Sangheili Grammar

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Sangheili Language Navigation: Home, Phonology, Grammar, Vocabulary, Dialogue

Sangheili is a lightly inflectional, strongly head-final language and follows an ergative-absolutive alignment.

Syntax

Sangheili generally follows a subject-object-verb syntax:

K'uucho o1 domo2 ruuk'inatan3"the warrior1 attacked3 the human2"

In content questions, question words appear in situ:

K’e o gha ts’aachi?"what have you done?"

Subjects of intransitive verbs and objects of transitive ones are unmarked, but subjects of transitive verbs are marked by the postposition o, Sangheili's alignment is therefore ergative-absolutive.

K'uucho mejayatan"the warrior is ready"
K'uucho o domo ruuk'inatan"the warrior attacked the human"

Adjectives, possessors and relative clauses precede nouns, and dependent clauses precede main clauses. Relative clauses are simply obtained by placing their verb before the noun or relative pronoun they modify:

K'uucho o domo ruuk'inatan"the warrior attacked the human"

Domo ruuk'inatan k'uucho"the warrior who attacked the human"
K'uucho o ruuk'inatan domo"the human whom the warrior attacked"

Pronouns

Personal pronouns Singular Plural
Inclusive Exclusive
First Person jan riin jaari
Second Person k'e k'iri
Third Person Animate mu muuri
Inanimate tkha tkhaari

Sangheili's personal pronouns distinguish clusivity, riin is used when the speaker talks about themself and the addressee, while jaari is used otherwise:

Riin o domo ruuk'inatan"we attacked the human" (you and I)
Jaari o domo ruuk'inatan"we attacked the human" (not you)

The demonstrative pronouns (as well as the related adjectives and adverbs) have a three-way distance contrast, proximal (near the speaker), medial (near the hearer) and distal (away from both):

Demonstrative pronouns Singular Plural
Proximal ine niri
Medial uzo zuri
Distal atkha tkhaari
Unknown/Indefinite aba baari
Negative ngajo

There is also a reflexive pronoun, khuzho:

Jan o khuzho juundujijaga"I will make myself look good"

Nouns and adjectives

Sangheili does not distinguish definiteness, and its nouns do not inflect and are not categorized into classes. They appear on their own in appositions and in absolutive roles.

Postpositions

Nouns are followed by o in ergative roles. When directly addressed, they are often followed by ghu:

K'uucho o domo ruuk'inatan"the warrior attacked the human"
K'uucho ghu, ruuk'ina!"Warrior, attack!"

Other common postpositions include:

Ga from, away from
Ni near, by
Oni to, onto
Ba out of
Zhi into
Me inside, within

Some roles are expressed by multiword postpositions, such as me mos ba (out of the mind inside), meaning "as" or "like".

Possession

There is no purely possessive postposition, Sangheili uses different ones to express possession depending on the relationship's nature:

Example Literal translation Possession type
K'uucho oni zhuro The weapon onto the warrior The warrior's weapon, which they own
K'uucho ni zhuro The weapon near the warrior The warrior's weapon, which they happen to have
K'uucho oni1 nejo ga2 zhuro The weapon from2 the father to1 the warrior The warrior's weapon, which they received from their father
K'uucho me ik'o The eyes within the warrior The warrior's eyes, which they still have
K'uucho ba ik'o The eyes out of the warrior The warrior's eyes, which were removed

Adjectives

Common adjectives include the demonstrative ones:

Proximal ne
Medial zo
Distal tkha
Unknown/Indefinite ba
Negative ii

Adverbs

Common adverbs include:

Proximal nis
Medial zus
Distal tkhaas
Unknown/Indefinite baas
Negative ngamaas

Adverbs can be followed by postpositions, for instance tkhaas oni translates as "that way".

Verbs

Verbs are the most heavily inflected parts of speech in Sangheili, although they do not agree with anything, they have a rich system for marking tense, aspect, mood, evidentiality, polarity and emphasis.

