Proto-Kunnu-lūjungo: Difference between revisions
Line 1,224: | Line 1,224: | ||
| Strings || -<span style="color:Red">gōnya</span> <br> -<span style="color:Blue">kwünye</span> || Strings, threads, ropes, etc. | | Strings || -<span style="color:Red">gōnya</span> <br> -<span style="color:Blue">kwünye</span> || Strings, threads, ropes, etc. | ||
|- | |- | ||
| Substance || -<span style="color:Red"> | | Substance || -<span style="color:Red">kwogwo</span> <br> -<span style="color:Blue">kwögwö</span> || Things that consist of liguid, a mushy substance or fine powder | ||
|- | |- | ||
| Trees || -<span style="color:Red">(k)kūga</span> <br> -<span style="color:Blue">(k)kūge</span> || Trees, excluding bushes | | Trees || -<span style="color:Red">(k)kūga</span> <br> -<span style="color:Blue">(k)kūge</span> || Trees, excluding bushes |
Revision as of 01:27, 22 February 2020
Proto-Kunnu-lūjungo | |
---|---|
Pronounced: | [-kunːuluːdʒuŋːo] |
Timeline and Universe: | |
Species: | Human |
Spoken: | |
Total speakers: | |
Writing system: | none (the speakers are illiterate; this article uses a transliteration using the Latin alphabet) |
Genealogy: | |
Typology | |
Morphology: | Agglutinative |
Morphosyntax: | Ergative |
Word order: | SOV |
Credits | |
Creator: | Qwynegold |
Created: | April 2010 |
Phonology
Phoneme inventory
Consonants | ||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bilabial | Labiod. | Alveolar | Post-alv. | Velar | Glottal | |||||||||||
Nasal | /m/ | /n/ | /ŋ/ | |||||||||||||
Plain Plosive | /p/ | [b] | /t/ | [d] | /k/ | [ɡ] | ||||||||||
Aspirated Plosive | /pʰ/ | /tʰ/ | /kʰ/ | |||||||||||||
Fricative | /f/ | /s/ | /z/ | /ʃ/ | /ʒ/ | /h/ | ||||||||||
Affricate | /ts/ | /tʃ/ | /dʒ/ | |||||||||||||
Rhotic | /*r/1 | |||||||||||||||
Lateral Approximant | [l] |
1The exact quality of the rhotic is unknown.
There are long/geminated versions of the consonants /n, p, t, k, s, r/ (/rː/ is phonetically [lː]) that are very common. The consonants /m, pʰ, tʰ, kʰ, f, ʃ, ts/ may also be long/geminated, but they are very rare. Geminated /ts/ has two contrastive realizations: /tsts/ and /tːs/.
Monophthongs | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Front | Back | |||||||||
High | /i/ | /y/ | /u/ | /uː/ | ||||||
Mid | /e/ | /ø/ | /o/ | /oː/ | ||||||
Low | /ɑ/ |
Diphthongs | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Front-Front | Front-Back | Back-Front | Back-Back | |||||||
High | /jy/ | /ju/ | /juː/ | /wi/ | /wy/ | /wuː/ | ||||
Mid | /je/ | /jø/ | /jo/ | /joː/ | /we/ | /ue/ | /wø/ | /wo/ | ||
Opening Low | /jɑ/ | /wɑ/ | ||||||||
Closing Low | /ɑi/ | /ɑu/ |
Allophony
- The velar nasal is long if intervocalic, and short otherwise.
- The short unvoiced plosives are voiced if intervocalic.
- The liquid is a rhotic at the beginning of a word and before /w/, but [l] in other positions.
- /jy/ and /jø/ only appear in a few suffixes as the counterparts of /jo/ resp. /joː/ due to vowel harmony.
Phonological constraints
The syllable structure of Proto-Kunnu-lūjungo is (O)V(C) where O is any consonant but /ŋ/, C is any consonant other than {/z, ʒ, h, ts, tʃ/}, and V is any single vowel or diphthong. /j/ and /w/ do not count as consonants, but as a part of a diphthong.
The geminated or long consonant can only appear intervocalically and it is bisyllabic. That is, the onset of the consonant belongs to the same syllable as the preceding vowel, while the release of the consonant belongs to the same syllable as the vowel following it.
Morphological processes
- When a suffix that begins with a long consonant, a voiced plosive, or /z/ is added to a word that ends with a consonant, the initial consonant of the suffix becomes a short unvoiced consonant. For this reason, in the lists of suffixes in this article, the first consonant letter representing a long consonant is put in parenthesis (e.g. -(t)to). The voicing change is not indicated, however.
- When two aspirated consonants are adjacent, or when a plain plosive is followed by its aspirated version, those two turn into a long aspirated plosive.
- When a suffix changes the last vowel of a word, diphthongs count as one vowel. So for example the singular first person pronoun pot'ya with the ergative suffix -ak' is pot'ak' and not *pot'yak'. An exception is if the dipthong begins with /j/ or /w/ which is preceded by a vowel. In that case the /j/ or /w/ is retained.
Vowel harmony
Proto-Kunnu-lūjungo has front-back vowel harmony. In the list below front vowels have been marked with blue and back vowels with red. There are also neutral vowels, which are: /u, uː, ju, juː, wuː/. Each suffix is by default front or back (unless it is neutral), and if the suffix is attached to a word of the opposite affinity, the vowels in the suffix will change according to this list. (Note that not all vowels make matching pairs; for example the opposite of /ue/ is /wo/, but the opposite of /wo/ is /wø/).
- ɑ → e
- e → ɑ
- i → u
- o → ø
- oː → wy
- ø → o
- y → u
- ɑi → i
- ɑu → i
- ue → wo
- jɑ → je
- je → jɑ
- jo → jø
- joː → jy
- wɑ → we
- we → wɑ
- wi → wuː
- wo → wø
- wø → wo
- wy → oː
The red and blue marking is used consistently throughout this article, so that suffixes that go with back vowel words are marked with red and suffixes that go with front vowel words are marked with blue. Whenever there are two versions of a suffix, the one that is presented first is used with neutral words.
Writing
The speakers of Proto-Kunnu-lūjungo had no writing system. The language is transliterated in this article with the Latin alphabet, as shown below.
A a, B b, Ch ch, D d, E e, F f, G g, H h, I i, J j, K k, K' k', L l, M m, N n, Ng ng, O o, Ō ō, Ö ö, P p, P' p', R r, S s, Sh sh, T t, T' t', Ts ts, U u, Ū ū, Ü ü, W w, Y y, Z z, Zh zh
Letter | Pronunciation |
---|---|
A a | ɑ |
B b | b |
Ch ch | tʃ |
D d | d |
E e | e |
F f | f |
G g | ɡ |
H h | h |
I i | i |
J j | dʒ |
K k | k |
K' k' | kʰ |
L l | l |
M m | m |
N n | n |
Ng ng | ŋ |
O o | o |
Ō ō | oː |
Ö ö | ø |
P p | p |
P' p' | pʰ |
R r | *r |
S s | s |
Sh sh | ʃ |
T t | t |
T' t' | tʰ |
Ts ts | ts |
U u | u |
Ū ū | uː |
Ü ü | y |
W w | w |
Y y | j |
Z z | z |
Zh zh | ʒ |
The voiced plosives and the lateral are represented in the romanization, even though they are not phonemic.
Long or geminated consonant are represented by doubling the consonant letter or digraph (so for example /kː/ is <kk> and /ʃː/ is <shsh>). But the apostrophe of the aspirated consonants is not duplicated (so for example /kʰː/ is <kk'>).
Grammar
Morphology
Verbs
There are two kinds of verbs in Proto-Kunnu-lūjungo, stative and dynamic. The stative verbs describe the state of something, for example mūzōngto - be hungry, k'yokyak'ya - like, etc. Adjectives may also be zero-derived into verbs. These adjective-verbs are always stative.
Finite verbs
Voice and transitivity
In the following table, the affixes marked with blue go together with front vowel words, and the ones in red with back vowel words. If a word has only neutral vowels, the affix that stands first in the morphology column will be used.
Voice | Morphology | Example |
---|---|---|
Active transitive | -∅ | pot'ak' ubōtta p'yowochyang - I eat an apple pot'ak' tallūda kweding - I hear a song |
Active intransitive | -(t)to -(t)tö |
pot'a p'yowochyattong - I eat pot'a kwedittöng - I hear |
Passive | k'ūdi VERB-ttūk1 | ubōtta pot'yat k'ūdi p'yowottūk - an apple becomes eaten by me tallūda k'ūdi kwettūk - a song becomes heard |
Causative | -k'ye1 -k'ya1 |
pot'a myatto kwek'yeng - I make him hear pot'ak' myatto ubōtta p'yowok'yang - I make him eat an apple |
Passive-Causative | k'ūdi VERB-ttūkk'ye1 k'ūdi VERB-ttūkk'ya1 |
*** |
1The last syllable of the verb is deleted before this suffix is added.
Proto-Kunnu-lūjungo has explicit marking of intransitive verbs, while transitive verbs are unmarked. The intransitive marker is deleted if any voice other than active is used on the given verb. See the sections Transitive sentences and Intransitive sentences for more details.
The passive voice has similar uses as in English. It shifts focus from the agent to the patient, and it is often used for indicating that someone did something to the patient without asking for consent, or even outright against the patient's will, or that the patient succumbed to a situation that was not brought on by any sentient being. Another use for the passive is for turning a transitive verb into an intransitive while demoting the agent. For example negefa is an inherently transitive verb which means "break". Using the passive voice is the only way to make it an intransitive verb with the meaning that something gets broken, because using intransitive marking would have the meaning that someone breaks something (without telling what that "something" is).
The causative voice is used for marking that someone makes, lets or somehow causes someone else to do something. It can also be used for turning an agent-less intransitive verb into one that takes an agent as its argument. For example the word satwatto means burn, as in "the wood is burning". To express that someone burns something, the causative voice would be used. This verb can be used either intransitively, i.e. without a patient, or transitively.
