Classical Arithide declension: Difference between revisions

From FrathWiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
 
(20 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{seealso|Classical Arithide grammar}}
{{seealso|Classical Arithide grammar}}


Owing to the language's inflectionary nature, [[Classical Arithide]] nouns, pronouns and certain of its adjectives must be declined (i.e. inflected) to provide grammatical meaning. A group of words that decline in the same way is known as a "declension class". There are 8 declension classes for nouns and the same for adjectives; pronouns are generally irregular.
Owing to the language's inflectionary nature, [[Classical Arithide]] nouns, pronouns and certain of its adjectives must be declined (i.e. inflected) to provide grammatical meaning. A group of words that decline in the same way is known as a "declension class". There are 5 declension classes for nouns and the same for adjectives; pronouns are generally irregular.


==Declension classes==
==Declension classes==


Nouns in [[Classical Arithide]] are classed into different declensions based on their semantic meaning. This lexically based categorisation means that each declension class represents a broad group of nouns that share a certain characteristic. Traditional grammatical analysis takes the number of declension classes in Classical Arithide to be six, but the sub-classes that are sometimes sufficiently distinct from their ostensible parent class render the number about double. Factoring in overlapping and coincident declensions, modern grammarians generally accept the existence of 8 discrete groups, numbered declension classes I to VIII respectively. Only 7 classes were lexical: classes I to IV were productive classes due to their nature—they are still productive in [[Modern Arithide]]—and the nouns thence derived, which declined distinctly from their original classes, were categorised under an eighth class.
Nouns in [[Classical Arithide]] are classed into different declensions based on their semantic meaning. This lexically based categorisation means that each declension class represents a broad group of nouns that share a certain characteristic. Traditional grammatical analysis takes the number of declension classes in Classical Arithide to be five, on top of which are various subgroups that decline in slightly different ways from the parent class.


Nouns of the '''first declension''' ending in ''-os'' are associated lexically with abstractions: states (''valonos'' "peace") and qualities (''fugirenos'' "dangerousness"), as well as others (''sonos'' "daily life"). The '''second declension''' ends in ''-as'' and is associated with places: ''kitaras'' "hall". The '''third''' (''-ir'') and '''fourth''' (''-rir'') both indicate a negative denotation or connotation associated with the noun, and were treated traditionally as variants of one declension, but separately nowadays because of the differences in their declension; they are also the only declensions where disyllabic nouns are stressed on the last syllable; ''vokir'' "evil", ''kirir'' "faux pas". The '''fifth declension''' consists of nouns ending in either ''-er'' or ''-a'', and the association here is with people, society and culture: ''ither'' "person", ''medier'' "wife", ''steima'' "measurement"; nouns without an ending decline the same way but have no particular lexical association (''stant'' "weight"). The '''sixth declension''' consists solely of nouns which all end in ''-on'', e.g. ''pūron'' "hero" or ''foriton'' "miner", and the ending is productive in forming the agentive nouns of verbs. The '''seventh''' is made up of nouns ending in ''-i'' or ''-e'', as well as certain nouns ending in ''-is'' and ''-es'', but no apparent lexical connection has been found that sufficiently encompasses the nouns in the category. The '''eighth''', and last, declension class comprises the derived nouns, ending in any of ''-os'', ''-as'' or ''-ir'', and is the most regular declension class due to its character: it is the only class in which no irregularity is observed in any individual noun.
'''Declension I''', with the characteristic nominative singular ending ''-os'', is the most productive declension class of all. It is associated with morally and emotionally neutral abstractions: states (''valonos'' "peace"), qualities (''fyginthos'' "dangerousness"), acts (''leatos'' "act of worship") as well as other types of concepts (''sonos'' "daily life"). As may be noted the supine verbal noun (i.e. "the act of doing something") also falls under this declension.


===Distinction between ''-er'' and ''-on''===
'''Declension II''' nouns take the ending ''-as'' and refer to places: ''kitaras'' "hall", ''sivas'' "town", ''leatas'' "place of worship. The verbal noun of location (i.e. "the place where something is done") falls under declension II.


Both the nominative singular endings ''-er'' (V) and ''-on'' (VI) indicate people, or agents of verbs. While in surviving Classical Arithide texts only the latter seemed to be sufficiently lexemic to be productive (as the agentive noun-forming suffix, for one), there existed a semantic distinction between the two suffixes that persisted long enough for the ''-er'' ending to experience a resurgence in productivity in the [[Vulgar Arithide|vulgar tongue]], and hence subsequently the [[Koine Arithide|koine]] and the [[Modern Arithide|modern standard]].
'''Declension III''' nouns take the ending ''-ir'', and can be differentiated into classes III-a with simple ''-ir'', and III-b with ''-rir''. This declension comprises nouns with negative moral or emotional denotations or connotations: ''vokir'' "evil", ''kirir'' "faux pas", ''kreisantir'' "grief of bereavement".


The lexeme ''-on'' was straightforward: it simply denoted any person who committed any action, and could be freely attached to any verb due to its broad semantic scope:
'''Declension IV''' is the most general declension class. Its nouns have no characteristic nominative singular ending but instead shares it with declension V (''-a''), and its lexical scope is practically unlimited; Class-IV nouns can refer to items, animals, plants or any other non-human, non-divine object. E.g. ''arotha'' "carpet", ''hegra'' "vine", ''izia'' "coin".
*''segrēn'' "to write" > ''segron'' "one who writes, the person who wrote"
*''terēn'' "to weave" > ''teron'' "one who weaves, the person who wove"
*''damēn'' "to carry" > ''damon'' "one who carries, the person who carried"


''-Er'', on the other hand, was more restrictive: this suffix could be used only to denote such persons as professionals, passionate believers, or members of the family and so on. In other words, the action in question could not be a casual, one-off incidence, but had to be done by virtue of vocation, profession, conviction, or social role. Note the semantic contrast between the examples in the above paragraph and those that follow:
'''Declension V''' comprises nouns referring to the human, the divine or the socio-cultural aspect of life: ''thelera'' "neighbour", ''venera'' "deity", ''kunera'' "currency". Complex historical reasons have given Class V nouns the double nominative ending of ''-era'', the final part of which (''-a'') is shared with Class IV. There is a subgroup, V-b, whose nominative singulars end in ''-on'' but otherwise decline identically with regular Class-V nouns: these are the special agentive nouns (see next section), generally formed from verbs but occasionally found fossilised elsewhere in words belonging to other parts of speech.
*''segrēn'' "to write" > ''segriter'' "author"
*''terēn'' "to weave" > ''teriter'' "tailor, seamstress"
*''damēn'' "to carry" > ''dampter'' "porter"


The above examples all include the infix ''-(i)t-'', which is attached to frst conjugation verbs in the derivation of nouns one degree removed semantically from the verb, for more of which see [[Classical Arithide conjugation#Verbal nouns]].
These five declension classes can be broadly classified into two categories: concrete nouns (IV, V) and abstract nouns (I, II, III).