Verbs generally have 3 stems: the plain one, the reduplicated one and one which is used before suffixes beginning with a consonant. The reduplicated stem is derived from the plain one, but the results are rather unpredictable:

Verb stems Plain Reduplicated
"Burst" bakha baabakha
"Stab" ch'in ch'injin
"Hunt" chkha'a chkhaaja'a
"Rotate" donu daadonu
"Mount" ema aamema
"Decay" ghaaba ghaagaba
"Come" jaya jejaya
"Fight" k'utkho k'uukutkho
"Fertilize an egg" naya nenaya
"Bend" opkho pkhaapkho
"Suffer" ot'a ot'oza
"Sleep" pkhungo pkhubungo
"Walk" qkhoso qkhoghoso
"Be sure" satkha sasatkha
"Name" tkhop'o tkhaadop'o
"Expand" zaya zaazaya

Both can take various inflectional suffixes, however the meaning of a bare stem or the combination of a stem and some suffixes differs depending on whether the verb is dynamic or stative:

TAM suffixes Stem Dynamic Stative
After consonants After vowels
-o None Reduplicated Imperfect Emphatic
Plain Imperative Present
-i -ikhi Inceptive Inchoative
-tan Perfect Cessive
-cho -jo Present Probabilitive
-chi -ji Emphatic Past
-chen -jen Uncertain Possibilitive
-chaga -jaga Future

Other notable suffixes include:

-jahe Used with a reduced set of TAM suffixes to form yes/no questions
-eya Negation
-'ala Ability

Copular constructions

Sangheili generally uses zero-copula constructions:

Ne bekkhajo riin o maamaro gha"this creature is what we seek" (literally "this creature what we seek")

However, it has a locative copula, ts'aha:

Ghaadi ni ngitkhagha ts'aha?"Where are the controls?"

Emphasis

The particle pkha commonly emphasizes the verb it follows:

Bit'a ba riin ngani"we need to have (it)"
Bit'a ba riin ngani pkha"we must have (it)"

Derivation

Sangheili has a productive set of instrumental prefixes to derive new verbs:

ba(n)- With the back or rear
ch'a(n)- With the head
dzu(m/n)- With a weapon or a sharp point, dangerously
ga(i/y)- With the lower mandible, with uncertainty
gha(y)- With the foot
kh(e/y)- General instrumental, with the hand
juu(n)- With the upper mandible, with certainty
me(kh)- With a tool or device
mo(s)- With the mind, by reasoning
ru(u)- With fire or heat
t'i(s)- With words, verbally
wel(e)- With a vehicle

The meaning of a derived verb is more or less predictable:

Bakha (burst) → gaibakha (happen), mobakha (realize), ruubakha (destroy)
Chkha'a (hunt) → ghachkha'a (track)
Donu (rotate) → ch'adonu (notice), juudonu (flank)
Duje (molt) → gaiduje (sully), juunduje (make look good), moduje (lose track of)
Ema (mount) → dzumema (conquer), khayema (scale by hand), welema (board)
Ghaina (hear) → banghaina (sense), t'ighaina (understand)
Jaya (come) → mejaya (prepare)
K'utkho (fight) → bank'utkho (defend), t'ik'utkho (argue)
Khawa (say) → gaikhawa (guess), juukhawa (claim), khekhawa (respond), t'ikhawa (chat)

Other common suffixes include -jo, which forms agent nouns, and -t'u (or -tu), which forms nominalizations:

Maaro (seek) → maarojo (search team)
Ts'aha (be at) → ts'ahat'u (presence)

Coordinating conjunctions

Common coordinating conjunctions include:

Q'a but
Nizhi and (used to coordinate nouns and sentences)
Ze and (used to coordinate adjectives)

Question words

Common question words, which are also used as subordinating conjunctions or relative pronouns, include:

Gha what
Ghaazhi because, if, when
Ghaadi where
Ghaasha how
Ghaakhe how much