The passive-causative is simply a combination of the passive and causative voices.
Tense and aspect
Proto-Kunnu-lūjungo has arguably three basic tenses (past, present and habitual); while the other tenses (remote past, future, remote future) and the three aspects (progressive, perfect and frequentative) are expressed periphrastically, through reduplication or through a combination of conjugation, periphrastic means and reduplication.
Stative verbs can not take the habitual tense, or perfect or progressive aspects.
The following table displays allowed combinations of tenses and aspects. The AI marks the place for the active intransitive suffix, C for the causative suffix, and the M for mood suffixes, if there are any. In constructions involving auxiliary verbs, the place of the main verb is marked with VERB. The main verb will have the active infinitive form.
Combining the passive voice with these verb forms is a bit complicated, so see Proto-Kunnu-lūjungo conjugation tables for how it is expressed together with any tense or aspect.
Tense | Aspect | Morphology | Example |
---|---|---|---|
Remote Past | - | -AI/C-oXo1-M -AI/C-öXö1-M |
kallololo - dug a long time ago kwedödö - heard a long time ago |
Past | - | -AI/C-o-M -AI/C-ö-M |
kallolo - dug kwedö - heard |
Present | - | -AI/C-ng-M | kallorwang - digs kweding - hears |
Future | - | k'ūdi-AI-M VERB-C | k'ūdi kallorwa - will dig k'ūdi kwedi - will hear |
Remote Future | - | k'ūdik'ūdi-AI-M VERB-C | k'ūdik'ūdi kallorwa - will dig in the far future k'ūdik'ūdi kwedi - will hear in the far future |
Habitual | - | -AI/C-∅-M | kallorwa - usually digs kwedi - usually hears |
Remote Past | Progressive | ut-AI-oXo1-M VERB-C-beppi2 ut-AI-oXo1-M VERB-C-bappu2 |
udodo kwebeppi - was hearing a long time ago udodo kallobappu - was digging a long time ago |
Past | Progressive | ut-AI-o-M VERB-C-beppi2 ut-AI-o-M VERB-C-bappu2 |
udo kwebeppi - was hearing udo kallobappu - was digging |
Present | Progressive | ut-AI-M VERB-C-beppi2 ut-AI-M VERB-C-bappu2 |
ut kwebeppi - is hearing ut kallobappu - is digging |
Future | Progressive | k'ūdi-AI-M VERB-C-beppi2 k'ūdi-AI-M VERB-C-bappu2 |
k'ūdi kwebeppi - will be hearing k'ūdi kallobappu - will be digging |
Remote Future | Progressive | k'ūdik'ūdi-AI-M VERB-C-beppi2 k'ūdik'ūdi-AI-M VERB-C-bappu2 |
k'ūdik'ūdi kwebeppi - will be hearing in the far future k'ūdik'ūdi kallobappu - will be digging in the far future |
Remote Past | Perfect | ut-AI-oXo1-M VERB-C-ttūk2 | udodo kallottūk - had dug a long time ago udodo kwettūk - had heard long ago |
Past | Perfect | ut-AI-o-M VERB-C-ttūk2 | udo kallottūk - had dug udo kwettūk - had heard |
Present | Perfect | ut-AI-(o)ng-M VERB-C-ttūk2 | udong kallottūk - have dug udong kwettūk - have heard |
Future | Perfect | k'ūdi-AI-ng-M VERB-C-ttūk2 | k'ūding kallottūk - will have dug k'ūding kwettūk - will have heard |
Remote Future | Perfect | k'ūdik'ūdi-AI-ng-M VERB-C-ttūk2 | k'ūdik'ūding kallottūk - will have dug in the far future k'ūdik'ūding kwettūk - will have heard in the far future |
Habitual | Perfect | ut-AI-M VERB-C-ttūk2 | ut kallottūk - have/had usually dug ut kwettūk - have/had usually heard |
Remote Past | Frequentative | -AI/C-dödö-M -AI/C-dodo-M |
kwedidödö - repeatedly heard things long ago kallorwadodo - dug around long ago |
Past | Frequentative | -AI/C-dö-M -AI/C-do-M |
kwedidö - repeatedly heard things kallorwado - dug around |
Present | Frequentative | -AI/C-ding-M -AI/C-dung-M |
kwediding - repeatedly hear things kallorwadung - dig around |
Future | Frequentative | k'ūdi-AI-M VERB-C-di k'ūdi-AI-M VERB-C-du |
k'ūdi kwedidi - will hear things repeatedly k'ūdi kallorwadu - will dig around |
Remote Future | Frequentative | k'ūdik'ūdi-AI-M VERB-C-di k'ūdik'ūdi-AI-M VERB-C-du |
k'ūdik'ūdi kwedidi - will hear things repeatedly in the far future k'ūdik'ūdi kallorwadu - will dig around in the far future |
Habitual | Frequentative | -AI/C-di-M -AI/C-du-M |
kwedidi - usually hears things repeatedly kallorwadu - usually digs around |
Remote Past | Progressive-Frequentative | ut-AI-oXo1-M VERB-C-dibeppi ut-AI-oXo1-M VERB-C-dubappu |
udodo kwedidibeppi - was repeatedly hearing things long ago udodo kallorwadubappu - was digging around long ago |
Past | Progressive-Frequentative | ut-AI-o-M VERB-C-dibeppi ut-AI-o-M VERB-C-dubappu |
udo kwedidibeppi - was repeatedly hearing things udo kallorwadubappu - was digging around |
Present | Progressive-Frequentative | ut-AI-M VERB-C-dibeppi ut-AI-M VERB-C-dubappu |
ut kwedidibeppi - is repeatedly hearing things ut kallorwadubappu - is digging around |
Future | Progressive-Frequentative | k'ūdi-AI-M VERB-C-dibeppi k'ūdi-AI-M VERB-C-dubappu |
k'ūdi kwedidibeppi - will be hearing things repeatedly k'ūdi kallorwadubappu - will be digging around |
Remote Future | Progressive-Frequentative | k'ūdik'ūdi-AI-M VERB-C-dibeppi k'ūdik'ūdi-AI-M VERB-C-dubappu |
k'ūdik'ūdi kwedidibeppi - will be hearing things repeatedly in the future k'ūdik'ūdi kallorwadubappu - will be digging around in the far future |
Remote Past | Perfect-Frequentative | ut-AI-oXo1-M VERB-C-dittūk ut-AI-oXo1-M VERB-C-duttūk |
udodo kwedidittūk - has heard things repeatedly long ago udodo kallorwaduttūk - has dug around long ago |
Past | Perfect-Frequentative | ut-AI-o-M VERB-C-dittūk ut-AI-o-M VERB-C-duttūk |
udo kwedidittūk - has heard things repeatedly udo kallorwaduttūk - has dug around |
Present | Perfect-Frequentative | ut-AI-(o)ng-M VERB-C-dittūk ut-AI-(o)ng-M VERB-C-duttūk |
udong kwedidittūk - have heard things repeatedly udong kallorwaduttūk - have dug around |
Future | Perfect-Frequentative | k'ūdi-AI-M VERB-C-dittūk k'ūdi-AI-M VERB-C-duttūk |
k'ūdi kwedidittūk - will have heard things repeatedly k'ūdi kallorwaduttūk - will have dug around |
Remote Future | Perfect-Frequentative | k'ūdik'ūdi-AI-M VERB-C-dittūk k'ūdik'ūdi-AI-M VERB-C-duttūk |
k'ūdik'ūdi kwedidittūk - will have heard things repeatedly in the far future k'ūdik'ūdi kallorwaduttūk - will have dug around in the far future |
Habitual | Perfect-Frequentative | ut-AI-M VERB-C-dittūk ut-AI-M VERB-C-duttūk |
ut kwedidittūk - have/had usually heard things repeatedly ut kallorwaduttūk - have/had usually dug around |
1The X stands for a consonant that is the same as the previous consonant in the word.
2The previous syllable is deleted before this suffix is added, unless the previous syllable is the causative suffix.
The habitual, which is used for expressing that someone does something on regular basis, cannot be used together with any tense. It is usually understood to mean present tense, but if need be, one can specify past meaning with the adverb öttöt (before), and future meaning with the adverb allogau (intends to).
The frequentative can have the meaning of just doing something repeatedly, or doing something repeatedly and in several locations. For example myosyak'yattodung can either mean "to jump around", or "to jump up and down at the same spot".
Mood
Mood | Morphology | Examples |
---|---|---|
Conditional | -(o)ppo -(ö)ppö |
kallorwappo - would dig kwedippö - would hear |
Energetic | -(s)sa -(s)se |
kallorwangsa - does dig too! kwedingse - does hear too! |
Hortative | -wat -wet |
kallorwat - let's dig kwetwet - let's hear |
Imperative | deletion of last syllable | kallo - dig! kwe - hear! |
Optative | -gaut -git |
kallorwagaut - may he/she dig kwedigit - may he/she hear |
Volitive | -auk -ik |
kallolauk - let him/her dig then kwedik - let it be heard then |
Conditional-Energetic | -(o)ppossa -(ö)ppösse |
kallorwappossa - I wish someone would dig kwedippösse - I wish someone would hear |
Hortative-Energetic | -watsa -wetse |
kallorwatsa - let's dig! kwetwetse - let's hear! |
Imperative-Energetic | deletion of last syllable + (s)sa deletion of last syllable + (s)se |
kallossa - you dig, allright? kwesse - would you hear? |
Optative-Energetic | -gautsa -gitse |
kallorwagautsa - may he/she dig! kwedigitse - may he/she hear! |
The conditional is used for marking the "then" part of an "if...then" statement. But sometimes it is used on both the "if" and the "then" part simultaneously. The conditional can only be used together with the past and habitual tense. Any aspect together with past tense can be used however.
The energetic mood is used when expressing what oneself actually believes to be the case, despite of what anyone else thinks. It can be used together with any tense and aspect.
