User:Bukkia/sandboxVIII
Noun declension
Nouns are declined in case and number by adding the following endings to the base form of the noun:
| - | -nə | - | -nə | |
| -re | -nore | -re | -nore | |
| -xa | -noxa | |||
| -sah | -nosah | |||
Some examples are shown below: a 1st class noun, paβu, father, and a 2nd class noun, sóɣə, house.
| paβu | paβunə | sóɣə | sóɣənə | |
| paβure | paβunore | sóɣəre | sóɣənore | |
| sóɣəxa | sóɣənoxa | |||
| sóɣəsah | sóɣənosah | |||
As for the rules, the endings for the secondary oblique cases cannot be added to a 1st class noun.
Nouns ending in a consonant in the singular direct case usually add a euphonic vowel before the endings of the other cases. This vowel is generally -ə-, but other vowels are also possible.
dir. piɣ → g.d. piɣəre, ... dir. šóneh → g.d. šónehare, ...
Some irregular nouns, conversely, change their last vowel in the root before adding other endings. The commonest changes are e → a, or ə → o. A lot of these nouns display both irregular and regular forms, especially in earlier texts. In modern texts the amount of irregular forms is increasingly limited.
dir. soβe → g.d. soβere or soβare, ... dir. sanə → g.d. sanəre or sanore, ...