===Irregular nominatives===
===Distinction between ''-thera'' and ''-on''===


A combination of phonetic processes, among which is notable syncope (the elimination of non-initial or -final word syllables), has given rise to many first declension nouns whose nominative singular forms do not end in the expected ''-os''. In these nouns, the most common process has been the elision of the ''-o-'' in the ending; the resultant consonant clusters have each been resolved in a different way, at times through assimilation, at others through dissimilation, and in yet other cases triggering further elision. Note, however, that declension VIII nouns never undergo such reduction.
Both the nominative singular endings ''-thera'' (V-a) and ''-on'' (V-b) indicate people, or agents. While in surviving Classical Arithide texts only the latter seemed to be sufficiently lexemic to be productive (as the agentive noun suffix, for one), there existed a semantic distinction between the two suffixes that persisted long enough for the ''-thera'' ending to experience a resurgence in productivity in the [[Vulgar Arithide|vulgar tongue]], and hence subsequently the [[Koine Arithide|koine]] and the [[Modern Arithide|modern standard]].


Examples are given below:
The lexeme ''-on'' was straightforward: it simply denoted any person who committed any action, and could be freely attached to any verb due to its broad semantic scope:
*''serēn'' "to write" > ''seron'' "one who writes, the person who wrote"
*''terēn'' "to weave" > ''teron'' "one who weaves, the person who wove"
*''damēn'' "to carry" > ''damon'' "one who carries, the person who carried"


*'''*-fos > -fs > -ps:''' ''kaps'' "list"{{footnote|1}}
It is even possible to attach ''-on'' to secondary verbal stems, e.g. participle forms. Compare:
*'''*-tos > -ts > -ss > -s:''' ''ves'' "breeze"{{footnote|2}}
*''seron'' "one who writes", "one who wrote" VS
*'''*-dos > -ds > -z > -s:''' ''as'' "sea"
*''se'''i'''ron'' "the one writing" VS
*'''*-ros > -rs > -s:''' ''tos'' "step"{{footnote|3}}
*''ser'''ās'''on'' "one who has written", "one who has been published"
*'''*-egos, *-igos > -ēs, -īs:''' ''rēs'' "day", ''rīs'' "we (exclusive)"{{footnote|4}}
*'''*-gos > -gs > -ks:''' ''rūthex'' "chairperson, president"{{footnote|5}}


{{footnote|1}}In cases other than the nominative, the /f/ is generally voiced to [v], while retaining its spelling. Hence &lt;kafo&gt; [kavo] "list (acc.)". There are, coincidentally, no declension I nouns that end in ''-pos'' (except as part of a cluster), all of which having already been lenited to ''-fos'' in [[Ancient Arithide]].<br>
''-Thera'', on the other hand, was more restrictive: this suffix could be used only to denote such persons as professionals, passionate believers, or members of the family and so on. In other words, the action in question could not be a casual, one-off incidence, but had to be done by virtue of vocation, profession, conviction, or social role. Note the semantic contrast between the examples in the above paragraph and those that follow:
{{footnote|2}}Note that the supines of second to fourth conjugation verbs (which are declension I), as well as the infix ''-(i)t-'', do not undergo this particular reduction due to the prominence of their ''-t-'' and their productivity.<br>
*''serēn'' "to write" > ''sesthera'' "author"
{{footnote|3}}This process, with ''r''-stems, was considerably short-lived, and consequently affected only a limited number of words, leaving many others unaltered.<br>
*''terēn'' "to weave" > ''testhera'' "tailor, seamstress"
{{footnote|4}}Again, this process lost steam very quickly, and affected only the most commonly-used words.<br>
*''damēn'' "to carry" > ''danthera'' "porter"
{{footnote|5}}This process did not actually occur in [[Classical Arithide]], but in [[Dethric language|Dethric]], from which the few agentive nouns ending in ''-x'' were borrowed.


These reductive processes only kicked in when the consonants mentioned above were in isolation, i.e. they did not occur as part of a cluster. In addition, the behaviour of the vowels immediately before the affected consonants exhibits a degree of variation that is not entirely regular or predictable. While much of the time they remain unchanged, in certain nouns the high vowels [i] and [u] may be lowered to [e] and [o] (which was not reflected in the standard orthography but gleaned from informal correspondences and writings).
The above examples also demonstrate the regular phonological assimilation undergone in nominalisation.


Most problematically, for reasons of stress and hence scansion, they might sometimes be lengthened. Vowel-lengthening in ''orathōs < *orathodos'' "religious" is logical, partly because the reduction involves the coalescence of two [o]s, and partly for reasons of contrast with plain ''orathos'' "religion". However, the adjectival substantive ending ''-itās'' has the stem ''-itat-'', and the stem of ''dhīs'' "festival" is actually ''dhid-''. The occurrence of ''-ā-'' and ''-ī-'' in these cases appears to be entirely arbitrary, especially given the precedents of words like ''das, dad-'' "hand" that do not undergo compensatory lengthening.
For more, see [[Classical Arithide conjugation#Verbal nouns]].


==Grammatical cases==
==Grammatical cases==
Line 70: Line 65:
==First declension ''-os''==
==First declension ''-os''==


Nouns of and adjectives in the first declension take the following endings:
Nouns and adjectives of the first declension take the following endings, illustrated by ''thiftios'' "temptation":


{| style="width: 300px; background: #efefef; border: 1pt solid #cccccc" cellspacing="0"
{| style="width: 400px; background: #efefef; border: 1pt solid #cccccc" cellspacing="0"
| style="width:80px" |  
| style="width:80px" |  
| style="width: 110px; border-bottom: 1pt solid #cccccc; text-align: center" | ''sg.''
| style="width: 160px; border-bottom: 1pt solid #cccccc; text-align: center" | ''sg.''
| style="width: 110px; border-bottom: 1pt solid #cccccc; text-align: center" | ''pl.''
| style="width: 160px; border-bottom: 1pt solid #cccccc; text-align: center" | ''pl.''
|-
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Nom.'''
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Nom.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | sōmos, thiftios
| style="width: 160px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thiftios
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | sōmēs
| style="width: 160px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thiftiēs
|-
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Top.'''
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Top.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | sōm'''ou'''
| style="width: 160px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thifti'''ou'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | sōm'''ōi'''
| style="width: 160px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thifti'''ēu'''
|-
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Acc.'''
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Acc.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | sōm'''o'''
| style="width: 160px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thifti'''o'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | sōm'''ē'''
| style="width: 160px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thifti'''ē'''
|-
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Gen.'''
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Gen.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | sōm'''oi''', thifti'''ne'''{{footnote|1}}
| style="width: 160px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thifti'''oi'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | sōm'''ēi''', thifti'''nēi'''{{footnote|1}}
| style="width: 160px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thifti'''ēi'''
|-
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Dat.'''
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Dat.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | sōm'''ae'''
| style="width: 160px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thifti'''ae'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | sōm'''ei'''
| style="width: 160px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thifti'''ēā''' <*thiftiēiae
|-
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Loc.'''
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Loc.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | sōm'''i''', thifti'''m'''{{footnote|2}}
| style="width: 160px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thifti'''ōm''' <*thiftioum
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | sōm'''ō''', thifti'''ōm'''{{footnote|2}}
| style="width: 160px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thifti'''ēum'''
|-
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Abl.'''
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Abl.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | sōm'''ōn'''
| style="width: 160px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thifti'''ōn'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | sōm'''ēn'''
| style="width: 160px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thifti'''ēn'''
|-
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Ins.'''
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Ins.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | sōm'''ōis''', thifti'''tis'''{{footnote|1}}
| style="width: 160px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thifti'''tis'''{{footnote|1}}
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | sōm'''ūis''', thifti'''tēs'''{{footnote|1}}
| style="width: 160px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thifti'''ētūs'''
|-
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Voc.'''
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Voc.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | sōm'''ō'''
| style="width: 160px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thifti'''ō'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | sōm'''ē'''
| style="width: 160px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thifti'''ē'''
|-
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Ess./Con.'''
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Ess./Con.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | sōm, sōm-
| style="width: 160px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thifti'''e''', thifti-
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | sōm'''e(r)''', sōm'''e(r)-'''
| style="width: 160px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thifti'''ē''', thifti'''ē-'''
|}
|}