The hortative denotes the meaning of "let's". No tense or aspect, except for the frequentative, can be used with the hortative. It can be used with any voice, except for the passive-causative.
The imperative mood is used for making commands. It is not used together with any particular voice, tense or aspect, except that it can be used with the frequentative, in which case the present frequentative suffix is added after the last syllable of the verb has been deleted. The adressee, which is optional, can be put before the verb in the vocative case.
The optative can be used for expressing a wish in one of these cases:
- The wish is not up to any person to make come true, for example "may it not rain tomorrow".
- The wish is directed at someone who is not present and contactable at the time being, for example "may the king not raise the taxes again" said by someone who has never met, and probably never will meet, the king.
- The wish is dependent on a large group of people, like the society or mankind. As an example: "let's all work together to make the world a better place to live".
The optative can only be used together with the present and habitual tenses. Any aspect together with present tense is also allowed.
The volitive mood has two similar uses. One is used to express that one does not approve of, or like, the state of affairs, but reluctantly accepts it because nothing else can be done. The other use expresses that one does not really wish for something to happen, but lets it happen anyway because one cannot be bothered to do something about it. This mood can only be used together with the present simple, present progressive, present frequentative and habitual tenses.
The combination of the conditional and energetic moods has two different uses. One means that one wishes current things to be in a certain way instead of how they are now. The other use means that one wishes for something to happen; either wishing it very intently, or being hopeful or optimistic about it happening. This mood can be used with the same tenses and aspects as the simple conditional.
Combining the hortative mood with the energetic adds a persuasive tone to the proposal made. It can be used together with the same tenses and aspects as the simple hortative.
Using the combination of imperative and energetic is paradoxically more polite than using the imperative alone. In this case, the energetic mood makes the statement more of a suggestion than a command. The tenses it can used together with are the same as for the simple imperative.
Together with the optative, the energetic has simply a more intensifying meaning. This can be used with the same tenses and aspects as the simple optative.
Nonfinite verbs
Infinitives
In action nominal constructions, when the active form of any of the infinitives is used, any agent argument of that infinitive takes the genitive case and any patient argument gets either the genitive or the absolutive case (except for the deverbal noun where both arguments always get the genitive). With the passive forms of an infinitive, the patient gets the genitive case and the agent ablative case (including the deverbal noun).
In other kinds of constructions, the object of an infinitive gets absolutive case. For the simple infinitives, the object is placed before the finite verb. The deverbal nouns have other requirements though, see Deverbal nouns for the details.
Type of infinitive | Morphology | Example |
---|---|---|
Active Infinitive | -∅ | p'yowochya - to eat kwedi - to hear |
Passive Infinitive | k'ūdi VERB-ūk'p'o k'ūdi VERB-ūk'p'ö |
k'ūdi p'yowochūk'p'o - to become eaten k'ūdi kwedūk'p'ö - to become heard |
Active Inessive infinitive | -öppi -oppu |
kwedöppi - when hearing p'yowochoppu - when eating |
Passive Inessive infinitive | -ūk'p'o k'ūdöppi -ūk'p'ö k'ūdöppi |
p'yowochūk'p'o k'ūdöppi - when becoming eaten kwedūk'p'ö k'ūdöppi - when becoming heard |
Active Instructive infinitive | -ōt -wüt |
p'yowochōt - by eating kwetwüt - by hearing |
Passive Instructive infinitive | -ūk'p'o k'ūtwüt -ūk'p'ö k'ūtwüt |
p'yowochūk'p'o k'ūtwüt - by becoming eaten kwedūk'p'ö k'ūtwüt - by becoming heard |
Active Adverb infinitive | -ba1-C2 -be1-C2 |
p'yowobappu - in the middle of eating kwebeppi - in the middle of hearing |
Passive Adverb infinitive | -būk'p'o1 k'ūbe-C2 -būk'p'ö1 k'ūbe-C2 |
p'yowobūk'p'o k'ūbeppi - in the middle of getting eaten kwebūk'p'ö k'ūbeppi - in the middle of getting heard |
Active Deverbal noun | -bossan1 -bössen1 |
p'yowobossan - eating kwebössen - hearing |
Passive Deverbal noun | -ūk'p'o k'ūbössen -ūk'p'ö k'ūbössen |
p'yowochūk'p'o k'ūbössen - getting eaten kwedūk'p'ö k'ūbössen - getting heard |
1The last syllable from the verb stem is deleted before this suffix is added.
2The C marks the place for an obligatory case suffix (see Adverb infinitives).
Simple infinitives
The simple infinitive is used as an oblique of another verb. For example:
Pot'-ak' | k'yamk'ottōtk'-a | madūkka-∅-ng | t'yamchya-∅ |
---|---|---|---|
1SG-ERG | shooting.star-ABS | want-ACT.TR-PRES | see-INF |
I want to see a shooting star. |
Inessive infinitives
The inessive infinitive has the meaning of "when someone is doing something"; it is used as a time reference.
Pot'ya-t | pōkp'ya-ppu | küllöd-öppi | p'adab-a | sai-nnat | opkōya-tt-o |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1SG-GEN | forest-INE | walk-ACT.INE.INF | lightning-ABS | tree-ILL | strike-ACT.INTR-PAST |
When I was walking in the forest, lightning struck a tree. |
Instructive infinitives
The instructive infinitive describes in what manner something happens. For example:
Myod-a | pingketti-dö | p'utsūk'-ōt | pöttü-tt-ö |
---|---|---|---|
3SG-ABS | market-ALL | row-INSTR.INF | go-INTR-PAST |
He went to the market by rowing. |
Adverb infinitives
The adverb infinitive requires a case (marked with C in the table). It has different meanings depending on the case used. Without a following case suffix, the suffix -ba/be makes a passive agent participle. The table below shows all cases that can be combined with the adverb infinitive.
Case | Example |
---|---|
Abessive | kallobakku - without digging |
Exessive | kallobatk'a - from having been digging |
Inessive | kallobappu - in the middle of digging |
Instrumental | kallobōp' - by digging |
Translative | kallobak'p'o - to go digging |
The exessive and translative are used for expressing that someone goes from one activity to another, with the exessive corresponding to the from part, and the translative to the to part. For example:
Pot'-a | opk'ū-ba-tk'a | p'ōnoppu-ba-nnat | pöttü-tt-ö |
---|---|---|---|
1SG-ABS | sit-ADV.INF-EXE | stand-ADV.INF-TRANSL | go-INTR-PAST |
I went from sitting to standing. |
The difference between the inessive infinitive and the inessive adverb infinitive is that the inessive infinitive can be used for comparing two situations in time: "when doing X, Y happened"; while the inessive adverb infinitive cannot be used that way. A single verb in the inessive adverb infinitive form can be used as an answer to the question where someone is. For example:
-Peppü op'a udittöng? (Where is dad?)
-Kadappappu. (Out fishing.)
The inessive adverb infinitive together with the auxiliary ut makes the progressive aspect.
Deverbal nouns
This form derives the name of the act of doing something. The difference between deverbal nouns and the simple infinitives is that the simple infinitives are used as objects while deverbal nouns are used as subjects. Deverbal nouns function just like normal nouns and can therefore take any case, or even the plural suffix when referring to several instances of some act. If the deverbal noun has an object argument, it gets the genitive case. So for example "the eating of food" would be nūjugat p'yowobossan.
Participles
Participle | Morphology | Example |
---|---|---|
Active past participle | -ttūk1 | p'yowottūk sutsoga - boy who has eaten kwettūk k'wik'wö - girl who has heard |
Passive past participle | -k'p'o k'ūttūk -k'p'ö k'ūttūk |
p'yowochyak'p'o k'ūttūk nūjuga - food that is eaten kwedik'p'ö k'ūttūk hūjungū - gossip that is heard |
Active present participle | -lla1 -lle1 |
p'yowolla sutsoga - boy who is eating kwelle k'wik'wö - girl who is hearing |
Passive present participle | -k'p'o k'ūlle -k'p'ö k'ūlle |
p'yowochyak'p'o k'ūlle nūjuga - food that is being eaten kwedik'p'ö k'ūlle hūjungū - gossip that is being heard |
Active agent participle | ||
Passive agent participle | -ba1 -be1 |
sutsogat p'yowoba nūjuga - food eaten by the boy k'wik'wöt kwebe hūjungū - gossip heard by the girl |
1The last syllable from the verb stem is deleted before this suffix is added.
When a verb is used for describing a noun the way adjectives are used, the verb takes a participle form. There are only two tenses, past and present. There are active participles, describing an agent, and passive participles, describing a patient. Causative voice can also be used. In that case, the causative suffix is added before the participle suffix as follows:
K'yapya | ōppok'yob-ak' | t'ūgū-k'ye-lle | ud-∅-ong |
---|---|---|---|
this | show-ERG | sleep-CAUS-ACT.PRES.PTC | be-TR-PRES |
This show is sleep-inducing. |
The active past participle and the active present participle can take an object, and the passive present participle and the passive agent participle can take a subject, all of which are marked with the genitive case. For the passive agent participle the agent argument is obligatory. The subject or object is placed right before the participle.
The agent participle is similar to the passive past participle, but the difference is that the past passive participle does not take a subject. If a noun (or pronoun) with genitive case is placed before the passive past participle, it means that the object described by the participle belongs to the person or thing marked by the genitive case. While for the agent participle, the genitive marks who the action has been done by.
The noun following a participle can have any case. If a core case is used, which one is used is governed by the finite verb's voice. The participle itself can be used as the object of the copula, as in the above example sentence. The copula will be marked as an active voice transitive and the subject will be marked as ergative, but no absolutive case will be present.
Nouns
Number
The singular form of nouns is unmarked, while the plural is marked with the suffix -k. If the noun ends with a consonant, a vowel is inserted before the -k suffix. Usually the vowel will be ō or wü depending on vowel harmony, but there are many irregular plurals that will use o, ö or wū as the linking vowel instead. In san words, final -san becomes -sōk and -sen becomes -swük.
Case
The final -n is deleted from san words before the case suffix is added.
