User:Bukkia/sandboxVIII: Difference between revisions

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| style="width: 110px;"| <center>''Case''</center>  || <center>''Meaning''</center>
| style="width: 110px;"| <center>''Case''</center>  || <center>''Meaning''</center>
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| '''Direct'''  || <small>This case marks both the subject and the direct object of a verb. It is regarded as the base form of the noun, and it is used as the vocative form.</small>
| '''Direct'''  || <small>This case marks both the subject and the direct object of a verb. It can be also used with some prepositions. It is regarded as the base form of the noun, and it is used as the vocative form.</small>
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| '''Oblique'''  || <small>It has no specifical meaning and it is generally used only with prepositions. It can be occasionally used without prepositions, marking the indirect object. In earlier texts it can mark the final point of a movement (''motion toward a place'') and, limited to proper nouns, possession and belonging.</small>
| '''Oblique'''  || <small>It has no specifical meaning and it is generally used only with prepositions. It can be occasionally used without prepositions, with some verbs, and it may mark the indirect object in some kinds of pronouns.</small>
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Revision as of 02:42, 30 August 2025

Main article: Höśikə

This page gives an extensive description of Höśikə morphological features.

Nouns

Nouns in Gəjlnigo language can end either in a vowel or in a consonant, although there is a marked tendency for the vocalic ending. Nouns ending in a consonant usually add a euphonic vowel before the normal declension endings.

Nouns display neither gender nor class distinction. Nouns are divided and categorized in six declension groups, each distinguished by the plural formation and the last phoneme of the word.

There are, moreover, two morphological numbers for almost all nouns, singular and plural, and a limited case system. Nouns also display two forms, the indefinite form and the definite form, the latter being built by adding the postposed definite article.

Cases

Gəjlnigo nouns do decline, according to a nominative-accusative system with 2 cases:

Case
Meaning
Direct This case marks both the subject and the direct object of a verb. It can be also used with some prepositions. 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, with some verbs, and it may mark the indirect object in some kinds of pronouns.

Articles

There is only one article, the definite article, ež, which is placed before the noun, agreeing with it in case and number.

singular
plural
direct
ež / ežd ežno
oblique
ežəre ežnore

In the singular direct case two forms of the article are listed. The choice between the two forms depends on the first phoneme of the following word:

  • ež is placed before a word beginning with a consonant.
  • ežd is placed before a word beginning with a vowel.

Examples:

ež pɔge čəjnnos
the person is singing
ežd ɔne čəjnnos
the woman is singing

The definite article, both in its singular and plural forms and in any case, can merge with some prepositions to form the so-called articled prepositions. Such forms will be analyzed in a following section.

Noun declension

Nouns are declined in case and number by adding the following endings to the base form of the noun:

singular
plural
direct
- -no
oblique
-re -nure

Some examples are shown below: bevvo, father, and hɔgo, house.

bevvo
hɔgo
singular
plural
singular
plural
direct
bevvo bevvono hɔgo hɔgono
oblique
bevvore bevvonore hɔgore hɔgonore

Nouns ending in a consonant in their base form, except for nouns ending in the semiconsonant -j, usually add a euphonic vowel before the endings of the other cases. This vowel is generally -i-, but other vowels are also possible.

dir. heǵ → obl. heǵire, ...

Some irregular nouns, however, change their last vowel in the root before adding other endings. The commonest change is o → u. A lot of these nouns display both irregular and regular forms, especially in earlier texts. In modern texts the amount of irregular forms is extremely limited, with a strong tendency towards regularization by analogy.

dir. heňo → obl. heňure, ...

A small amount of nouns, conversely, display unpredictable irregularities, both vocalic and consonantal, in the noun root.

dir. beĺ → obl. bejre, ...