly, va oktiot kōrē is called a prepositional phrase.

Kostōbī, a class I adjective, is solar and accusative to agree with zaldrīzī. Zaldrīzī is accusative because it is the object of jiōrza. Note that zaldrīzī (4sol.) is both the accusative singular and the accusative plural.

Here is an example of a sentence not using an accusative:

Explanation- Quickly the harpys gather on the walls.
High Valyrian: Jazdani dorot bōsot aderī derēbas
English: Harpys [on, at, in] [the, a] wall tall quickly [they] gather

The word bōsot agrees with the singular, locative, and solar dorot.

The harpys may have walls; however, Daenerys has dragons!

Explanation- The dragons fly from the canyon and the harpys attack the great dragons.
High Valyrian: Zaldrīzesse hen rihot sōvesi se jazdani zaldrīzī karī idakosi
English: [The] dragons from [the, a] canyon [they] fly and [the] harpys [the] dragons great attack.

Kara must become karī in order to modify zaldrīzī, which is solar, plural, and accusative.

Dragons do not like to be attacked:

Explanation- With anger, the dragons burn them all.
High Valyrian: Vēdroso zaldrīzesse pōnte tolvie zālzi
English: [with] anger, angry [the] dragons them all [they] burn.

[CHECK] With the accusative pronoun pōnte, the lunar form of the adjective is used.