Case | Suffix | Examples |
---|---|---|
Core cases | ||
Ergative | -ak' -ek' |
kutsongak' - dog-ERG keppek' - cat-ERG |
Absolutive | -a -e |
kutsonga - dog-NA keppe - cat-NA |
Adpositional cases | ||
Distributive | -k'illet -k'ullat |
keppik'illet - each cat separately syazolyak'ullat - every day |
Distributive-Temporal | -oppot -öppöt |
syazoloppot - at daytime sigissöppöt - during frost |
Essive | -tta -tte |
kutsongatta - as a dog keppitte - as a cat |
Genitive | -t | kutsongat - dog's keppit - cat's |
Instrumental | -ōp' -wüp' |
rappangōp' - with a hammer köswüp' - with a stick |
Prolative | -kp'ō -kp'wü |
pōngokp'ō - by sea kikkukp'wü - by rooftop |
Locational cases | ||
Ablative | -(ō)t'k'ya -(wü)t'k'ye |
pōngot'k'ya - from the sea kikkut'k'ye - from the roof |
Elative | -pk'a -pk'e |
kutsongapk'a - from the inside of the dog kikkupk'e - from inside the rooftop |
Exessive | -tk'a -tk'e |
kutsongatk'a - (turn) from a dog (into something else) keppitk'e - (turn) from a cat (into something else) |
Adessive | -di -du |
kikkudi - on the roof pōngodu - by the sea |
Inessive | -ppi -ppu |
kikkuppi - in the roof pōngoppu - in the sea |
Allative | -dö -do |
kikkudö - to the roof pōngodo - to the sea |
Illative | -(nn)at -(nn)et |
pōngonnat - into the sea kikkunnet - into the roof |
Translative | -k'p'o -k'p'ö |
kutsongak'p'o - (turn) into a dog keppik'p'ö - (turn) into a cat |
Comitative | -ttō -twü |
kutsongattō - (together) with his/her dog keppitwü - (together) with his/her cat |
Other | ||
Abessive | -kki -kku |
kössekki - without a stick rappangakku - without a hammer |
Vocative | -∅ | kutsonga - hey you dog! keppi - hey you cat! |
Adpositional cases
If the distributive case is used together with a word that stands for some kind of time period, it has the meaning that something is done during each of those periods. If used with any other kind of noun, it has the meaning of each of those separately. For example the sentence k'yapya k'yowo k'ōm sangok'ullat means "do this assignment in pairs", where the word for pair (sango) carries the distributive case. The distributive case can not be used with pronouns.
The distributive-temporal case is only used together with words relating to time. It has the meaning that something is done during that time, but unlike the simple distributive case it doesn't necessarily mean that it is done during every such time period.
The essive case has the meaning of "as" or "if". For example kyot'pyatta syazolyatta sidöding - during a cold day one freezes (or "if there is a cold day one freezes"), or nogapwatta ōno k'yowopk'yudappo - as a rich man I would not do work.
The genitive case is used for marking possession (with the possessive preceding the head noun), as well as for marking the agent in passive sentences. If the genitive case is used on a word that ends with a consonant, a vowel is inserted before the suffix. This is the same vowel as the one used in the plural form.
The instrumental tells that something is used as a tool. It cannot be used with personal pronouns or animate nouns. If need be, the pronoun or animate noun can be given the absolutive case, followed by the word küwikkōt (use-INSTR.INF).
The prolative tells "by which medium or route". For example rōtta hugokp'ō kūt'kōnang - the boat travels by river. It cannot be used with pronouns or animate nouns.
Locational cases
The ablative has the meaning of "from the vicinity or topside of something". The elative on the other hand means "from the inside of something". The elative has two other uses as well. When used on a time noun it means "from that time onwards". The other use is for expressing what someone feels; the person who is feeling gets the elative case.
The adessive has the meaning of "by, near or on top of something". The inessive means "inside something". Both the adessive and inessive can be used together with a time noun to indicate when something happened or will happen. The difference is that the adessive is used when the action stretches out during the whole time period, while the inessive is used about things that happened sometime during that time period.
The allative has the meaning of "to the vicinity or topside of something", while the illative has the meaning "to the inside of something". The illative can also be used with a time noun to indicate "until a certain time".
The "inside" meaning of the internal locatives (elative, inessive and illative) is also applied to objects that somehow cover something else (even if only partially). For example, when describing someone sitting on a chair, one of the internal locatives would be used because a chair has a back support, so the person sitting in it would have his or her back covered. A stool on the other hand does not have any part that covers a person, so one of the external locatives (ablative, adessive or allative) would be used. The external locatives are also used when describing possession of items or the transaction of items between people. The people involved are then marked with external locatives.
The exessive and translative cases describe either that something turns into something else, or that something changes from one state into another. The exessive is the source and the translative is the result. The exessive can also be used to descibe what something is made of.
Other cases
The abessive case has the meaning of "without". It cannot be used with personal pronouns or nouns standing for humanoid beings. Instead the preposition ot'pat is used, followed by the given noun or pronoun in essive case.
The vocative case is used when addressing someone by their name or title, and also when calling someone a rude word. The word with the vocative case can be placed either at the beginning or end of the sentence.
Pronouns
Personal Pronouns
Proto-Kunnu-lūjungo has a three-way distinction of person in its personal pronouns, but no gender distinction.
1st person | 2nd person | 3rd person | Interrogative | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Singular | pot'ya I |
p'ot'ya you |
myat he/she |
kūga who |
Plural | pō we |
k'ō you |
mō they |
kōkkya who |
In the daughter languages of Proto-Kunnu-lūjungo the second person pronouns are avoided for politeness, and instead the addressee's name or title is used. In Proto-Kunnu-lūjungo, at least the singular second person pronoun was avoided, but it is unclear if it was because of politeness reasons or because it was so similar to the singular first person pronoun. If the plural second person pronoun was also avoided is unknown.
Demonstrative Pronouns
1st person | 2nd person | 3rd person | Interrogative | Interrogative dual | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Singular | k'yapya this |
k'ūju that |
p'ō that/it |
pokya what |
kūp'so which |
Plural | t'yapya these |
t'ūju those |
t'ō those/they |
pokkya which |
kūp'sok which ones |
The demonstrative pronouns refer to inanimate things and non-humanoid beings, except for the singular interrogative dual which can also be used about humanoids. The demonstrative pronouns can also be used as demonstrative determiners. The interrogative dual has the meaning of "which one (of two alternatives)". Kūp'sok is used when referring to two groups of things.
Relative Pronouns
There are two relative pronouns: huga, which refers to the preceding word (or noun preceding numeral); and pokya, which refers to the preceding clause or sentence. If a relative pronoun is used without the thing it refers to having been explicitly mentioned, then huga will be used if the implicit thing is animate, and pokya if it is inanimate. For example:
Myat-ōt | op'-a | atk'wa-tto-∅, | myad-ak' | pog-a | syuk'yu-∅ |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
3SG-GEN | father-ABS | give-INTR-HAB | 3SG-ERG | what-ABS | ask.for-HAB |
Her father gives her what she asks for. |
The relative pronoun gets the same number as the thing it refers to, and whichever case is required in the position the relative pronoun appears in. Unless the relative pronoun appears without something it refers to, as in the above example, it is moved to the beginning of the relative clause.
Reciprocal Pronoun
The reciprocal pronoun is k'utsossan (k'utsossa in absolutive case and k'utsossōt in the genitive). Below are examples of the word in both cases.
M-ak' | k'utsoss-a | nagapk'wa-ng |
---|---|---|
3PL-ERG | each.other-ABS | love-PRES |
They love each other. |
M-ak' | k'utsoss-ōt | mofūb-ōg-a | tōnogakk-o |
---|---|---|---|
3PL-ERG | each.other-GEN | hair-PL-ABS | cut-PAST |
They cut each other's hair. |
Reflexive Pronoun
The reflexive pronoun is okp'ō.
Pot'-ak' | okp'-a | sōpk'-o |
---|---|---|
1SG-ERG | self-ABS | wash-PAST |
I washed myself. |
The reflexive pronoun can also be used for emphasis, in which case it is placed after the verb.
Pot'-ak' | p'-a | k'ōmchya-ng | okp'ō |
---|---|---|---|
1SG-ERG | it-ABS | do-PRES | self |
I'll do it myself! |
Quantifier Pronouns
Inclusive | Exclusive | Universal | Negative | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Singular humanoid | kūga k'annatp'a anyone |
hugū someone |
killege everyone |
ōno kūkyut no one |
Plural humanoid | kōkkya k'annatp'a anyone |
hukkūk some |
ōno kōkkyut no one | |
Dual | kūp'so k'annatp'a either one |
hup'sogūp'so either or |
pudöbik both |
ōno kūp'sokyut neither |
Singular inanimate | pokya k'annatp'a anything/any |
hugot something/some |
killege everything/all |
ōno pokyut nothing/no |
Plural inanimate | pokkya k'annatp'a any |
hukkot some |
ōno pokkyut no |
The singular inanimates can also be used as determiners. The plural inanimates can only be used as determiners. See also Quantifier adverbs for more quantifiers.
Adjectives
San adjectives declinate slightly differently than other adjectives, as the final -an or -en is deleted from san adjectives before comparison suffixes are added. The following table displays both types of declination.
Comparison | Suffix | Example |
---|---|---|
San adjectives | ||
Positive | -∅ | pyowomyazossan - late negettüzessen - broken |
Comparative | -ōp'so -wüp'sö |
pyowomyazossōp'so - later negettüzesswüp'sö - more broken |
Superlative | -ot -öt |
pyowomyazossot - latest negettüzessöt - most broken |
Other adjectives | ||
Positive | -∅ | mochap - slow kūbi - odd |
Comparative | -p'so1 -p'sö |
mochap'so - slower kūbip'sö - odder |
Superlative | -tsot1 -tsöt |
mochatsot - slowest kūbitsöt - oddest |
1If the adjective ends with p, the p is deleted before this suffix is added. (There are only front vowel adjectives that end with p.)
