Classical Arithide pro-forms: Difference between revisions
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 65: | Line 65: | ||
|} | |} | ||
The reflexive pronoun ("self", or, in compounds, "-self") has only two forms, the singular and plural, and each is declined below: | The reflexive pronoun ("self", or, in compounds, "-self") has only two forms, the singular and plural, and each is declined below. Note that the full declension of the reflexive pronouns fell out of general use very early on in the language's history and only the earliest, or the most archaically or poetically written, texts document it—for all practical purposes, and from epistolary evidence it can be deduced, that a much reduced declension served for both singular and plural (using older forms to clarify ambiguity where necessary). That reduced declension is seen in the rightmost column: | ||
{|style="border: 1pt solid #cccccc; width: 400px; padding: 2px;" cellspacing="0" | |||
! || ''refl. sg.'' <br>"oneself" || ''refl. pl.'' <br>"theirselves" etc. || ''reduced decl.'' | |||
|- | |||
|style="width: 80px; font-weight: bold"| Nom. || kēa || agera || kē | |||
|- | |||
|style="width: 80px; font-weight: bold"| Top. || kēs || agerās || - | |||
|- | |||
|style="width: 80px; font-weight: bold"| Acc. || ke(te) || age(te) || ke | |||
|- | |||
|style="width: 80px; font-weight: bold"| Gen. || kēs, kess- || ages, agess- || kes, kess- | |||
|- | |||
|style="width: 80px; font-weight: bold"| Dat. || kinai || aginai || ke | |||
|- | |||
|style="width: 80px; font-weight: bold"| Loc. || kēnou, kedum || agedum || kum | |||
|- | |||
|style="width: 80px; font-weight: bold"| Abl. || kēdō || agedō || kō | |||
|- | |||
|style="width: 80px; font-weight: bold"| Ins. || kitis || agitis || ke | |||
|- | |||
|style="width: 80px; font-weight: bold"| Voc. || kiā || agiā || - | |||
|- | |||
|style="width: 80px; font-weight: bold"| Ess./Con. || ki(-) || agī(-) || ke | |||
|} | |||
===Distributive pronouns=== | ===Distributive pronouns=== |
Latest revision as of 09:23, 6 April 2008
The pro-forms of Classical Arithide include pronouns, pro-verbs, pro-adjectives and pro-adverbs, each class of which substitutes for the part of speech in its name. Demonstrative pronouns are also listed below.
Pronouns
Like nouns, Classical Arithide pronouns decline for case, and sometimes number. Pronouns can be divided into two large groups: personal pronouns and impersonal pronouns. The former includes words like des "I" and kēa "oneself", as well as the distributive pronouns like "each" and "neither"; the latter is further subdivided into possessive pronouns ("This book is mine."), relative pronouns ("The car which..."), interrogative pronouns ("Who did this?"), and demonstrative pronouns ("This is good.").
Personal pronouns
Personal pronouns in Classical Arithide number many more than the average European language. In the traditional grammar, there are two types of personal pronouns: the direct class, corresponding to the "I", "you", "we" etc. of Indo-European languages and including the reflexive pronoun, which directly refer to people by their grammatical argument in a sentence; the indirect class, which, as its name suggests, refers to people via descriptive terms much as royalty are referred to as "Your Majesty", and which tends to be honorific in nature.
All direct personal pronouns in Classical Arithide are irregularly declined, as in many languages. There are separate pronouns for each of the three persons and two numbers (and a distinction between the inclusive and exclusive "we"), as well as reflexive pronouns. They are listed and declined below:
1p. sg. "me" |
1p. pl. excl. "we, not you" |
1p. pl. incl. "we + you" |
2p. sg. "you" |
2p. pl. "you" |
3p. sg. "he/she/it"1 |
3p. pl. "they" | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nom. | des | rīs | er | his | aus | na | kina |
Top. | dās | rigās | ergās | hās | vās | nās | kinās |
Acc. | dei (dege) | rei (rege) | ergē | he(te) | vete | nede | kinede |
Gen.2 | den, din- | rin, rign- | ern, ergn- | hes, het- | ves, vet- | nes, net- | kines, kinet- |
Dat. | dinai | irige | ergaí | hinai | ivine | nizai | kinizai |
Loc.3 | dēnou, dum | irigum | ergum | hēnou, hum | ivēnum | nēzou, num | kinum |
Abl. | dēdō | irigō | ergō | hēdō | ivēnō | nēdō | kinēdō |
Ins. | ditis | irigis | ergis | hesis | ivesis | nesis | kinesis |
Voc. | diā | rīgā | ērgiā | hī | vīdā | nāi | kināi |
Ess./Con. | di, de(g)- | rī, ri(g)- | erga, erg(e)- | he, hi(n)- | vī, vi(d)- | ne, ni(z)- | kine, kini(z)- |
1
"It" here refers only to animate objects, such as animals and insects, or a gender-unspecified person such as a baby. For inanimate objects, see below.
2
The first form in each pair is used in contexts where case marking is not needed or wanted; the second form where it is, and takes the appropriate case ending of the first declension.
3
Where case forms occur in pairs, the first of each pair is literal in meaning, i.e. "on me, on my body" etc., while the second is idiomatic, i.e. "with regard to me, as for me" etc.
For inanimate objects, there were a separate set of pronouns. These were basically the pronominal stems of the appropriate person with first declension endings added.
2p. sg./pl. "you" |
3p. sg. "it" |
3p. pl. "they" | |
---|---|---|---|
Nom. | hos | nos | kinos |
Top. | hou | nou | kinou |
Acc. | ho | no | kino |
Gen. | hin, hen- | nin, nen- | kinin, kinen- |
Dat. | hae | nae | kinae |
Loc. | hira | nira | kinira |
Abl. | hōn | nōn | kinōn |
Ins. | hois | nois | kinois |
Voc. | hā | nā | kinā |
Ess./Con. | - | - | - |
The reflexive pronoun ("self", or, in compounds, "-self") has only two forms, the singular and plural, and each is declined below. Note that the full declension of the reflexive pronouns fell out of general use very early on in the language's history and only the earliest, or the most archaically or poetically written, texts document it—for all practical purposes, and from epistolary evidence it can be deduced, that a much reduced declension served for both singular and plural (using older forms to clarify ambiguity where necessary). That reduced declension is seen in the rightmost column:
refl. sg. "oneself" |
refl. pl. "theirselves" etc. |
reduced decl. | |
---|---|---|---|
Nom. | kēa | agera | kē |
Top. | kēs | agerās | - |
Acc. | ke(te) | age(te) | ke |
Gen. | kēs, kess- | ages, agess- | kes, kess- |
Dat. | kinai | aginai | ke |
Loc. | kēnou, kedum | agedum | kum |
Abl. | kēdō | agedō | kō |
Ins. | kitis | agitis | ke |
Voc. | kiā | agiā | - |
Ess./Con. | ki(-) | agī(-) | ke |
Distributive pronouns
Possessive pronouns
Relative pronouns
Interrogative pronouns
Demonstrative pronouns
- Main article: Classical Arithide demonstratives
- See also Classical Arithide determiners#Demonstrative determiners for more information
Pro-verbs
Pro-adjectives
Pro-adverbs
Pro-adverbs inflect just like adjectives and adverbs, with infixes for the comparative, superlative and other forms.