Munja'kin Grammar

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Munja'kin Language Navigation: Home, Phonology, Grammar, Vocabulary, Dialogue

Munja'kin is a very analytic, strongly head-initial verb-subject-object language. Munja'kin lacks gender, number marking on nouns or any form of agreement, but it features switch-reference particles, clusivity, differential object marking and inalienable possession.

Alternations

A pervasive feature of Munja'kin's grammar is the alternation between i and a which occurs in many derivations and compounds and usually results in a turning into i:

InjuAnjuri
HioKijáhao

This phenomenon occurs because Proto-Munja'kin's vowel */e/ merged with /i/ when it was stressed and with /a/ when it was not, and stress shifts often happen when a word takes an affix or forms a compound with another. However, the alternations are not always predictable even if one knows their etymology, as they do not occur in some irregular words even though they would be expected.

Nouns and adjectives

Munja'kin's nouns and adjectives are invariable and are not categorized into classes. Munja'kin does not use articles, so no distinction between definite and indefinite nouns is made. Some nouns like pagi may also be used as verbs, others like juru may be used as adjectives, and adjectives may be used as stative verbs, the exact role is determined by word order, as verbs precede their arguments while adjectives follow nouns.

ni 'ozu marí: this good world
Marí ni 'ozu: this world is good

Comparisons are made using the preposition puli, meaning "against":

'ozu marí puli ni 'ozu: a world better than this world

Compounds and reduplication

Compounds of nouns and verbs are attested, the head noun usually appears before the modifier. Reduplication is used for some derivations, though the resulting words' meanings are lexically determined. Some roots are no longer used alone and only appear in reduplications.

Pronouns

Munja'kin's pronouns distinguish clusivity, hin is used when the speaker talks about themself and the addressee, while tunga is used otherwise:

Ambro hin zi'a: we (you and I) can sing
Ambro tunga zi'a: we can sing (but you cannot)

They also have a possessive form, which is used after the prepositions an and pa to express attributive possession, or as a verb to express predicative possession:

Uli an doni: my face (toni mutates into doni after an)
Toni ni uli: this face is mine

Singular Plural
1st Person 2nd Person 3rd Person 1st Person 2nd Person 3rd Person
Inclusive Exclusive
Plain tun si'o lia hin tunga si'ka li'ka
Possessive toni sa'oi li hini tungí sa'kí li'kí
Reflexive vu an doni vu an-d-za'oi vu an-d-li vu an hini vu an dungí vu an-d-za'kí vu an-d-li'kí

Reflexive pronouns are formed with the particle vu, which is related to vo'u, meaning "body".

Determiners

Munja'kin's determiners have a three-way distance contrast, ni is proximal, ki is medial and kika, which was originally a reduplication of ki, is distal. Determiners precede nouns or may be used alone as demonstrative pronouns. Munja'kin also has a honorific determiner hi, which precedes names and may serve as a vocative marker.

Adverbs

Munja'kin's adverbs are often identical to adjectives and usually follow verbs directly:

Tani a'a: a near day
Hi pas a'a!: stay near!

Alternatively, one may use the preposition ki with a noun to form an adverbial construction, for instance, mon ki vunduri means "to choose right", literally "to choose with correctness".

Prepositions

Munja'kin's prepositions generally originate from verbs and co-occur with either the plain or the possessive form of a pronoun.

Hi and pa

Munja'kin has differential object marking: the preposition hi precedes displaced direct object proper nouns or pronouns while pa precedes displaced direct object non-proper nouns. When objects directly follow verbs (when the subject is implied by lanú, for instance), they do not take a preposition:

Lon tun hi Ojo : I see Ojo
Lon tun hi lia : I see him
Lon tun pa dizu : I see the man
Lon tun pa dizu lanú ris lia : I see the man and hear him

The an-mutation

An is a special preposition that causes a following consonant (but not a following cluster) to voice. It also becomes an-d- before z, l and r.

Effects of an
Initial sound +an
p an b
t an d
ch an j
k an g
s an-d-z
z
l an-d-l
r an-d-r

Possession

Two prepositions may express possession in Munja'kin: an is used for inanimate inalienable possessions (such as body parts) and animate inferior possessions (such as offspring), while pa is conversely used for inanimate alienable possessions and animate superior possessions (such as parents). When the possessor is a pronoun, its possessive form is used.

Uli an Ojo: Ojo's face
Boku an-d-li: his son
Jurunomi pa Ojo: Ojo's emerald
Tata pa li: his father

Conjunctions

The preposition ki, meaning "with", also serves as the conjunction "and", but it is only used with noun phrases, as the particles la and lanú already link clauses. Monala, which derives from mon ala, meaning "choose one", serves as "or" and follows the noun phrases or verb phrases it conjoins.

Verbs

Munja'kin's verbs do not inflect. Tense, aspect, mood and polarity are conveyed by particles, which directly precede the verbs, or by auxiliaries, which precede the verbs and whose subjects also precede the verbs. Munja'kin does not have a copula, it uses stative verbs or zero-copula constructions.

Verb derivation

Most Munja'kin verbs may be nominalized with the suffix -ri, which often cause the stem's final phoneme to change, the change is usually predictable if one knows the verb's etymology (for instance, a stem ending with a will yield -uri if the a is actually a former */e/, otherwise it will yield -ori), but some irregularities are attested. The resulting nouns express concepts, processes or instances.

Effects of -ri
Final sound +ri
í (Proto-Munja'kin *ai) iri
i uri
ú (Proto-Munja'kin *au)
u
a (Proto-Munja'kin *e)
o
a ori
n ndri
n (Proto-Munja'kin *ŋ) ngri
s zri

Verbs may be made causative with the prefix liz-, which becomes li- before consonants, and may be made passive with the prefix u-, which becomes wa- before r, v- before u and o, and w- before i and a. The suffix -n makes verbs terminative, some roots no longer occur without it. It generally causes a root-final o to turn into u, though this change does not happen with some irregular verbs.

Particles

Many sentences in Munja'kin begin with a particle, three important ones are hi, la and lanú. Hi directly precedes verbs, turns a sentence into a command and is combined with the negative auxiliary inju to form the prohibitive hinju. La appears sentence-initially and indicates that the sentence's subject is different from the previous one's, it may be used before both declarative sentences and commands, and precedes hi in the latter. Conversely, lanú appears sentence-initially and indicates that the sentence's subject is the same as the previous one's and does not need to be repeated. It does not appear in commands.

Syntax

Word order

Munja'kin is usually a verb-subject-object language, however, sentences containing an auxiliary verb use the order auxiliary-subject-verb-object.

Relative clauses

An serves as a relativizer and is followed by a verb's nominalized form. Relative clauses are VSO like the main clauses and use resumptive pronouns to relativize obliques.

Questions

Polar questions are only marked by intonation in Munja'kin, it has no question particle. Interrogative words are fronted in content questions.