Epithets
Proto-Kunnu-lūjungo has a special part of speech called epithets. Epithets are words that precede proper nouns and define what kind of thing that proper noun is. Epithets are mostly used with people's names and names of geographical locations. They function differently from nouns and adjectives because epithets do not inflect, they cannot be used predicatively and epithets only modify proper nouns while adjectives only modify common nouns.
A few epithets are identical to the corresponding noun and some are closely related to the corresponding noun. Others have been derived from other nouns, some are words that used to be nouns but have ceased to be used as such, and some are words borrowed from other languages.
The use of epithets is not obligatory, especially not in full sentences. Though, when it comes to people's names, using an epithet is a sign of respect, so when speaking in the presence of someone one does not know intimately, they are almost always used together with that person's name.
Shorthand translation of epithet | Epithet | Description |
---|---|---|
Bachelor | hyakkya | Signifies the name of an unmarried man (surname, or given name, or surname followed by given name) |
Bay | Used before the name of a bay, bight or gulf | |
Beach | zyōkp'o | Used before the name of a beach |
Bridge | p'ot'k'a | Used before the name of a bridge. This is the same word as the noun for bridge. |
Cape | kash | Used before the name of a cape |
City | Used before the name of a town or city | |
Coast | fupk'a | The name of a coastline |
Delta | chōt'k'a | Used before the name of a delta or mouth of a river. Usually a river and its delta or mouth will have the same name, but different epithets are used depending on which part one is talking about. |
Doctor | k'umk'ungo | Used before a doctor's name (surname or surname followed by given name) |
Ford | kamtai | Used before the name of a ford |
Forest | p'adu | Used before the name of a forest (standard) |
kungso | Used before the name of a forest (dialectal) | |
God | hūbat' | Signifies the name of a deity |
Highland | yotyapwa | Used before the name of a highland or elevated tableland |
Hill | kūp'sū | Used before the name of a hill |
Island | wo | Used before the name of an island |
Island chain | angkossōtwafo | Used before the name of an island chain, a group of islands or an archipelago |
King | nōsh | Signifies the name of a king |
Lake | hyanglo | Used before the name of a lake. This is the same word as the noun for lake. |
Land | kutk'ū | Used before the name of a piece of land, a country or a region |
Lowland | adapwa | Used before the name of a lowland area |
Miss | t'ōnokko | Signifies the name of an unmarried woman (surname, or given name, or surname followed by given name) |
Mister | möngi | Signifies the name of a married man (surname, or given name, or surname followed by given name) |
Mistress | nutsūlla | Signifies the name of a married woman (surname, or given name, or surname followed by given name) |
Mountain | Used before the name of a mountain or peak | |
Mountain range | k'ūtk'ūngo | Used before the name of a mountain range |
Pass | kūt'kū | Used before the name of a mountain pass |
Peninsula | kofōdo | Used before the name of a peninsula |
Plateau | Used before the name of a plateau of undefined height (see also lowland (adapwa) and highland (yotyapwa)) | |
Pond | tap'so | Used before the name of a pond or spring |
Queen | igi | Signifies the name of a queen |
Rapids | zhungp'i | Used before the name of some rapids |
River | nofu | Used before the name of a river |
Road | rofa | Used before the name of a road or street |
Sea | ūdissi | Used before the name of a sea |
Ship | adūp | Signifies the name of a ship or boat |
Straight | kat'wado | Used before the name of a straight or sound |
Stream | rongk'a | Used before the name of a stream, creek or brook |
Swamp | nyabō | Used before the name of a swamp, marsh, bog or quagmire |
Town drunk | hūjussu | Used before the name of a drunkard with low status in the society (surname, or given name, or surname followed by given name). This usage is rude, and these people would rather prefer to be called by the epithet möngi or hyakkya. |
Valley | p'uda | Used before the name of a valley |
Village | sok'yahya | Used before the name of a village or settlement |
Yard | sonna | Signifies the name of a courtyard or farmyard, or signifies the house on that plot |
Adverbs
Below are listed adverbs that are related to the pronouns, in such a way that there is a person distinction among them as well as interrogative forms (allthough some of them distinguish fewer than three persons), and that some of them are somehow derived from the pronouns (cf. the locational adverbs with the demonstrative pronouns).
1st person | 2nd person | 3rd person | Interrogative | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Locational | k'ue- here |
k'ūju- there |
p'e- there |
po- where |
Temporal | t'yok now |
p'edutset then |
podutsat when | |
Manner | t'yazot this way |
t'utsot that way |
pokkōt how | |
Reason | p'ok'p'o therefore |
pok'p'o why |
These locational adverbs are obligatorily combined with a one of the locational cases ablative, adessive, allative, elative, inessive or illative.
Quantifier adverbs
Inclusive | Exclusive | Universal | Negative | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Locative | poppu k'annatp'a anywhere |
huppiget somewhere |
killegedi everywhere |
ōno popkyut nowhere |
Temporal | podutsat k'annatp'a anytime |
hupkūp sometime |
allotta all the time |
ōno kupkyut never |
Manner | pokkōt k'annatp'a any way |
hukkōtkot somehow |
huga k'assōp' every way |
ōno pokkōtkyut no way |
Adpositions
There are several postposition, a few ambipositions (adpositions that can appear either before or after the noun it modifies) and even fewer prepositions in Proto-Kunnu-lūjungo. The words that are solely postpositions require the preceding noun to have genitive case. The tables in the following sections use the word k'adu (house), and in some cases op'ya (father), as an example together with the adpositions.
Postpositions
Motion to | Being at a location | Motion away | Motion across |
---|---|---|---|
k'adut adado under the house |
k'adut adadu under the house |
k'adut adat'k'ya from underneath the house |
k'adut adakp'ō underneath the house |
k'adut kōpkodo to the middle of the house |
k'adut kōpkodu in the middle of the house |
k'adut kōpkot'k'ya from the middle of the house |
k'adut kōpkokp'ō across the middle of the house |
k'adut k'agado behind the house |
k'adut k'agadu behind the house |
k'adut k'agat'k'ya from behind the house |
k'adut k'agakp'ō across the back of the house |
k'adut ōkkūdo in front of the house |
k'adut ōkkūdu in front of the house |
k'adut ōkkūt'k'ya from front of the house |
k'adut ōkkūkp'ō across the front of the house |
k'adut p'ollūdo beside the house |
k'adut p'ollūdu beside the house |
k'adut p'ollūt'k'ya from beside the house |
k'adut p'ollūkp'ō past the side of the house |
k'adut p'op'yannat into the house |
k'adut p'op'yappu inside the house |
k'adut p'op'yapk'a from the inside of the house |
- (tyassokp'ō is used instead, see the list further down this section) |
k'adut rofōngōdo beside the house |
k'adut rofōngōdu beside the house |
k'adut rofōngōt'k'ya from beside the house |
- |
op'yat tūjudo to father's home/vicinity |
op'yat tūjudu at father's home/vicinity |
op'yat tūjut'k'ya from father's home/vicinity |
- |
k'adut tyannodo near the house |
k'adut tyannodu near the house |
k'adut tyannot'k'ya from near the house / something passes by close to the house | |
k'adut yotyado on top of the house / above the house |
k'adut yotyadu on top of the house / above the house |
k'adut yotyat'k'ya from the top of the house / from above the house |
k'adut yotyakp'ō over the house |
The difference between p'ollū- and rofōngō- is that p'ollū- denotes the flank or the location immediately next to something, while rofōngō- denotes a wider area. So for example sa ut k'adut rofōngōdu (the tree is beside the house) could be said even if there is some third object between the house and the tree, making it impossible to see the house from where the tree is. Sa ut k'adut p'ollūdu means that "the tree is right next to the house". K'adut p'ollūdu can also mean "on the wall (flank) of the house". Though p'ollū- and rofōngō- are synonymous to many speakers.
The tūju- postpositions can only be used in reference to an animate being. They can either have the meaning of near that person, or that person's home (whether or not s/he is home).
The tyanno- postpositions can also be used as adverbs (without any preceding noun).
The following invariant postpositions also exist:
- hyat'kodu - after (locational)
- hyat'koppu - after (temporal)
- ippöpyette - in someone's place
- killūkki - via
- k'agofa - for someone's sake; because of
- rangk'ōt1 - for a purpose
- sūjudopk'a - on behalf of somebody
- tyassokp'ō - through
- unnokp'ō - past (locational)
- yop'syongo - around (only one lap, see also Prepositions)
1This postposition requires the noun to have the exessive case instead of genitive.
Ambipositions
The following table shows all ambipositions as well as the cases they call for in the nouns they modify.
Ambiposition | Case of noun |
---|---|
kumk'o - toward | Allative |
kutk'yunga - against | Essive |
rapk'ōt - against | Any external locative |
rapk'wat - toward; versus | Allative |
sokkot - along | Any external locative |
The difference between kumk'o and rapk'wat is that rapk'wat is only used about something moving towards a person. Kumk'o is used either about someone or something moving towards some inanimate object or place, about someone moving with malicious intent toward some person, or about something capable of causing injury moving towards a person. Rapk'wat can not have any of these meanings. Rapk'wat is usually used about a person moving toward someone else to greet that person, or for describing who or what one has met during one's way. With these meanings, rapk'wat can also be used as an adverb modifying an inessive infinitive. Paradoxically, one other use for rapk'wat is like the word "versus" in a battle (possibly because a sports battle is entered with both parties' consent, while battles in war are meant to be fought with a code of honour).
The difference between kutk'yunga and rapk'ōt is that rapk'ōt is used for describing the position of some object, usually together with verbs with meanings similar to "lean". Kutk'yunga on the other hand is used about someone or something being against someone else's order or will.
Prepositions
Preposition | Case of noun |
---|---|
ot'pat - without | Essive |
öttöt - before | Essive or illative |
yop'syongo - around (several laps) | Adessive |
Ot'pat can only be used together with pronouns or nouns standing for humanoid beings.
