User:Bukkia/sandboxVIII: Difference between revisions
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| <center>y → u</center> || | | <center>y → u</center> || | ||
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Some nouns, conversely, display unpredictable irregularities in pluralization. | |||
Nouns are also declined in case by adding the following endings to the base form of the noun: | Nouns are also declined in case by adding the following endings to the base form of the noun: | ||
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{|- | {|- | ||
|- | |- | ||
| style="width: 100px;"| <center><small>'' | | style="width: 100px;"| <center><small>''direct''</small></center> || style="width: 60px;"| - | ||
|- | |- | ||
| <center><small>'' | | <center><small>''obliquo''</small></center> || -vo | ||
|} | |} | ||
Revision as of 10:15, 2 May 2025
Noun declension
Nouns are declined in case and number with different models, depending on the last phoneme of the root.
Nouns, whose root ends in a consonant, are divided into two groups: non-palatal and palatal group. Both groups add a different thematic vowel in their declension. Nouns in the non-palatal group do also palatalize the last consonant of the root, if possible, in the plural forms.
There is, however, a certain amount of irregular nouns, like some nouns which seemingly belong to the palatal group, while declining like a non-palatal noun, and vice versa.
Nouns, whose root ends in a vowel, change this last vowel. The general vowel changes are:
| (The last consonant of the root undergo palatalization, if possible) | |
| (The last consonant of the root undergo palatalization, if possible) | |
| (The last consonant of the root undergo palatalization, if possible) | |
Some nouns, conversely, display unpredictable irregularities in pluralization.
Nouns are also declined in case by adding the following endings to the base form of the noun:
| - | |
| -vo |
Here is an example of a noun, whose root ends in a vowel: tõčah, village.
| tõčah | tõčeh | |
| tõča | tõče | |
| tõčaβ | tõčeβ | |
| tõčaž | tõčež | |
Nouns, whose root ends in a consonant, add the so-called root vowel before the case endings. While this vowel can be either -ɛ-, -i-, or -u-, there is no clear rule in the choice.
Here is an example of a noun, whose root ends in a consonant: lozɛh, dog.
| lozɛh | lozeh | |
| loz | loze | |
| lozɛβ | lozeβ | |
| lozɛž | lozež | |
Some nouns of the consonantal root group, whose roots end in a consonant cluster, can insert an euphonic vowel -ə- between these consonants in the accusative singular form.
Here is an example of a noun, whose root ends in a consonant cluster: fihnih, harvest.
| fihnih | fihnoh | |
| fihən | fihno | |
| fihniβ | fihnoβ | |
| fihniž | fihnož | |