{{footnote|1}}The former in each pair is used with consonant-stem words (e.g. ''sōmos, sōm-''), while the latter with vowel-stem words (e.'''g.''' ''thiftios, thifti-'').
{{footnote|1}} As seen, vowel-stem nouns lose the thematic ''-o-'' in the instrumental singular. Consonant-stem nouns, however, retain the vowel: ''klevos'' "force" becomes ''klevotis''.
 
{{footnote|2}}This alternation is not due to the consonant- and vowel-stem differentiation. The singular locative ending for declension I is ''-im'', in this case shown truncated to ''-i'' after an ''m-'' stem, and to ''-m'' after a vowel-stem. The plural ending (''-ōm'') truncates in the same way.


==Second declension ''-as''==
==Second declension ''-as''==


Unlike the first declension, nouns of the second declension do not distinguish endings between consonant- and vowel-stem words. An example conjugation is provided with ''sivias'' "town" below.
Nouns and adjectives of the first declension take the following endings, illustrated by ''thiftias'' "place of temptation":


{| style="width: 300px; background: #efefef; border: 1pt solid #cccccc" cellspacing="0"
{| style="width: 300px; background: #efefef; border: 1pt solid #cccccc" cellspacing="0"
Line 132: Line 125:
|-
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Nom.'''
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Nom.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | sivias
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thiftias
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | siviais
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thiftiais
|-
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Top.'''
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Top.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | sivi'''āi'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thifti'''au'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | sivi'''aiā'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thifti'''āi'''
|-
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Acc.'''
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Acc.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | sivi'''a'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thifti'''a'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | sivi'''ai'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thifti'''ai'''
|-
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Gen.'''
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Gen.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | sivi'''ā'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thifti'''ai'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | sivi'''an'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thifti'''ās'''
|-
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Dat.'''
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Dat.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | siv'''īs'''{{footnote|1}}
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thift'''īs'''{{footnote|1}}
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | siv'''īei'''{{footnote|1}}
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thift'''īei'''{{footnote|1}}
|-
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Loc.'''
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Loc.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | sivi'''um'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thifti'''um'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | sivi'''ām'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thifti'''ām'''
|-
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Abl.'''
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Abl.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | sivi'''or'''{{footnote|2}}
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thift'''ior'''{{footnote|2}}
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | sivi'''ēri'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thift'''iēri'''
|-
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Ins.'''
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Ins.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | sivi'''āis'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thifti'''ātis'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | sivi'''ēis'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thifti'''aitis'''
|-
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Voc.'''
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Voc.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | sivi'''ā'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thifti'''ā'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | sivi'''ai'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thifti'''ai'''
|-
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Ess./Con.'''
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Ess./Con.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | sivi'''a''', sivi'''a-'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thifti'''a''', thifti'''a-'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | sivi'''ē''', sivi'''ē-'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thifti'''ai''', thifti'''ai-'''
|}
|}


{{footnote|1}}The actual endings ''-īs'' and ''-iei''. With ''-i-'' stem words, a simple, long ''-ī-'' results in both cases.
{{footnote|1}}The actual endings are ''-īs'' and ''-iei''. With ''-i-'' stem words, a simple, long ''-ī-'' results in both cases.


{{footnote|2}}The actual ending is ''-ior''. In this case the ''-i-'' in the case ending is elided.
{{footnote|2}}The actual ending is ''-ior''. In this case the ''-i-'' in the case ending is elided.


==Third declension ''-ir''==
==Third declension ''-ir'', ''-rir''==


In [[Classical Arithide]], nouns that end in ''-ir'' in the nominative singular are descended from two separate older noun groups, with singular stems in either ''-yr-'' or ''-rud-'', and fall in either of two declension classes; plural stems for both are ''-id-''. The important distinction between nouns that end in the simpler ''-ir'' and more complex ''-rir'' endings (declensions III and IV respectively) must be maintained for purposes of proper declension. Besides maintaining distinctive stems, third declension nouns take endings that vary substantially from those of the fourth declension.
In [[Classical Arithide]], nouns that end in ''-ir'' in the nominative singular are descended from the older ''-ydr̩'', i.e. they were originally considered part of the Old Arithide [[Old Arithide declension|"Society & Culture" declension]], but regular phonological erosion has made it a separate declension class of its own. Sound change also introduced a variant stem, ''-ir-'', and both forms appear liberally throughout Classical Arithide texts.


In the third declension, besides the traditional ''-yr-'' stem, sound change also introduced a variant stem, ''-ir-'', and both forms appear liberally throughout Classical Arithide texts.
''Vokir'' "evil" (Class III-a) is declined as follows:
 
''Vokir'' is declined as follows:


{| style="width: 300px; background: #efefef; border: 1pt solid #cccccc" cellspacing="0"
{| style="width: 300px; background: #efefef; border: 1pt solid #cccccc" cellspacing="0"
Line 191: Line 182:
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Nom.'''
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Nom.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vokir
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vokir
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vokidēs
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vokirēs
|-
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Top.'''
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Top.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vokyr'''ō''', vokir'''ō'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vokyr'''ō''', vokir'''ō'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vokid'''ō'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vokir'''au'''
|-
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Acc.'''
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Acc.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vok'''i'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vokir'''i'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vokid'''ē'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vokir'''ai'''
|-
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Gen.'''
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Gen.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vok'''in'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vokir'''in'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vokid'''in'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vokir'''īs'''
|-
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Dat.'''
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Dat.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vokyr'''ae''', vokir'''ae'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vokir'''i'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vokid'''ei'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vokir'''ei'''
|-
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Loc.'''
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Loc.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vokyr'''ī''', vokir'''ī'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vokir'''um'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vokid'''ī'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vokir'''ium'''
|-
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Abl.'''
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Abl.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vokyr'''ōn''', vokir'''ōn'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vokir'''ior'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vokid'''ēn'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vokir'''ēri'''
|-
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Ins.'''
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Ins.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vokyr'''ū''', vokir'''ū'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vokyr'''ū''', vokir'''ū'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vokid'''ū'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vokir''''''
|-
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Voc.'''
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Voc.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vok'''y'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vokir'''i'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vokid'''ē'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vokir'''ē'''
|-
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Ess./Con.'''
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Ess./Con.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vok'''y''', vok'''y(r)-'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vokir'''e''', vokir-
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vok'''it''', vok'''id-'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vokir'''a''', vokir'''ē-'''
|}
|}


==Fourth declension ''-rir''==
Class III-b nouns (ending in ''-rir'') take the same endings, but with ''-id-'' in the stem rather than ''-ir-'' as the preceding ''r-'' blocks rhotacism.


