Cernelian/Verbs: Difference between revisions
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(Created page with "Verbs in Cernelian were conjugatable for persons (first, second, third, and impersonal), number (singular and plural), tenses (present, past), moods (indicative, conditional,...") |
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== Aspects == | == Aspects == | ||
While Cernelian has two grammatical aspects, the perfective derivation from imperfective ones are not uniform. Usually, the perfective are derived by suffixing | While Cernelian has two grammatical aspects, the perfective derivation from imperfective ones are not uniform. Usually, the perfective are derived by suffixing the stem with directional cases (dative, locative, or ablative), a parallel of Slavic prefixation with prepositions. | ||
{| class="wikitable" | {| class="wikitable" | ||
! Conjugation | ! Conjugation | ||
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! I | ! I | ||
| ''-a'' | | ''-a'' | ||
| ''- | | ''-ojona'' | ||
| ''- | | ''-ojosa'' | ||
| ''- | | ''-ojosta'' | ||
|- | |- | ||
! II | ! II |
Revision as of 05:49, 21 October 2021
Verbs in Cernelian were conjugatable for persons (first, second, third, and impersonal), number (singular and plural), tenses (present, past), moods (indicative, conditional, imperative), non-finite forms (infinitive, verbal noun, and participles), and particularly, grammatical aspects (imperfective and perfective) by the influence of Slavic languages.
Conjugations
- Cernelian/1st conjugation: Verbs whose the infinitive ends in -a.
Aspects
While Cernelian has two grammatical aspects, the perfective derivation from imperfective ones are not uniform. Usually, the perfective are derived by suffixing the stem with directional cases (dative, locative, or ablative), a parallel of Slavic prefixation with prepositions.
Conjugation | Unsuffixed | Dative | Locative | Ablative |
---|---|---|---|---|
I | -a | -ojona | -ojosa | -ojosta |
II | -edzie | -edzieczę | -edzieczesie | -edzieczlecie |