Modern Figo morphology: Difference between revisions

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Nouns display neither gender nor class distinction. There are, however, two morphological numbers for almost all nouns, '''singular''' and '''plural''', and a limited case system.
Nouns display neither gender nor class distinction. There are, however, two morphological numbers for almost all nouns, '''singular''' and '''plural''', and a limited case system.
===Cases===
Modern Figo nouns do decline, according to a ''nominative-accusative'' system with '''3 cases''':
{| class="wikitable"
|-
| style="width: 110px;"| <center>''Case''</center>  || <center>''Meaning''</center>
|-
| '''Nominative'''  || <small>This case marks the subject of a verb. It is regarded as the citation form of the noun.</small>
|-
| '''Accusative'''  || <small>This case marks the direct object of a verb. It is also used with many postpositions. It is regarded as the base form of the noun, and it is used as the vocative form.</small>
|-
| '''Oblique'''  || <small>It has no specifical meaning and it is generally used only with prepositions. It can be occasionally used without prepositions in earlier texts and in crystallized forms, marking possession and belonging.</small>
|-
|}
==Numerals==
==Numerals==
The numeral system relies on a decimal base.
The numeral system relies on a decimal base.

Revision as of 09:31, 29 April 2025

Main article: Modern Figo

This page gives an extensive description of modern Figo morphological features.

Nouns

Nouns in modern Figo can end either in a vowel or in a consonant in their basic form. A certain number of nouns ending in a vowel, however, can add a suppletive syllable before the normal declension endings, especially monosyllabic nouns. Nouns ending in a consonant usually add a euphonic vowel in their declension.

Nouns display neither gender nor class distinction. There are, however, two morphological numbers for almost all nouns, singular and plural, and a limited case system.

Cases

Modern Figo nouns do decline, according to a nominative-accusative system with 3 cases:

Case
Meaning
Nominative This case marks the subject of a verb. It is regarded as the citation form of the noun.
Accusative This case marks the direct object of a verb. It is also used with many postpositions. It is regarded as the base form of the noun, and it is used as the vocative form.
Oblique It has no specifical meaning and it is generally used only with prepositions. It can be occasionally used without prepositions in earlier texts and in crystallized forms, marking possession and belonging.

Numerals

The numeral system relies on a decimal base.

The first ten cardinal numbers are noun-like forms on their own:

digit
noun form
1:
šwov
2:
ug
3:
miɣwo
4:
nwoh
5:
šwõ
6:
fwa
7:
hoše
8:
fu
9:
čwi
10:
fjev

Numerals from 11 to 19 are built with the construction NUM + fjev, with some irregularities:

digit
noun form
11:
šwofjev
12:
uɣifjev
13:
miɣwofjev
14:
nwofjev
15:
šwõfjev
16:
fwafjev
17:
hošefjev
18:
fufjev
19:
čwifjev

The numerals for (one) hundred and (one) thousand are noun-like forms on their own:

digit
noun form
100:
ňwož
1000:
řa

The numerals for the multiples of tens, hundreds and thousands are built with the construction NUM + fjewdũ / ňwoždũ / řadũ, with some irregularities:

tens
hundreds
thousands
2x:
uɣifjewdəj uɣiňwoždũ uɣiřadũ
3x:
miɣwofjewdũ miɣwoňwoždũ miɣwořadũ
4x:
nwofjewdũ nwoňwoždũ nwořadũ
5x:
šwõfjewdũ šwõňwoždũ šwõřadũ
6x:
fwafjewdũ fwaňwoždũ fwařadũ
7x:
hošefjewdũ hošeňwoždũ hošeřadũ
8x:
fufjewdũ fuňwoždũ fuřadũ
9x:
čwifjewdũ čwiňwoždũ čwiřadũ

Composite numbers are built by just putting them beside, without any conjunction, in descending order:

  • 1985: řa čwiňwoždũ fufjewdũ šwõ

All cardinal numerals up to these forms are meant as invariable.