''Kirir'' is declined as follows:


{| style="width: 300px; background: #efefef; border: 1pt solid #cccccc" cellspacing="0"
==Fourth declension ''-a''==
 
''Steima'' "measurement'' illustrates the declension paradigm for Class IV nouns:
 
{| style="width: 400px; background: #efefef; border: 1pt solid #cccccc" cellspacing="0"
| style="width:80px" |  
| style="width:80px" |  
| style="width: 110px; border-bottom: 1pt solid #cccccc; text-align: center" | ''sg.''
| style="width: 160px; border-bottom: 1pt solid #cccccc; text-align: center" | ''sg.''
| style="width: 110px; border-bottom: 1pt solid #cccccc; text-align: center" | ''pl.''
| style="width: 160px; border-bottom: 1pt solid #cccccc; text-align: center" | ''pl.''
|-
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Nom.'''
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Nom.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | kirir
| style="width: 160px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | steima
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | kiridēs
| style="width: 160px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | steimeia
|-
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Top.'''
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Top.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | kirud'''ō'''
| style="width: 160px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | steim'''eu'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | kirid'''ō'''
| style="width: 160px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | steim'''aiā'''
|-
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Acc.'''
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Acc.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | kir'''u(d)'''
| style="width: 160px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | steim'''e'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | kirid'''ē'''
| style="width: 160px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | steim'''ai'''
|-
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Gen.'''
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Gen.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | kirud'''i'''
| style="width: 160px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | steim'''us'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | kirid'''ēī'''
| style="width: 160px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | steim'''eus'''
|-
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Dat.'''
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Dat.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | kirud'''īs'''
| style="width: 160px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | steim'''i'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | kirid'''iei'''
| style="width: 160px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | steim'''ēi''' <*steimaii
|-
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Loc.'''
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Loc.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | kirud'''um'''
| style="width: 160px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | steim'''era'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | kirid'''ām'''
| style="width: 160px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | steim'''aira'''
|-
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Abl.'''
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Abl.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | kirud'''ior'''
| style="width: 160px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | steim'''ōn'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | kirid'''ēri'''
| style="width: 160px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | steim'''ēn'''
|-
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Ins.'''
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Ins.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | kir'''ū'''
| style="width: 160px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | steim'''ibas'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | kirid'''ū'''
| style="width: 160px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | steim'''aibas'''
|-
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Voc.'''
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Voc.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | kir'''ū'''
| style="width: 160px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | steim'''ā'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | kirid'''ē'''
| style="width: 160px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | steim'''āī'''
|-
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Ess./Con.'''
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Ess./Con.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | kir'''ur''', kir'''ud-'''
| style="width: 160px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | steim'''e''', steim-
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | kir'''it''', kir'''id-'''
| style="width: 160px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | steim'''aie''', steim'''ai-'''
|}
|}


==Fifth declension ''-er'' and ''-a'' etc.==
==Fifth declension ''-ra''==
 
The groups of nouns in the fifth declension decline in generally the same way, albeit with minor differences. Nouns with no ending are declined like nouns ending in ''-er''.


''Theler'', ''steima'' and ''stant'' are declined as below:
''Theler'' "neighbour" and ''agnon'' "doer" are declined as below:


{| style="width: 740px; background: #efefef; border: 1pt solid #cccccc" cellspacing="0"
{| style="width: 740px; background: #efefef; border: 1pt solid #cccccc" cellspacing="0"
| style="width:80px" |  
| style="width:80px" |  
| style="width: 110px; border-bottom: 1pt solid #cccccc; text-align: center" | ''sg.''
| style="width: 110px; border-bottom: 1pt solid #cccccc; text-align: center" | ''pl.''
| style="width: 110px; border-bottom: 1pt solid #cccccc; text-align: center" | ''sg.''
| style="width: 110px; border-bottom: 1pt solid #cccccc; text-align: center" | ''sg.''
| style="width: 110px; border-bottom: 1pt solid #cccccc; text-align: center" | ''pl.''
| style="width: 110px; border-bottom: 1pt solid #cccccc; text-align: center" | ''pl.''
Line 298: Line 288:
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | theler
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | theler
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | theleis
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | theleis
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | steima
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | agnon
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | steimeis
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | agneis{{footnote|1}}
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | stant
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | stanteis
|-
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Top.'''
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Top.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thel'''eu'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thel'''eu'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thel'''eiā'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thel'''eiā'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | steim'''eu'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | agnon'''a'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | steim'''eiā'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | agnēn'''a'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | stant'''eu'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | stant'''eiā'''
|-
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Acc.'''
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Acc.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thel'''or'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thel'''or'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thel'''ei'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thel'''ei'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | steim'''or'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | agnon'''e'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | steim'''ei'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | agnēn'''e'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | stant'''or'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | stant'''ei'''
|-
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Gen.'''
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Gen.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thel'''us'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thel'''us'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thel'''ius'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thel'''ius'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | steim'''us'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | agnon'''us'''
| style="width: 120px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | steim'''eus'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | agnēn'''us'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | stant'''us'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | stant'''ius'''
|-
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Dat.'''
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Dat.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thel'''eīs'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thel'''eīs'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thel'''īei'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thel'''īei'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | steim'''eīs'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | agnon'''i'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | steim'''īei'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | agnēn'''i'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | stant'''eīs'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | stant'''īei'''
|-
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Loc.'''
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Loc.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thel'''era'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thel'''era'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thel'''irē'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thel'''irē'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | steim'''era'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | agnon'''im'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | steim'''erē'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | agnēn'''ōm'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | stant'''era'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | stant'''irē'''
|-
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Abl.'''
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Abl.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thel'''eōn'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thel'''eōn'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thel'''iēn'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thel'''iēn'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | steim'''ōn'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | agnon'''ōn'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | steim'''ēn'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | agnēn'''ēn'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | stant'''eōn'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | stant'''iēn'''
|-
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Ins.'''
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Ins.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thel'''et(is)'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thel'''et(is)'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thel'''itū'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thel'''itū'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | steim'''et(is)'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | agnon'''ū'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | steim'''etū'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | agnēn'''ū'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | stant'''et(is)'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | stant'''itū'''
|-
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Voc.'''
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Voc.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thel'''ā'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thel'''ā'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thel'''ī'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thel'''ī'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | steim'''ā'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | agnon'''ā'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | steim'''ē'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | agnēn'''ā'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | stant'''ā'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | stant'''ī'''
|-
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Ess./Con.'''
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Ess./Con.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thel'''e''', thel'''e-'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thel'''e''', thel'''e-'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thel'''i''', thel'''i-'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | thel'''i''', thel'''i-'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | steim'''a''', steim'''a-'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | steim'''e''', steim'''e-'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | stant'''e''', stant'''e-'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | stant'''i''', stant'''i-'''
|}
==Sixth declension ''-on''==
The sixth declension is the only class of nouns that has variant stems: in the plural, the ''-on'' (which is actually part of the stem; the class marker is a null morpheme) fronts to become ''-ēn-''.
Thus ''agnon'' has a declension of:
{| style="width: 300px; background: #efefef; border: 1pt solid #cccccc" cellspacing="0"
| style="width:80px" |
| style="width: 110px; border-bottom: 1pt solid #cccccc; text-align: center" | ''sg.''
| style="width: 110px; border-bottom: 1pt solid #cccccc; text-align: center" | ''pl.''
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Nom.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | agnon
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | agnein{{footnote|1}
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Top.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | agnon'''a'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | agnēn'''a'''
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Acc.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | agnon'''e'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | agnēn'''e'''
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Gen.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | agnon'''us'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | agnēn'''us'''
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Dat.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | agnon'''i'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | agnēn'''i'''
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Loc.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | agnon'''im'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | agnēn'''ōm'''
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Abl.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | agnon'''ōn'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | agnēn'''ēn'''
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Ins.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | agnon'''ū'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | agnēn'''ū'''
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Voc.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | agnon'''ā'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | agnēn'''ā'''
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Ess./Con.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | agnon, agnon-
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | agnon, agnon-
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | agnein, agnein-
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | agnein, agnein-
|}
|}


