Veslovian/Verbs: Difference between revisions

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Line 32: Line 32:
! style="background:red" | Northern
! style="background:red" | Northern
| ''luv'''oudo'''''
| ''luv'''oudo'''''
| ''teč'''oudo'''''
| ''teč'''edo'''''
| ''děl'''ído'''''
| ''děl'''edo'''''
|-
|-
! style="background:white" | Southern
! style="background:white" | Southern
Line 41: Line 41:
|-
|-
! style="background:blue" | Western
! style="background:blue" | Western
| ''lîv'''ot'''''
| ''liv'''ot'''''
| ''tic'''êt'''''
| ''tic'''êt'''''
| ''dil'''êt'''''
| ''dil'''êt'''''

Revision as of 18:21, 24 November 2021

The Veslovian verbs are divided to 3 conjugation groups for non-ablauting ones (weak) and 7 groups for ablauting ones (strong). However, such divisions only found in the past participle forms.

Groups

Groups are ordered largely according to the Latin conjugation groups, so luvanu "to love", točenu "to cover", and dělínu "to divide" translates to Latin amāre, tegere, and partīre. Despite its dialectal diversity, the prototypical verbs are always the same.

  • First conjugation:
    • Northern: prmí konjugacja, infinitive ending in -énu (luvénu).
    • Western: perm coniugazia, infinitive ending in -en (lîven).
    • Southern: prme konjugacja, infinitive ending in -ajeno (lavajeno).
  • Second conjugation:
    • Northern: vutera konjugacja, infinitive ending in -énu (točénu).
    • Western: vontere coniugazia, infinitive ending in -en (tocen).
    • Southern: votera konjugacja, infinitive ending in -ojeno (točojeno).
  • Third conjugation:
    • Northern: třdí konjugacja, infinitive ending in -ínu/-ýnu (dělínu).
    • Western: tert coniugazia, infinitive ending in -an (delan).
    • Southern: trde konjugacja, infinitive ending in -eno (deleno).

In all of dialects, the final vowel tends to lost and shorten colloquially, except in the Western dialects where such changes were regarded as standard.

Non-finite forms

Present participle

Present participle are usually formed by these endings:

1 2 3
Northern luvoudo tečedo děledo
Southern levodo tēčedo dēledo
Western livot ticêt dilêt

Past participle

Past participle are either formed by adding a dental suffix (such verbs are known as weak ones), changing the root vowel (ablaut), or reduplicating the stem. Let's start from the most regular ones (dental).

1 2 3
Northern luvédo tečédo díldo
Southern levedo tečedo dēldo
Western lîvêt ticêt dîlt