Numerals for “million” and “billion” are loanwords from other languages:

digit
noun form
1,000,000:
čãčãr (from β. ʈʂʼamʈʂʼam)
1,000,000,000:
mešurentur (from I. mêšúrěntu )

These forms are treated as regularly declinable nouns:

digit
noun form
3,000,000:
miɣwo čãčãrĩ
6,000,000,000:
fwa mešurenturĩ

If these numerals are used as simple count forms, they are declined in the nominative case. Inside of a structured sentence, they are declined according the case required by their syntactical role. Nouns adjoining such numerals are declined in the oblique case:

šwov čãčãr fožašũ
one million people
kwov ug mešurentušu fožašũ
to two billions people

In the earlier modern period the idea of “zero” is introduced from Iðâɣ language. This numeral is however usually limited to mathematics:

digit
noun form
0:
xesu (from I. xesú)

Ordinal numerals are formed by adding the ordinal ending -dur (-d) to the cardinal numeral form, with an irregular suppletive form and some other irregularities:

digit
adjective form
1st:
rošdur (rošd)
2nd:
uɣidur (uɣid)
3rd:
miɣwodur (miɣwod)
4th:
nudur (nud)
5th:
šwõdur (šwõd)
6th:
fwadur (fwad)
7th:
hošedur (hošed)
8th:
fudur (fud)
9th:
čwidur (čwid)
10th:
fjewdur (fjewd)
11th:
šwofjewdur (šwofjewd)
12th:
uɣifjewdur (uɣifjewd)
20th:
uɣifjewdəjdur (uɣifjewdəjd)
60th:
fwafjewdũdur (fwafjewdũd)

Ordinal numerals for “millionth” and “billionth” are regularly formed from their corresponding cardinal forms, while their multiples are formed by unifying the separated forms in an only adjectival word:

digit
adjective form
1,000,000th:
čãčãdur (čãčãd)
1,000,000,000th:
mešurentudur (mešurentud)
3,000,000,000th:
miɣwomešurentudur (mešurentud)

If the numeral form is composite, the ending is added only to the last numeral form:

  • 25th: uɣifjedəj šwõdur

Pronominal numerals

Every cardinal number may display, moreover, a special pronominal form. This form is to be used strictly when referring to human beings. This numerals are built by adding the derivative ending -for to the cardinal numeral form, with some irregularities:

digit
noun form
2:
uɣifor
3:
miɣwofor
4:
nufor
5:
šwõfor
6:
fwafor
7:
hošefor
8:
fufor
9:
čwifor
10:
fjewfor
11:
šwofjewfor
12:
uɣifjewfor
20:
uɣifjewdəjfor
60:
fwafjewdũfor

If the numeral form is composite, the ending is added only to the last numeral form:

  • 25: uɣifjedəj šwõfor

Pronominal numerals can be formed from every cardinal numeral, except for the numeral "one", "million" and "billion" and the multiples of the latter two ones.

These forms decline only in singular number. They, however, display a complete singular declension. If present, the verb always agrees with the personal numeral in the singular number.

miɣwofo řirušjidũ jẽnõ
we saw three (of them)
miɣwofor õt řirušjid jẽh
three (of them) saw us

The pronominal forms, however, can be adjoined by a noun. This is built with a peculiar construction. The personal numerals are declined in the singular, while the adjoining nouns are always declined in the oblique plural form. If present, the verb always agrees with the personal numeral in the singular number.

miɣwofo řirušũ řirušjidũ jẽnõ
we saw three men
miɣwofor řirušũ õt řirušjid jẽh
three men saw us

The pronominal forms tend to be placed before the adjoining nouns. In colloquial language and in some texts, the adjoining noun can be placed before the pronominal numeral.

řirušũ miɣwofor õt řirušjid jẽh
three men saw us

This placement, albeit spreading in some dialects, is not accepted in formal language and widely deprecated by grammarians.