{{footnote|1}}The form ''-ein'' is a contraction of the older ''-ēnis''; the former is more often seen in later texts, but the latter remains widespread and the standard for formal and serious topics.
{{footnote|1}}The form ''-eis'' is a contraction of the older ''-ēnis''; the former is more often seen in later texts, but the latter remains widespread and the standard for formal and serious topics.


==Seventh declension ''-i'', ''-e'', ''-is'', ''-es''==
==Irregular nominatives==


The seventh declension takes the following endings:
The nominatives of certain nouns do not follow the declension paradigms strictly as set out above. Most notable among these are the first, fourth and fifth declension nouns that end in combinations of either a long vowel or consonant + ''-s''. This phenomenon is due to regular phonological processes, which have seen significant syncopation and elision erode affected words to their current forms. E.g.:


{| style="width: 300px; background: #efefef; border: 1pt solid #cccccc" cellspacing="0"
'''Declension I'''
| style="width:80px" |
*'''-fos > -wos > -ōs'''
| style="width: 110px; border-bottom: 1pt solid #cccccc; text-align: center" | ''sg.''
**''*safos'' "shade" > ''saōs'', acc. ''saō'', gen. ''savoi'', dat. ''savae'', loc. ''saōm'', abl. ''saōn'', ins. ''saftis''<br>Observe the fortition that occurs of ''-w-'' when followed by >2 vowels (''savoi'') or by a vowel other than ''-o-'' (''savae''). The original ''-f-'' is also retained in the instrumental case where the consonant that follows it obstructs the sound change. The plural is not affected similarly due to the absence of conditioning criteria.
| style="width: 110px; border-bottom: 1pt solid #cccccc; text-align: center" | ''pl.''
*'''(-oCos >) -oFos > ōs''' where C represents any voiced plosive, and F any voiced fricative except /v/
|-
**''*bogos'' "swelling" > ''bōs'', acc. ''bō'', gen ''bōi''; the remainder are formed regularly from ''bog-''
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Nom.'''
**''*orathodos'' "religious" > ''orathōs'', acc. ''orathō''; the remainder are regular (''orathod-'')<br>This process also affected nominal adjectives, as shown.
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -i(s), -e(s)
*'''-osos > os''' by haplology, e.g. ''*kiosos'' "gap, gulf, emptiness" > ''kios, kios-'', otherwise regularly declined
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -īs
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Top.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -us
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -utē
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Acc.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -ēs
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -ētē
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Gen.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -is
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -itē
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Dat.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -e, -eā
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -erei
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Loc.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -ira
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -ērē
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Abl.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -igōn
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -ēgēn
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Ins.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -uī, -eī
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -uītē, -eītē
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Voc.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -i ''etc.''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -ē
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Ess./Con.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -ī, -ī-
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -ē, -ē-
|}


Below is the example declension for ''vosi'':
The irregularities exhibited in declensions IV and V are older, and caused more by fricativisation and general lenition than by syncope and elision. There is no tendency that can be generalised, but rather an assortment of commonly used nouns that have been phonologically eroded.


{| style="width: 300px; background: #efefef; border: 1pt solid #cccccc" cellspacing="0"
'''Declension IV'''
| style="width:80px" |
*''*dad'' "hand" > ''dadz'' > ''daz'' > ''das'', acc. ''dade/daze'', nom. pl. ''dadāī'', acc. pl. ''dadai/dazai''; the remainder are regular.
| style="width: 110px; border-bottom: 1pt solid #cccccc; text-align: center" | ''sg.''
**''*ad'' "sea" follows a similar path to become ''as'', but its stem was permanently altered to ''az-'', i.e. gen. ''azus'', acc. pl. ''azai'' etc.
| style="width: 110px; border-bottom: 1pt solid #cccccc; text-align: center" | ''pl.''
*''*vet'' "breeze" > ''vets'' > ''ves'', acc. ''vete'', gen. ''vetus'' etc. regularly
|-
*''*tor'' "step" > ''tos'', acc. ''tore'', gen. ''torus'' etc. regularly
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Nom.'''
*''*reg'' "day" > ''reɣ'' > '''' > ''rēs''<br>The stem was permanently altered to ''-'', i.e. acc. '''', gen. ''rēus'', acc. pl. ''rēai'' etc.
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vosi, libe
*''*gent'' "bloodline" > ''gēn'', acc. ''gente'', etc. regularly
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vosīs
*''*gjor'' "tongue" > '''', acc. ''iore'', etc. regularly with stem ''ior-'' [jor]
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Top.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vos'''us'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vos'''utē'''
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Acc.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vos'''ēs'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vos'''ētē'''
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Gen.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vos'''is'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vos'''itē'''
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Dat.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vos'''e''', lib'''eā'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vos'''erei'''
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Loc.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vos'''ira'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vos'''ērē'''
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Abl.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vos'''igōn'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vos'''ēgēn'''
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Ins.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vos'''uī''', lib'''eī'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vos'''uītē''', lib'''eītē'''
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Voc.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vos'''i'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vos'''ē'''
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Ess./Con.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vos'''i''', vos'''i-'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | vos'''ē''', vos'''ē-'''
|}


==Eighth declension ''-os'', ''-as'', ''-ir''==
The pronominal declensions were also affected by these changes, as evidenced in the genitive singular and the possessive series (e.g. ''nes, net-'').


