Pı̀ morphology: Difference between revisions

From FrathWiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
Line 18: Line 18:


This particle has, however, a very marked use and highlight the meaning of a large quantity of the said entities or items.
This particle has, however, a very marked use and highlight the meaning of a large quantity of the said entities or items.
==Adjectives and pronouns==
Adjectives closely resemble the noun form, not displaying any morphological change for either number, case or definiteness. Pronouns, while also morphologically unchanging, may exhibit different forms in the root form.
===Adjectives===
Attributive adjectives are always placed '''before''' the nouns they specify, while predicative adjectives are always placed ''after'' them.
χat nɔ̀χɛ̱́
<small>a young man</small>
nɔ̀χɛ̱́ ɟē χat
<small>the man is young</small>
However, if the specified noun is sintactically definite in the sentence (<small>i.e., it has been already mentioned or it is an already known information to the speaker</small>), it adjective can be placed ''after'' it, while being introduced by the demonstrative pronoun tı̱̋, ''that one'', (or rarely by pı̱̋, ''this one''):
ɔ̄̀nhɛ̱ tı̱̋ hat
<small>the young man (lit. the man, the young one)</small>
As these pronominal forms mandatorily convey a number distinction, by having a specific plural, also the specified noun can distinguish a plural form by using these plurals:
ɔ̄̀nhɛ̱ tɪ̂ hat
<small>the young men (lit. the men, the young ones)</small>
This construction, called ''definite construction'', is completely optional and can be expressed only by qualifying adjectives. Every other adjective is sistematically placed before the noun.


==Numerals==
==Numerals==

Revision as of 05:17, 1 June 2025

Main article: Pı̀

This page gives an extensive description of Pı̀ morphological features.

As already mentioned, Pı̀ is a morphologically isolating language. Each lexeme does not undergo any morphological mutation. Syntactical roles are thus entirely expressed by syntax and word order. Lexemes can, however, combine in many derivative processes.

Nouns

Nouns in Pı̀ usually have a monosyllabic form, or a multisyllabic form, if morphologically derived or being loanwords.

On the morphological level nouns display no number, case or definiteness, exhibiting always the same unaltered form:

ū̃ 
wolf - a wolf - the wolf - wolves - the wolves

A process similar to pluralization, conveying the meaning of an undefined amount bigger than one, can be achieved by placing the pluralizing particle e̱ after the noun:

ū̃ e̱
a lot of wolves

This particle has, however, a very marked use and highlight the meaning of a large quantity of the said entities or items.

Adjectives and pronouns

Adjectives closely resemble the noun form, not displaying any morphological change for either number, case or definiteness. Pronouns, while also morphologically unchanging, may exhibit different forms in the root form.

Adjectives

Attributive adjectives are always placed before the nouns they specify, while predicative adjectives are always placed after them.

χat nɔ̀χɛ̱́
a young man
nɔ̀χɛ̱́ ɟē χat
the man is young

However, if the specified noun is sintactically definite in the sentence (i.e., it has been already mentioned or it is an already known information to the speaker), it adjective can be placed after it, while being introduced by the demonstrative pronoun tı̱̋, that one, (or rarely by pı̱̋, this one):

ɔ̄̀nhɛ̱ tı̱̋ hat 
the young man (lit. the man, the young one)

As these pronominal forms mandatorily convey a number distinction, by having a specific plural, also the specified noun can distinguish a plural form by using these plurals:

ɔ̄̀nhɛ̱ tɪ̂ hat 
the young men (lit. the men, the young ones)

This construction, called definite construction, is completely optional and can be expressed only by qualifying adjectives. Every other adjective is sistematically placed before the noun.

Numerals

The numeral system relies on a decimal base.

Cardinal numerals

The first ten cardinal numbers are forms on their own:

digit
full form
1:
xṑ
2:
mɛ̱s
3:
4:
guf
5:
pı́
6:
tə̀
7:
hāt
8:
má̱
9:
šű̱
10:
bæ̱̃

Numerals from 11 to 19 are built with the construction bæ̱̃ + NUM:

digit
full form
11:
bæ̱̃ xṑ
12:
bæ̱̃ mɛ̱s
13:
bæ̱̃ có
14:
bæ̱̃ guf
15:
bæ̱̃ pı́
16:
bæ̱̃ tə̀
17:
bæ̱̃ hāt
18:
bæ̱̃ má̱
19:
bæ̱̃ šű̱

The numeral for (one) hundred is a form on its own, while the numeral for (one) thousand is a loanword from Iðâɣ language:

digit
full form
100:
çı̱́p
1000:
ěn (from I. ěn)

The numerals for the multiples of tens, hundreds and thousands are built with the construction NUM + gɛ (time(s)) + bæ̱̃ / çı̱́p / ěn:

tens
hundreds
thousands
2x:
mɛ̱s gɛ bæ̱̃ mɛ̱s gɛ çı̱́p mɛ̱s gɛ ěn
3x:
có gɛ bæ̱̃ có gɛ çı̱́p có gɛ ěn
4x:
guf gɛ bæ̱̃ guf gɛ çı̱́p guf gɛ ěn
5x:
pı́ gɛ bæ̱̃ pı́ gɛ çı̱́p pı́ gɛ ěn
6x:
tə̀ gɛ bæ̱̃ tə̀ gɛ çı̱́p tə̀ gɛ ěn
7x:
hāt gɛ bæ̱̃ hāt gɛ çı̱́p hāt gɛ ěn
8x:
má̱ gɛ bæ̱̃ má̱ gɛ çı̱́p má̱ gɛ ěn
9x:
šű̱ gɛ bæ̱̃ šű̱ gɛ çı̱́p šű̱ gɛ ěn

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

  • 1985: ěn šű̱ gɛ çı̱́p má̱ gɛ bæ̱̃ pı́

Numerals for “million” and “billion” are loanwords from Iðâɣ language:

digit
full form
1,000,000:
šúrěn (from I. šúrěntu)
1,000,000,000:
mêšúr (from I. mêšúrěntu)

These forms are treated as regular nouns:

digit
full form
3,000,000:
có šúrěn
6,000,000,000:
tə̀ mêšúr

Cardinal numerals usually precede their adjoining noun cluster, as an adjectival form. However, every numeral can be optionally used with a noun cluster introduced by the partitive preposition jó.

tə̀ hó or tə̀ jó hó
six dogs

With semantically uncountable nouns and with pronouns, the partitive preposition is mandatorily used, with the meaning of “X units of Y”:

tə̀ jó kø̄m
six pieces/parts/balls/etc. of wool
šű̱ jó gø̱
nine of us

With the numerals for “million” and “billion” the partitive preposition jó is always mandatorily used.

mɛ̱s šúrěn jó hɛ̱
two millions people

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

digit
full form
0:
xesú (from I. xesú)

Ordinal numerals

Ordinal numerals are formed by putting the particle sē after the cardinal numeral form:

digit
full form
1st:
xṑ sē
2nd:
mɛ̱s sē
3rd:
có sē
4th:
guf sē
5th:
pı́ sē
6th:
tə̀ sē
7th:
hāt sē
8th:
má̱ sē
9th:
šű̱ sē
10th:
bæ̱̃ sē

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

  • 25th: mɛ̱s gɛ bæ̱̃ pı́ sē