Zemeni Grammar
Zemeni is an agglutinative language.
Phonology
Main page: Appendix:Zemeni pronunciation
An important phonetic rule is that high vowels lower after glides, which plays a role in many of the inflectional paradigms.
Nouns
Nouns inflect only for singular and plural number. The plural marker is a prefix which comes from an historic word *is- ("all"), which also gave rise to the plural pronouns. The following table shows examples of singular and plural forms for noun roots with different initials:
Initial | Singular | Plural | |
---|---|---|---|
Vowel | ara | isara | |
Stop/Affricate | Voiceless | ||
Voiced | gambo | iskambo | |
Nasal | neri | izneri | |
Liquid | remba | izhremba | |
Glide | yavi | ishavi | |
Fricative | khaze | ikkhaze | |
Glottal | hon | ison |
Pronouns
Pronouns decline for case, number and person. The cases are nominative and accusative, and the numbers singular and plural. In addition to first, second and third-person pronouns, there is also an inclusive dual pronoun, with no number and case distinctions. The pronouns decline as follows:
Singular | Plural | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Nominative | Accusative | Nominative | Accusative | |
First Person | avi | av | isi | ek |
Second Person | o | iso | is | |
Third Person | ene | en | ||
Inclusive Dual | avo |
Verbs
Verbs conjugate for tense and voice, and agree with their subjects in person and number. The voices are active and passive, and the tenses non-past, perfect, and imperfect. Verbs differ in their conjugation patterens based what sound the verb root begins and ends with.
Take as an example the verb root adaw- "fight". The forms adawe ("fight!") and adawesi ("we fight") are formed from the root by means of suffixes. The infinitive form of a verb is marked with bes ("do") followed by a verbal noun, in this case adawa ("fight"), which gives the infinitive form bes adawa ("to fight"). Verbal nouns for verb roots ending in a glide are formed by copying the final vowel of the root as a suffix. Historically, the fact that bes was used with verbal nouns, which were zero-derived from the verb root, combined with the fact that roots ending in a glide required the addition of a copy vowel, resulted in the generalization that the addition of a copy vowel to the root forms a verbal noun. The conjugation of adawa (vowel-initial, glide-final root) is depicted in the following chart:
Active | Passive | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Non-Past | Perfect | Imperfect | Non-Past | Perfect | Imperfect | ||
Singular | 1st | adawa | kyadawa | inadawa | ezadawa | kyezadawa | inezadawa |
2nd | adawo | kyadawo | inadawo | ezadawo | kyezadawo | inezadawo | |
3rd | adawene | kyadawene | inadawene | ezadawene | kyezadawene | inezadawene | |
Plural | 1st | adawesi | kyadawesi | inadawesi | ezadawesi | kyezadawesi | inezadawesi |
2nd | adaweso | kyadaweso | inadaweso | ezadaweso | kyezadaweso | inezadaweso | |
3rd | |||||||
Infinitive | bes adawa | kibes adawa | imbes adawa | bes ezadawa | kibes ezadawa | imbes ezadawa | |
Imperative | adawe | ezadawe |