The derived nouns of the eighth declension take endings as follows in the table below. One peculiarity of these derived nouns is that they form all cases by appending the relevant case ending to their connective, as will be demonstrated by the example conjugations table further down; in ''-ir'' nouns, only the singular connective is used, except where the case endings are identical for the singular and plural, when the plural connective is also used. For this declension, the genitive, dative, locative, ablative and instrumental cases have identical endings for all three classes of nouns.
'''Declension V'''
*''*aidonr̩'' > ''aidōr'', nom. ''aidōra'', gen. ''aidonin'' etc. regularly with stem ''aidon-''
*''*katasr̩'' > ''katār'', nom. ''katāra'', gen. ''katasin'' etc. regularly with stem ''katas-''


Note: This declension does not cover the derived verbal nouns, whether supine, agent or patient. Declension VIII encompasses only abstract nouns derived from other nouns, as per the examples below. Verbal nouns include identifying infixes and decline according to declensions I, II etc.
In addition, there are also two Class-II nouns that exhibit irregular nominatives: ''ilēthēs'' "world", stem ''ilēthēa-''; ''itās'' "port", stem ''itāna-''.


{| style="width: 740px; background: #efefef; border: 1pt solid #cccccc" cellspacing="0"
Due to the age of the processes that resulted in these irregular forms, nouns that were formed in these productive classes were not subject to such elisions.
| style="width:80px" |
| style="width: 110px; border-bottom: 1pt solid #cccccc; text-align: center" | ''sg.''
| style="width: 110px; border-bottom: 1pt solid #cccccc; text-align: center" | ''pl.''
| style="width: 110px; border-bottom: 1pt solid #cccccc; text-align: center" | ''sg.''
| style="width: 110px; border-bottom: 1pt solid #cccccc; text-align: center" | ''pl.''
| style="width: 110px; border-bottom: 1pt solid #cccccc; text-align: center" | ''sg.''
| style="width: 110px; border-bottom: 1pt solid #cccccc; text-align: center" | ''pl.''
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Nom.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -os
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -ēs
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -as
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -ae
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -ir
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -rēs
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Top.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -ou
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -ōi
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -ai
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -ōi
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -ou
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -ōi
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Acc.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -o
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -ē
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -a
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -ē
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -o
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -ē
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Gen.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -is
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -ēs
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -is
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -ēs
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -is
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -is
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Dat.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -ae
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -ei
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -ae
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -ei
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -ae
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -ei
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Loc.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -um
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -um
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -um
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -um
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -um
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -um
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Abl.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -ōn
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -ēn
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -ōn
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -ēn
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -ōn
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -ēn
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Ins.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -ōs
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -ū
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -ās
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -ū
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -itis
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -ērū
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Voc.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -ā
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -ā
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -ā
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -ē
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -ā
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -ērā
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Ess./Con.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -ōr, -or-
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -ēr, -er-
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -ār, -ar-
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -aes, -aer-
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -ir, -r-
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | -rēr, -rēr-
|}


''Moros'' "request" (cf. ''mossos'' "act of requesting"), ''minnas'' "locality of the valley" and ''syndir'' "sin" are declined as examples below:
These reductive processes only kicked in when the consonants mentioned above were in isolation, i.e. they did not occur as part of a cluster. In addition, the behaviour of the vowels immediately before the affected consonants exhibits a degree of variation that is not entirely regular or predictable. While much of the time they remain unchanged, in certain nouns the high vowels [i] and [u] may be lowered to [e] and [o] (which was not reflected in the standard orthography but gleaned from informal correspondences and writings).


{| style="width: 740px; background: #efefef; border: 1pt solid #cccccc" cellspacing="0"
Most problematically, for reasons of stress and perhaps scansion, they might sometimes be lengthened: e.g. the stem of ''kūs'' "proper" is actually ''kur-'', and that of ''dhīs'' "festival" is ''dhid-''. The occurrence of ''-ū-'' and ''-ī-'' in these cases appears to be entirely arbitrary, especially given the precedents of words like ''das, dad-'' "hand" that do not undergo compensatory lengthening.
| style="width:80px" |
| style="width: 110px; border-bottom: 1pt solid #cccccc; text-align: center" | ''sg.''
| style="width: 110px; border-bottom: 1pt solid #cccccc; text-align: center" | ''pl.''
| style="width: 110px; border-bottom: 1pt solid #cccccc; text-align: center" | ''sg.''
| style="width: 110px; border-bottom: 1pt solid #cccccc; text-align: center" | ''pl.''
| style="width: 110px; border-bottom: 1pt solid #cccccc; text-align: center" | ''sg.''
| style="width: 110px; border-bottom: 1pt solid #cccccc; text-align: center" | ''pl.''
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Nom.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | moros
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | morēs
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | minnas
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | minnae
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | syndir
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | syndrēs
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Top.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | moror'''ou'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | morer'''ōi'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | minnar'''ai'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | minnaer'''ōi'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | syndr'''ou'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | syndr'''ōi'''
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Acc.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | moror'''o'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | morer'''ē'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | minnar'''a'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | minnaer'''ē'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | syndr'''o'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | syndr'''ē'''
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Gen.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | moror'''is'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | morer'''ēs'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | minnar'''is'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | minnaer'''ēs'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | syndr'''is'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | syndrēr'''is'''
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Dat.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | moror'''ae'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | morer'''ei'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | minnar'''ae'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | minnaer'''ei'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | syndr'''ae'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | syndr'''ei'''
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Loc.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | moror'''um'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | morer'''um'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | minnar'''um'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | minnaer'''um'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | syndr'''um'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | syndrēr'''um'''
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Abl.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | moror'''ōn'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | morer'''ēn'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | minnar'''ōn'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | minnaer'''ēn'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | syndr'''ōn'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | syndr'''ēn'''
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Ins.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | moror'''ōs'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | morer'''ū'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | minnar'''ās'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | minnaer'''ū'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | syndr'''itis'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | syndr'''ērū'''
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Voc.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | moror'''ā'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | morer'''ā''', morer'''ē'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | minnar'''ā'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | minnaer'''ē'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | syndr'''ā'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | syndrēr'''ā'''
|-
| style="width:80px; border-right: 1pt solid #cccccc" | '''Ess./Con.'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | mor'''ōr''', mor'''or-'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | mor'''ēr''', mor'''er-'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | minn'''ār''', minn'''ar-'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | minn'''aes''', minn'''aer-'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | synd'''ir''', synd'''r-'''
| style="width: 110px; background: #f9f9f9; text-align: center" | synd'''rēr''', synd'''rēr-'''
|}


==Irregular nouns==
==Irregular nouns==
Line 722: Line 391:
As with all languages, Classical Arithide has its share of irregularly-declined nouns, some of them being among the most commonly used.
As with all languages, Classical Arithide has its share of irregularly-declined nouns, some of them being among the most commonly used.