Öttöt (which can also be used as an adverb) calls for the illative case on time nouns or other nouns that denote a specific time, and otherwise essive. See examples below.
Pot'-a | mōnyak'ya-tt-o | öttöt | allūngotkut-t'uptūgu-nnat |
---|---|---|---|
1SG-ABS | wake.up-INTR-PAST | before | sun-rise-ILL |
I woke up before sunrise. |
P'ot'-a | k'ūdi-tt-o | kukko-nnat | öttöt | pot'ya-tk'a |
---|---|---|---|---|
2SG-ABS | come-INTR-PAST | home-ILL | before | 1SG-ESS |
You came home before me. |
Yop'syongo is used like preposition when talking about something that goes several turns around. If talking about something that makes only one turn, it is used like a postposition.
Numerals
Proto-Kunnu-lūjungo has a decimal system. The numbers 11-19 are expressed by adding the suffix -k'utsossan to one of the numbers 1-9. Higher numbers are expressed simply by placing the name of one of the numbers 2-9 before the name of one of the numbers 10, 100, 1000 or 10 000. For example, 20 is called kak'p'o-kwibössen and 317 is called kut'pō-p'akka-kwibössen-p'ōnokp'ōpyat.
Number | Cardinal Numeral | Ordinal Numeral | Distributive |
---|---|---|---|
1 | yok'p'o | ōtp'obuzassan | yok'p'ok'ullat |
2 | kak'p'o | k'utsossan | kak'p'ok'ullat |
3 | kut'pō | kut'pap | kut'pōk'ullat |
4 | t'ōt'hya | t'ōt'hyap | t'ōt'hyak'ullat |
5 | ryōppo | ryōppap | ryōppok'ullat |
6 | kaippo | kaippap | kaippok'ullat |
7 | p'ōnokp'ōpyat | p'ōnokp'ōpyap | p'ōnokp'ōpyatk'ullat |
8 | kamchōk'p'at | kamchōk'p'ap | kamchōk'p'atk'ullat |
9 | yomchōk'p'yat | yomchōk'p'yap | yomchōk'p'yatk'ullat |
10 | kwibössen1 | kwibössep | kwibössek'ullat |
100 | p'akka | p'akkap | p'akkak'ullat |
1000 | k'ūnnak | k'ūnnap | k'ūnnakk'ullat |
10 000 | pyongofacho | pyongofachap | pyongofachok'ullat |
Interrogative | putk'a(gu) | puttōp(ku) | puttok'ullat(ku) |
1The -ssen suffix is deleted when a numeral classifier is added.
The cardinal numerals are like one, two, three, while the ordinal numerals are like first, second, third. The distributive numerals are used for expressing how many parts something should be divided into. These are indeed the same as the cardinal numbers with the distributive case. The interrogative number is used when asking questions that include "how many...", and also as a relative pronoun. Interrogative numerals are always used with the interrogative clitic -ku, which is placed after any numeral classifier.
Numeral Classifiers
Normally numerals are used together with a classifier suffix. Different suffixes are used depending on what is counted. So for example two carrots would be called kak'p'ohaingo sungkitti while two rocks would be called kak'p'opwomkyonya kollo (sungkitti meaning carrot and kollo rock).
The classifier is used regardless if the numeral is used for modifying a noun or if it is used predicatively. The noun can even be dropped if it is clear from context and the classifier what is being referred to. If just counting numbers, then no classifier is used.
Below is a list of classifiers. Since there are no neutral vowel numerals, the suffixes are simply presented with back vowel suffixes first and front vowel suffixes second.
Shorthand name | Suffix | Use |
---|---|---|
Abstract | -tsya -tsye |
Abstract things; also used when one does not know what other classifier to use |
Age | -(p)pallo -(p)pellö |
Years of age of people and things |
Animals | -ukkūp | Animals that do not fall under any of the other categories |
Birds | -(t)tugu -(t)tugi |
Birds and bats |
Bottles | -syūdu | Bottles and beverages stored in bottles |
Bugs | -bakku -bekku |
Small animals such as insects, worms and amphibians |
Buildings | -gukku -gikku |
Buildings |
Bundles | -(t)tassū -(t)tessū |
Bundles and bunches of things |
Canines | -(n)nūgu -(n)nūgi |
Dogs and wolves |
Cattle | -(p)panglōgap -(p)pengrwügep |
Livestock (excluding poultry) |
Children | -gaknap -geknep |
Children of humanoid creatures |
Clothes | -(k)kabottō -(k)kebötwü |
Clothes worn on the body, including shawls and scarfs but excluding other accessories |
Collective | -k1 | Groups or things that consist of several parts |
Containers | -(p)patku -(p)petku |
Containers other than bottles |
Eggs | -uk' -ük' |
Eggs, excluding roe and spawn |
Fish | -zhoppū -zhöppū |
Caught fish |
Flat | -dallūjō -dellūjwü |
Flat objects made of unflexible material; places |
Fruit | -(n)nōllo -nwüllö |
Fruit, berries, nuts and vegetables other than root vegetables |
Horses | -(n)nossu -(n)nössi |
Horses |
Large | -hyangkyadō -hyengkyetwü |
Large object, e.g. mountains, sun, moon |
Layers | -gongup -göngup |
Floors and layers |
Machine | -guhō -guhwü |
Machines and vehicles |
Marine | -ōlyakyap -wülyekyep |
Sea creatures (not caught) |
Multiplicative | -gōngk'a -kwüngk'e |
Number of times something is done |
Oblong | -swokkwo -swökkwö |
Long and narrow objects, excluding those things that go into the pipes category |
Pairs | -(s)sango -(s)sengö |
Pairs of things, as well as objects that consist of two similar parts |
People | -kyu | Humanoid creatures other than children (standard) |
-syu | Humanoid creatures other than children (dialectal) | |
Piles | -gūgūngu -gūgūngi |
Piles and heaps of things and materials |
Pipes | -nwowongo -nwöwöngö |
Hollow, oblong things |
Root vegetables | -haingo -hingö |
Root vegetables and bulbs |
Round | -pwomkyonya -pwömkyönye |
Small round objects |
Seafood | -gada -gede |
Sea creatures other than fish that has been caught |
Sheets | -ungka -ingke |
Flat objects made of flexible material, like paper or fabric |
Small | -ō -wü |
Small non-round items |
Strands | -noshp'o -nöshp'ö |
Very thin and oblong things, e.g. strands of hair, rivers |
Strings | -gōnya -kwünye |
Strings, threads, ropes, etc. |
Substance | -kwogwo -kwögwö |
Things that consist of liguid, a mushy substance or fine powder |
Trees | -(k)kūga -(k)kūge |
Trees, excluding bushes |
Wood | -gudafu -gidefi |
Pieces of wood and items made from cut wood |
1The final consonant is deleted from p'ōnokp'ōpyat, kamchōk'p'at and yomchōk'p'yat when this suffix is added. Kwibössen becomes kwibössek and k'ūnnak becomes k'ūnnagōk.
Syntax
Transitive sentences
In transitive sentences, the subject takes ergative case and the object absolutive if the active or causative voice is used.
Pot'-ak' | ubōtt-a | p'yowochya-∅-ng |
---|---|---|
1SG-ERG | apple-ABS | eat-ACT.TR-PRES |
I eat an apple. |
In causative sentences, the person who is caused to do something gets the allative case. This person goes between the subject and the direct object. The causer, causee and direct object are all optional, but at least one of the three must be present in a given sentence.
Pot'-ak' | myat-to | tallūd-a | kwe-k'ye-ng |
---|---|---|---|
1SG-ERG | 3SG-ALL | song-ABS | hear-CAUS-PRES |
I make him hear a song. |
In passive sentences, the agent, which is optional, comes between the patient and verb. The patient gets absolutive case and the agent genitive.
Ubōtt-a | pot'ya-t | k'ūd-e p'yowo-ttūk |
---|---|---|
apple-ABS | 1SG-GEN | PASS-PAST eat-PASS |
The apple got eaten by me. |
Intransitive sentences
In intransitive sentences the subject or object gets the absolutive-nominative case. Verbs that are inherently intransitive may not take active transitive marking, but verbs that are inherently transitive may take the active intransitive marker. This functions like antipassive voice; it deletes the patient argument.
Pot'-a | p'yowochya-tto-ng |
---|---|
1SG-ABS | eat-ACT.INTR-PRES |
I eat. |
The same rules apply for the causative as in transitive sentences.
Pot'-a | myat-to | p'yowochya-k'ya-ng |
---|---|---|
1SG-ABS | 3SG-ALL | eat-CAUS-PRES |
I make him eat. |
Some verbs which are inherently intransitive take an agent argument, while others take a patient argument. Those verbs that take a patient argument can be made transitive with the use of the causative voice.
Pot'-ak' | rōppo-do | k'ūdi | hyuk'yo-k'ya |
---|---|---|---|
1SG-ERG | water-ALL | FUT | freeze-CAUS |
I will freeze the water. |
Interrogative sentences
Questions are made by either using a question word, which is moved to the beginning of the sentence, or by adding the interrogative suffix -gu to the word that is questioned. A word with the interrogative suffix is also moved to the beginning of the sentence.
Pog-a | p'ot'-ak' | p'wach-∅-o |
---|---|---|
what-NA | you-ERG | get-UNM-PAST |
What did you get? |
Ut-to-gu | kyot'sōnya-ng | p'ot'-a |
---|---|---|
PERF-ACT-Q | bathe-PRES | you-NA |
Have you bathed? |
Negation
Negation is done with the negative auxiliary verb ōno. The verb that is negated get the simple infinitive form and is placed directly after ōno, with ōno taking all the conjugation; unless there is need to use the habitual tense or perfect or progressive aspect, in which case the negated verb is conjugated normally and ōno is placed before that verb without any marking.
The ōno that precedes the negative pronouns is removed when these words are used in negative sentences.
