User:Bukkia/sandboxVIII
Personal pronouns
Personal pronouns convey only the first two persons (1st and 2nd) in both numbers. Unlike nominal or adjectival roots, these root are monosyllabic.
They are declined with the same endings as the nominal declension, and select only the animate plural ending, as they refer always to animated entities.
Unlike any other elements of the sentence, the personal pronouns compulsorily distinguish the number singular from the plural.
In the 3rd person, a double distinction is made. There are, actually, two forms, referring respectively to either animated beings or inanimate entities.
In the 1st, 2nd and 3rd animate persons an additional distinction is made between formal and informal forms. Formal pronouns are used in formal contexts, out of politeness, and are derived from former so-called royal pronouns, reserved for people with a higher social status in the earlier middle period. Over time, their usage have changed in a distinction of politeness / familiarity.
(Throughout this grammar in examples the informal forms are primarily used, since they are regarded as the most familiar in the spoken language.)
All forms, if adjoined by the preposition gü, play the role of an indeclinable possessive pronoun, being placed after a demonstrative pronominal form.
osã gö̃ vuɣner nuvɔ uc gü eʂeʂ my father saw yours