In addition to that, most personal names in Classical Arithide are irregularly declined (e.g. Pereos, gen. Fini; Symbakos, voc. Sebeō). See also [[Areth names#Classical declension]] for more on personal name declensions.
In addition to that, most personal names in Classical Arithide are irregularly declined (e.g. ''Pereos'', gen. ''Fini''; ''Symbakos'', voc. ''Sebeō''). See also [[Areth names#Classical declension]] for more on personal name declensions.


==See also==
==See also==

Latest revision as of 15:39, 21 February 2010

See also Classical Arithide grammar for more information


Owing to the language's inflectionary nature, Classical Arithide nouns, pronouns and certain of its adjectives must be declined (i.e. inflected) to provide grammatical meaning. A group of words that decline in the same way is known as a "declension class". There are 5 declension classes for nouns and the same for adjectives; pronouns are generally irregular.

Declension classes

Nouns in Classical Arithide are classed into different declensions based on their semantic meaning. This lexically based categorisation means that each declension class represents a broad group of nouns that share a certain characteristic. Traditional grammatical analysis takes the number of declension classes in Classical Arithide to be five, on top of which are various subgroups that decline in slightly different ways from the parent class.

Declension I, with the characteristic nominative singular ending -os, is the most productive declension class of all. It is associated with morally and emotionally neutral abstractions: states (valonos "peace"), qualities (fyginthos "dangerousness"), acts (leatos "act of worship") as well as other types of concepts (sonos "daily life"). As may be noted the supine verbal noun (i.e. "the act of doing something") also falls under this declension.

Declension II nouns take the ending -as and refer to places: kitaras "hall", sivas "town", leatas "place of worship. The verbal noun of location (i.e. "the place where something is done") falls under declension II.

Declension III nouns take the ending -ir, and can be differentiated into classes III-a with simple -ir, and III-b with -rir. This declension comprises nouns with negative moral or emotional denotations or connotations: vokir "evil", kirir "faux pas", kreisantir "grief of bereavement".

Declension IV is the most general declension class. Its nouns have no characteristic nominative singular ending but instead shares it with declension V (-a), and its lexical scope is practically unlimited; Class-IV nouns can refer to items, animals, plants or any other non-human, non-divine object. E.g. arotha "carpet", hegra "vine", izia "coin".

Declension V comprises nouns referring to the human, the divine or the socio-cultural aspect of life: thelera "neighbour", venera "deity", kunera "currency". Complex historical reasons have given Class V nouns the double nominative ending of -era, the final part of which (-a) is shared with Class IV. There is a subgroup, V-b, whose nominative singulars end in -on but otherwise decline identically with regular Class-V nouns: these are the special agentive nouns (see next section), generally formed from verbs but occasionally found fossilised elsewhere in words belonging to other parts of speech.

These five declension classes can be broadly classified into two categories: concrete nouns (IV, V) and abstract nouns (I, II, III).

Distinction between -thera and -on

Both the nominative singular endings -thera (V-a) and -on (V-b) indicate people, or agents. While in surviving Classical Arithide texts only the latter seemed to be sufficiently lexemic to be productive (as the agentive noun suffix, for one), there existed a semantic distinction between the two suffixes that persisted long enough for the -thera ending to experience a resurgence in productivity in the vulgar tongue, and hence subsequently the koine and the modern standard.

The lexeme -on was straightforward: it simply denoted any person who committed any action, and could be freely attached to any verb due to its broad semantic scope:

  • serēn "to write" > seron "one who writes, the person who wrote"
  • terēn "to weave" > teron "one who weaves, the person who wove"
  • damēn "to carry" > damon "one who carries, the person who carried"

It is even possible to attach -on to secondary verbal stems, e.g. participle forms. Compare:

  • seron "one who writes", "one who wrote" VS
  • seiron "the one writing" VS
  • serāson "one who has written", "one who has been published"

-Thera, on the other hand, was more restrictive: this suffix could be used only to denote such persons as professionals, passionate believers, or members of the family and so on. In other words, the action in question could not be a casual, one-off incidence, but had to be done by virtue of vocation, profession, conviction, or social role. Note the semantic contrast between the examples in the above paragraph and those that follow:

  • serēn "to write" > sesthera "author"
  • terēn "to weave" > testhera "tailor, seamstress"
  • damēn "to carry" > danthera "porter"

The above examples also demonstrate the regular phonological assimilation undergone in nominalisation.

For more, see Classical Arithide conjugation#Verbal nouns.

Grammatical cases

Fully declining a noun requires expressing its 11 cases:

  • Nominative, which marks the subject of a verb; the nominative is the case in which a noun or pronoun is cited in the dictionary, hence it is also known as the citation case
  • Topical, which marks the topic of a sentence
  • Accusative, which marks the object of a verb
  • Genitive, which marks possession by
  • Dative, which marks motion towards, and by extension benefaction to etc.
  • Locative, which marks location (with places) or indicates shift of grammatical focus (with objects and people)
  • Ablative, which marks motion away or existence apart, and by extension is used with prepositions such as parō "about, regarding" or etel "by (agentive)"
  • Instrumental, which marks instruments, and by extension accompaniment, using the preposition etel "with"
  • Vocative, which marks direct address
  • Connective, which is an open-ended stem form to which certain affixes or other nouns are appended, e.g. salumos "heaven" + innos "top" > saluminnum "in heaven" (lit. "on heaven"; innos is in the locative) and allas "city" + dolō "around" (from dolos "surroundings") > alladolō "around the city" 1
  • Essive, which marks existence as

1

Alladolō (connective + prep.) must be distinguished from the similar dolō allior (prep. + ablative); while both might be translated as "around the city", the former refers to the areas outside and surrounding a certain city, while the latter refers to places all around within the city: alladolō siethē sena "there are flowers around the city" vs. dolō allior siethē sena "there are flowers all about the city".

Of these, the connective and essive cases in all nouns are identical, resulting in 10 effective cases. Should the need arise to differentiate the two, however, the essive may take on the auxiliary suffix -sanos (lit. "semblance, condition, state").

First declension -os

Nouns and adjectives of the first declension take the following endings, illustrated by thiftios "temptation":

sg. pl.
Nom. thiftios thiftiēs
Top. thiftiou thiftiēu
Acc. thiftio thiftiē
Gen. thiftioi thiftiēi
Dat. thiftiae thiftiēā <*thiftiēiae
Loc. thiftiōm <*thiftioum thiftiēum
Abl. thiftiōn thiftiēn
Ins. thiftitis1 thiftiētūs
Voc. thiftiō thiftiē
Ess./Con. thiftie, thifti- thiftiē, thiftiē-

1

As seen, vowel-stem nouns lose the thematic -o- in the instrumental singular. Consonant-stem nouns, however, retain the vowel: klevos "force" becomes klevotis.