Comparative constructions
To make comparative constructions involving a noun, such as "X is more Z than what Y is", Proto-Kunnu-lūjungo uses the form X-NOMABS Z-COMP kūjot Y-NOMABS. For example:
K'yapya | k'ad-a | oppu-p'so | kūjot | p'-a |
---|---|---|---|---|
this | house-NOMABS | big-COMP | than | that.3SG-NOMABS |
This house is bigger than that one. |
If it is a verb that is compared instead of an adjective, the following construction is used: X (object) Z öttöbüt kūjot Y (or X (object) öttöbüt Z kūjot Y). The cases of X and Y depend on the transitivity of the verb, and if Y is an agent or patient. See the following two sentences:
P'ot'-ak' | p'ofōbōd-a | p'yowochya-∅-∅ | öttöbüt | kūjot | totk'-ak' |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2SG-ERG | seed-NOMABS | eat-UNM-HAB | more | than | bird-ERG |
You eat more seeds than what birds do. |
P'ot'-ak' | p'ofōbōd-a | p'yowochya-∅-∅ | öttöbüt | kūjot | totk'ū-g-a |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2SG-ERG | seed-NOMABS | eat-UNM-HAB | more | than | bird-PL-NOMABS |
You eat more seeds than you eat birds. |
In the first sentence, the bird has ergative case, meaning that the bird is an agent. In the second sentence, the word for birds has the nominative-absolutive case, giving the meaning that the birds are a patient. If the sentence has no object, then both X and Y will have the nominative-absolutive case and the verb will have active voice. The Y argument will then be an agent. As an example:
P'ot'-a | p'yowochya-tto-∅ | öttöbüt | kūjot | totk'-a | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2SG-NOMABS | eat-ACT-HAB | more | than | bird-NOMABS | |
You eat more than what birds do. |
Purpose clauses
There are several ways in which purpose can be expressed in Proto-Kunnu-lūjungo. One way is to have the main event followed by the dependent event with the conjunction hukki between them.
Pot'-ak' | kad-a | p'ūjudakka-∅-ng | hukki | p'-a | ōno-tt-o | sodak'yotto-ppo |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1SG-ERG | fish-NOMABS | salt-UNM-PRES | so.that | it-NOMABS | not-ACT-PAST | get.bad-COND |
I salt the fish so that it will not get bad. |
If the two verbs have the same agent, the dependent verb can be turned into a simple infinitive with translative case. If the main verb is a verb of movement (such as go, come, etc.), then the dependent verb may alternatively be realized as an adverb infinitive. Both ways are exemplified in the following two sentences:
Pot'-ak' | nūjug-a | up-pa-k'p'o | pingketti-dö | pött-ö |
---|---|---|---|---|
1SG-ERG | food-NOMABS | buy-ADVINF-TRANSL | market-ALL | go-PAST |
I went to the market to buy food. |
Pot'-ak' | nūjug-a | upk'wa-∅-k'p'o | pingketti-dö | pött-ö |
---|---|---|---|---|
1SG-ERG | food-NOMABS | buy-INF-TRANSL | market-ALL | go-PAST |
I went to the market to buy food. |
Another way is to have a noun (or deverbal noun) followed by the postposition rangk'ōt.
Reporting
To report what someone else has said, the construction X-ERG VERB-UNM (ökkü) QUOTE is used, where X is the source of information, VERB is a verb like say, tell, etc. (with tense, aspect and mood as appropriate), and QUOTE is an independent clause. If the report is in direct speech, the particle ökkü will be used. If the report is in indirect speech, ökkü is not used, and the deictic center in the quote is changed to that of the speaker.
Evidentiality
Evidentiality can be expressed with a pronoun in the genitive case followed by one of three evidentiality verbs in the instructive infinitive form. The pronoun specifies according who, and the verb what kind of evidentiality. This construction precedes the main verb (or auxiliary + main verb construction).
Person | Evidentiality type | Morphology |
---|---|---|
1st | Inferential | pot'yat t'yamchyōt |
2nd | Inferential | p'ot'yat t'yamchōt |
3rd | Inferential | myatōt t'yamchōt |
1st | Reportative | pot'yat kwetwüt |
2nd | Reportative | p'ot'yat kwetwüt |
3rd | Reportative | myatōt kwetwüt |
1st | Direct Knowledge | pot'yat k'ofōk'ōt |
2nd | Direct Knowledge | p'ot'yat k'ofōk'ōt |
3rd | Direct Knowledge | myatōt k'ofōk'ōt |
Impersonal | Direct Knowledge | k'ofōk'ōt |
The inferential has the meaning of "seen by me/you/someone else" and reportative "according to what I/you/someone has heard". The direct knowledge evidential is used about any other evidence, including non-visual sensory. This evidential can also be used impersonally, which is marked by the absense of a pronoun. The impersonal direct knowledge can have the meaning "they say that..." without any clarifications of who "they" are, or it can have the meaning that something is supposed to be common knowledge, "anyone knows it". All second person evidentials are very seldomly used, and when they are, the pronoun is usually replaced by the name of the adressee in genitive case.
Lexicon
San words
Some adjectives and some nouns ends with the suffix -(s)san or -(s)sen. In adjectives it's usually present because of word derivation, while in nouns it usually just doesn't have any specific meaning. But it is obligatory nonetheless. In various kinds of suffixation, the San words usually inflect slightly differently than other words.
Compounds
In endocentric compounds, the head is the last word of the compound. All but the last words in a compound have the following characteristics:
- Verbs can only appear in non-final forms
- Nouns sometimes carry a case that the final word in the compound calls for. But nouns in some compounds have the genitive case for no particular reason.
- The suffix from San words is deleted.
- Some words have a special compound form, see Derivation below.
Derivation
Affix | Meaning | Example |
---|---|---|
Verb → verb | ||
ado-- | Underdo X | anglofutsocha - estimate → ado-anglofutsocha - under-estimate |
hütwūt-- | Redoing an action | kōngk'utsa - tell → hütwūt-kōngk'utsa - renarrate |
p'ada-- | Do X in secret | kwettöttö - listen → p'ada-kwettöttö - eavesdrop |
unno-- | Miss doing X | ap'sūja - shoot → unno-ap'sūja - shoot and miss |
-mk'wa1 -mk'we1 |
Diminishes the intensity of an action, or makes it momentane | kakp'utsa - look → kakp'umk'wa - glance millūgūttö - bark → millūgūmk'we - bark once |
-ōsya -wüsye |
The opposite of the action | p'ūjucha - let good things happen to others → p'ūjuchōsya - not let good things happen to others tūjuk'ye - trust → tūjuk'wüsye - distrust |
Verb → noun | ||
-bu | Place where X is done | t'yamk'ya - show → t'yamk'yabu - stage |
-būp1 | A simple deverbal noun, usually used about actions that take some time to complete | kōngk'utsa - tell → kōngk'ubūp - story |
-gō1 -kwü |
Device that performs X | kunglakka - substitute (V.) → kunglagō - substitute (N.) ködūttö - float → ködūkwü - floating device |
-ha1 -he1 |
Doer of X | kyot'sōtto - bathe → kyot'sōha - bather ihikködi - think → ihikköhe - thinker |
-ofu -öfu |
Noun somehow related to the verb | otto - sprout → ottofu - spore mönekkue - throw → mönekköfu - dump |
-ot1 -öt1 |
Tool used for doing X | kūt'kōtto - traverse → kūt'kot - vehicle p'utsek'ye - play → p'utsek'öt - (musical) instrument |
-ōt'pa -wüt'pe |
Result of verb | t'yamk'ya - show (V.) → t'yamk'ōt'pa - show (N.) p'utsek'ye - play → p'utsek'wüt'pe - play (of an instrument) |
-pya1 -pye1 |
Default verb to noun derivation | ōtto - live → ōpya - life kūjuttö - die → kūjupye - death |
-tk'u1 | Deverbal noun which implies of some kind of large occurrence | ūpkutsa - believe → ūpkutk'u - religion |
-tta1 -tte1 |
Deverbal form of sound verb | mongt'ūtto - neigh → mongt'ūtta - neighing millūgūttö - bark → millūgūtte - barking |
-u | Single instance of an act | tōtto - fly → tōttu - flight |
-ū | Deverbal form of frequentative verbs | tahok'yadu - sort → tahok'yadū - sorting |
-ūjō1 -ūjwü1 |
Collective deverbal noun | kūt'kōtto - traverse → kūt'kūjō - procession p'utsek'ye - play → p'utsūjwü - orchestra |
Noun → verb | ||
-kka -kke |
Default noun to verb derivation | pwado - paint (N.) → pwadokka - paint (V.) sillegi - patch (N.) → sillegikke - patch (V.) |
-k'ye -k'ya |
Make into X, or add X | k'aido - wind → k'aidok'ya - ventilate; fan kikku - roof → kikkuk'ye - add a roof to a building |
-k'yo(tto)2 -k'yö(ttö)2 |
Become X | pwa - earth → pwak'yotto - decompose swe - tree → swek'yöttö - become numb (literally "turn into wood") |
-(o)pk'wa -(ö)pk'we |
Hunt or collect something edible | kada - fish (N.) → kadapk'wa - fish (V.) sungkitti - carrot → sungkittipk'we - pick carrots |
-utsocha -utsöche |
Do something using X | rappanga - hammer (N.) → rappangutsocha - hammer (V.) mefögi - sand (N.) → mefögutsöche - sand (V.) |
Noun → noun | ||
ada-- | Bottom, low | köngup - floor → ada-göngup - bottom floor |
aip-- | New | kwe - moon → aip-kwe - new moon |
allu-- | Open, bare | pōngo - sea → allu-bōngo - open sea |
chūföt'-- | Double | ittup - portion → chūföt'-ittup - double portion |
hyat'ko-- | After | kunglakkōt'pa - compensation → hyat'ko-gunglakkōt'pa - compensation afterwards |
k'ōgu-- | Artificial | p'yu - reason → k'ōgu-p'yu - pretext |
kōt'k'a-- | Yellow | rüpk'üngüge - white wagtail → kōt'k'a-rüpk'üngüge - yellow wagtail |
kutk'yunga-- | Opposing force | k'aido - wind → kutk'yunga-k'aido - headwind |
k'aga-- | Back | ullo - door → k'aga-ullo - back door |
k'yayop-- | Full | kwe - moon → k'yayop-kwe - full moon |
kōpko-- | Middle | p'ungpo - finger → kōpko-p'ungpo - middle finger |
mūjessū-- | Top | p'ūjungak'yabūp - performance → mūjessū-p'ūjungak'yabūp - top performance |
nūpku-- | Brown | tōmk'o - leaf → nūpku-tōmk'o - brown autumn leaf |
ogo-- | Forever | k'at'lo - winter → ogo-k'at'lo → neverending winter |
okp'ō-- | Self | sökku - betrayal → okp'ō-zökku - self-deception |
ōkkū-- | Front | hat'kak - legs → ōkkū-hat'kak - front legs |
ōk'ya-- | Remote | |
ōppo-- | Front, first | pöngke - sign → ōppo-böngke - (good) example |
ōtp'o-- | Debute | kōngk'a - time → ōtp'o-gōngk'a - first time |
ōshk'yunga-- | Extra | t'yamk'ōt'pa - show → ōshk'yunga-t'yamk'ōt'pa - encore |
ōzhu-- | Outer | p'ollū - side → ōzhu-p'ollū - outside |
p'ada-- | Secret | pūngma - murder → p'ada-būngma - assassination |
p'ollū-- | Side | hugo - river → p'ollū-hugo - tributary |
p'op'ya-- | Inner | ōdot - organ → p'op'ya-ōdot - inner organ |
p'otto-- | Blue | syonyupk'wo - tail → p'otto-syonyupk'wo - red-flanked bluetail |
p'ūng-- | Large | sōngmō - family → p'ūng-sōngmō - large family |
pūpk'a-- | Black | pigingi - sausage → pūpk'a-bigingi - black sausage |
p'yonghya-- | Back, remote | p'ōnūkkū - area → p'yonghya-p'ōnūkkū - place in the sticks |
radō-- | Fake | appū - dress → radō-appū - disguise |
ranga-- | Precaution, spare | uppa - part → ranga-uppa - spare part |
rat'ku-- | White | mallo - shark → rat'ku-mallo - great white shark |
ronnōng-- | Green | kaptofu - plant → ronnōng-kaptofu - flowerless plant with leaves |
segū-- | Small | nūjuga - food → segū-nūjuga - snack |
sōngūp-- | Basic | k'ofōk'u - knowledge → sōngūp-k'ofōk'u - basic knowledge |
sūjudo-- | Half | kwe - moon → sūjudo-kwe - half-moon |
sutyo-- | Many | k'ofōha - sage → sutyo-k'ofōha - polymath |
sūtta-- | Red | notk'a - chest → sūtta-notk'a - robin |
sya-- | Head, important | killūssigu - city → sya-gillūssigu - capital |
tyanno-- | Near | k'ūllaip - future → tyanno-k'ūllaip - near future |
ūp'so-- | Closed | p'ūjudo - intestine → ūp'so-p'ūjudo - cecum |
yangkō-- | Arch-X | ronnadassan - enemy → yangkō-lonnadassan - arch-enemy |
-da -de |
Place associated with X | kyot'sōttu - bath → kyot'sōttuda - bath house |
-dallossan -dellössen |
Person from X | Kunnu-lūjungo - Kunnu-lūjungo → Kunnu-lūjungodallossan - Kunnu-lūjungoan mönekküfö - dump → mönekküfödellössen - person living in a dump |
-gi -gu |
Diminutive form | tap'so - pond → tap'sogu - puddle sungkitti - carrot → sungkittigi - small carrot |
-gō -kwü |
Small thing with Xs | p'ūjuda - salt → p'ūjudagō - food preserved by salting sede - pipe → sedekwü - hemp-nettle |
-gu | Place with lots of Xs, collective X, or something associated with X | zap'zū - bamboo → zap'zūgu - bamboo thicket |
-(k)kang -(k)keng |
Female X | p'atkango - hero → p'atkangokkang - heroine sisse - priest → sissekkeng - priestess |
-(ō)ngo -(wü)ngö |
Tool or person that uses X | t'waba - face → t'wabango - mask tillūkki - raft → tillūkkingö - ferry man |
-ofu -öfü |
Thing with Xs | uppa - part → uppofu - share |
-(o)pk'u -(ö)pk'u |
Place with collection of X | t'wassūngo - neighbor → t'wassūngopk'u - neighborhood |
-(o)tku -(ö)tku |
Natural features that is like X | k'appō - plane → k'appōtku - plain |
Noun → adjective | ||
ap'zo-NOUN-ossan | Both | kyappo - hand → ap'zo-kyappossan - ambi-dextrous |
sutyo-NOUN-X3 | Many | allofu - marriage → sutyo-allofossan - polygamistic |
-ballossan -bellössen |
Resembling X | kada - fish → kadaballossan - fishlike k'wik'wö - girl → k'wik'wöbellössen - girly |
-dessen -dassan |
X-like, endowed with X, time, or measure | kutsūnga - cupped hand → kutsūngadassan - handful set'kū - dot → set'kūdessen - dotted |
-dutsessen -dutsassan |
Often X-like | p'allongap - sick → p'allongaptutsassan - weak of the body millūgūtte - barking → millūgūttedutsessen - often barking |
-gap -gep |
Equipped with X | mūjudo - worry → mūjudogap - worrying kūttefi - honor → kūttefigep - honorful |
-kkut | Lacking X | swe - tree → swekkut - treeless |
-oppa -öppe |
Something that produces X | p'akku - harvest → p'akkoppa - bountyful harvest k'isu - kill (N.) → k'isöppe - someone with many kills |
-ossan -össen |
Regular noun to adjective derivation | odu - joy → odossan - happy mefögi - sand → mefögössen - sandy |
-zok'ossan -zök'össen |
Something that contains a substance | kūt'k'a - gold → kūt'k'azok'ossan - something (e.g. a river) that contains gold mefögi - sand → mefögizök'össen - something (e.g. mud) that contains sand |
-ssan -ssen |
Made from X | kūt'k'a - gold → kūt'k'assan - golden swe - tree → swessen - wooden |
Noun → adverb | ||
-ekkillet -akkullat |
From an X point of view | Kunnu-lūjungodallossan - Kunnu-lūjungoan → Kunnu-lūjungodallakkullat - from a Kunnu-lūjungoan's point of view |
-gillet -gullat |
Locative situative adverb (involving two things in relation to each other) | kaplu - face → kaplugullat - face-to-face t'ūngki - corner → t'ūngkigillet - corner-to-corner |
-(k)killet -(k)kullat |
Manner or position | p'ollū - side → p'ollūkkullat - sideways tönegebūp - play → tönegekkillet - not seriously |
Adjective → verb | ||
-∅ | Be X | sūttallossan - red → sūttallossan - be red tübet → tübet - be warm |
-(p)k'wa -(p)k'we |
Make into X | sūttallossan - red → sūttallopk'wa - make red tübet - warm → tübetk'we - warmen |
Adjective → noun | ||
-∅ | Person with X quality | nogap - rich → nogap - rich person |
-aip -ip |
The X quality | sūttallossan - red → sūttallaip - redness tübet - warm → tübedip - warmth |
-ūngo -ūngö |
Person who is being X | tallopka - lazy → tallopkūngo - lazy person |
Adjective → adjective | ||
kutk'yunga-- | Opposing force | k'ūjulla - productive → kutk'yunga-k'ūjulla - counter-productive |
ogo-- | Forever | zhūngūjo - old → ogo-zhūngūjo → really, really old |
okp'ō-- | Self | k'ūnnoppa - destructive → okp'ō-k'ūnnoppa - self-destructive |
ryamya-- | Little | tūbossan - snowy → ryamya-dūbossan - something has only little snow |
tyasso-- | Thoroughly | ryangokkak'p'o k'ūttūk - dyed → tyasso-lyangokkak'p'o k'ūttūk - thoroughly dyed |
ūp'so-- | Completely | myūdū - crazy → ūp'so-myūdū - absolutely crazy |
-dutsessen -dutsassan |
Someone or something that is often X-like | mochap - slow → mochaptutsassan - often slow nege - broken → negedutsessen - often broken |
-mku2 | Diminishes the quality | mochap - slow → mochamku - slowish |
-ossan -össen4 |
Tendency to be like X (only used on present participles) | k'allossūlla - bending → k'allossūllossan - flexible negefak'p'ö k'ūlle - getting broken → negefak'p'ö k'ūllössen - fragile |
-ōsya -wüsye |
Opposite quality | p'ōt'lya - clear → p'ōt'lōsya - unclear tūjutk'udessen - natural → tūjutk'utwüsye - unnatural |
Adjective → adverb | ||
-pk'o5 -pk'ö5 |
Regular adjective to adverb derivation | mochap - slow → mochapk'o - slowly tūjutk'udessen - natural → tūjutk'udessepk'ö - naturally |
Numeral → noun | ||
-ofu -öfu |
Shape with X number of sides (2D or 3D) | kut'pō - three → kut'pofu - triangle kwibösen - ten → *kwibösofu6 - decagon |
Numeral → adverb | ||
-ekkillet -akkullat |
Xs of | p'akka - one hundred → p'akkakkullat - hundreds of kwibössen - ten → kwibössekkillet - tens of |
1The last syllable is deleted before this suffix is added, unless the last syllable consisted of a monosyllabic derivational suffix.
2This suffix deletes any final consonant of the word stem. A final -san/-sen becomes -samku/-semku.
3The X stands for any derivational suffix that turns a noun into an adjective.
4In case of past or present passive participles, this suffix is added to the auxiliary verb.
5This suffix deleted any final consonant of the word stem. A final -san/-sen becomes -sapk'o/-sepk'ö.
6Theoretical word.