Second declension -as

Nouns and adjectives of the first declension take the following endings, illustrated by thiftias "place of temptation":

sg. pl.
Nom. thiftias thiftiais
Top. thiftiau thiftiāi
Acc. thiftia thiftiai
Gen. thiftiai thiftiās
Dat. thiftīs1 thiftīei1
Loc. thiftium thiftiām
Abl. thiftior2 thiftiēri
Ins. thiftiātis thiftiaitis
Voc. thiftiā thiftiai
Ess./Con. thiftia, thiftia- thiftiai, thiftiai-

1 The actual endings are -īs and -iei. With -i- stem words, a simple, long -ī- results in both cases.

2 The actual ending is -ior. In this case the -i- in the case ending is elided.

Third declension -ir, -rir

In Classical Arithide, nouns that end in -ir in the nominative singular are descended from the older -ydr̩, i.e. they were originally considered part of the Old Arithide "Society & Culture" declension, but regular phonological erosion has made it a separate declension class of its own. Sound change also introduced a variant stem, -ir-, and both forms appear liberally throughout Classical Arithide texts.

Vokir "evil" (Class III-a) is declined as follows:

sg. pl.
Nom. vokir vokirēs
Top. vokyrō, vokirō vokirau
Acc. vokiri vokirai
Gen. vokirin vokirīs
Dat. vokiri vokirei
Loc. vokirum vokirium
Abl. vokirior vokirēri
Ins. vokyrū, vokirū vokir
Voc. vokiri vokirē
Ess./Con. vokire, vokir- vokira, vokirē-

Class III-b nouns (ending in -rir) take the same endings, but with -id- in the stem rather than -ir- as the preceding r- blocks rhotacism.


Fourth declension -a

Steima "measurement illustrates the declension paradigm for Class IV nouns:

sg. pl.
Nom. steima steimeia
Top. steimeu steimaiā
Acc. steime steimai
Gen. steimus steimeus
Dat. steimi steimēi <*steimaii
Loc. steimera steimaira
Abl. steimōn steimēn
Ins. steimibas steimaibas
Voc. steimā steimāī
Ess./Con. steime, steim- steimaie, steimai-

Fifth declension -ra

Theler "neighbour" and agnon "doer" are declined as below:

sg. pl. sg. pl.
Nom. theler theleis agnon agneis1
Top. theleu theleiā agnona agnēna
Acc. thelor thelei agnone agnēne
Gen. thelus thelius agnonus agnēnus
Dat. theleīs thelīei agnoni agnēni
Loc. thelera thelirē agnonim agnēnōm
Abl. theleōn theliēn agnonōn agnēnēn
Ins. thelet(is) thelitū agnonū agnēnū
Voc. thelā thelī agnonā agnēnā
Ess./Con. thele, thele- theli, theli- agnon, agnon- agnein, agnein-

1 The form -eis is a contraction of the older -ēnis; the former is more often seen in later texts, but the latter remains widespread and the standard for formal and serious topics.

Irregular nominatives

The nominatives of certain nouns do not follow the declension paradigms strictly as set out above. Most notable among these are the first, fourth and fifth declension nouns that end in combinations of either a long vowel or consonant + -s. This phenomenon is due to regular phonological processes, which have seen significant syncopation and elision erode affected words to their current forms. E.g.:

Declension I

  • -fos > -wos > -ōs
    • *safos "shade" > saōs, acc. saō, gen. savoi, dat. savae, loc. saōm, abl. saōn, ins. saftis
      Observe the fortition that occurs of -w- when followed by >2 vowels (savoi) or by a vowel other than -o- (savae). The original -f- is also retained in the instrumental case where the consonant that follows it obstructs the sound change. The plural is not affected similarly due to the absence of conditioning criteria.
  • (-oCos >) -oFos > ōs where C represents any voiced plosive, and F any voiced fricative except /v/
    • *bogos "swelling" > bōs, acc. , gen bōi; the remainder are formed regularly from bog-
    • *orathodos "religious" > orathōs, acc. orathō; the remainder are regular (orathod-)
      This process also affected nominal adjectives, as shown.
  • -osos > os by haplology, e.g. *kiosos "gap, gulf, emptiness" > kios, kios-, otherwise regularly declined

The irregularities exhibited in declensions IV and V are older, and caused more by fricativisation and general lenition than by syncope and elision. There is no tendency that can be generalised, but rather an assortment of commonly used nouns that have been phonologically eroded.

Declension IV

  • *dad "hand" > dadz > daz > das, acc. dade/daze, nom. pl. dadāī, acc. pl. dadai/dazai; the remainder are regular.
    • *ad "sea" follows a similar path to become as, but its stem was permanently altered to az-, i.e. gen. azus, acc. pl. azai etc.
  • *vet "breeze" > vets > ves, acc. vete, gen. vetus etc. regularly
  • *tor "step" > tos, acc. tore, gen. torus etc. regularly
  • *reg "day" > reɣ > > rēs
    The stem was permanently altered to rē-, i.e. acc. , gen. rēus, acc. pl. rēai etc.
  • *gent "bloodline" > gēn, acc. gente, etc. regularly
  • *gjor "tongue" > , acc. iore, etc. regularly with stem ior- [jor]

The pronominal declensions were also affected by these changes, as evidenced in the genitive singular and the possessive series (e.g. nes, net-).

Declension V

  • *aidonr̩ > aidōr, nom. aidōra, gen. aidonin etc. regularly with stem aidon-
  • *katasr̩ > katār, nom. katāra, gen. katasin etc. regularly with stem katas-

In addition, there are also two Class-II nouns that exhibit irregular nominatives: ilēthēs "world", stem ilēthēa-; itās "port", stem itāna-.

Due to the age of the processes that resulted in these irregular forms, nouns that were formed in these productive classes were not subject to such elisions.

These reductive processes only kicked in when the consonants mentioned above were in isolation, i.e. they did not occur as part of a cluster. In addition, the behaviour of the vowels immediately before the affected consonants exhibits a degree of variation that is not entirely regular or predictable. While much of the time they remain unchanged, in certain nouns the high vowels [i] and [u] may be lowered to [e] and [o] (which was not reflected in the standard orthography but gleaned from informal correspondences and writings).

Most problematically, for reasons of stress and perhaps scansion, they might sometimes be lengthened: e.g. the stem of kūs "proper" is actually kur-, and that of dhīs "festival" is dhid-. The occurrence of -ū- and -ī- in these cases appears to be entirely arbitrary, especially given the precedents of words like das, dad- "hand" that do not undergo compensatory lengthening.

Irregular nouns

Main article: List of Classical Arithide irregular nouns

As with all languages, Classical Arithide has its share of irregularly-declined nouns, some of them being among the most commonly used.

In addition to that, most personal names in Classical Arithide are irregularly declined (e.g. Pereos, gen. Fini; Symbakos, voc. Sebeō). See also Areth names#Classical declension for more on personal name declensions.

See also