Korwedish: Difference between revisions

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==Telling Time==
==Telling Time==


Hours and minutes
'''Hours and minutes'''
 


Use the suffix -sci for hours, and -bun for minutes.
Use the suffix -sci for hours, and -bun for minutes.


hansci - one o’clock


dusci - two o’clock
hansci - ''one o’clock''
 
dusci - ''two o’clock''
 
nehwnitasbun - ''45 minutes''
 
hansci nehwnitasbun eftermiddage - ''1:45 in the afternoon''
 
 
'''Days of the week'''
 
maansdag - ''Monday''


nehwnitasbun - 45 minutes
brandsdag - ''Tuesday''


hansci nehwnitasbun eftermiddage - 1:45 in the afternoon
vattensdag - ''Wednesday''


Days of the week
trejsdag - ''Thursday''


maansdag - Monday
guldsdag - ''Friday''


brandsdag - Tuesday
stjejrnasdag - ''Saturday''


vattensdag - Wednesday
solsdag - ''Sunday''


trejsdag - Thursday


guldsdag - Friday
'''Months of the year'''


stjejrnasdag - Saturday


solsdag - Sunday
hanmaanad - ''January''


Months of the year
dumaanad - ''February''


hanmaanad - January
semaanad - ''March''


dumaanad - February
nemaanad - ''April''


semaanad - March
tasmaanad - ''May''


nemaanad - April
yosmaanad - ''June''


tasmaanad - May
gopmaanad - ''July''


yosmaanad - June
dolmaanad - ''August''


gopmaanad - July
hopmaanad - ''September''


dolmaanad - August
jolmaanad - ''October''


hopmaanad - September
jorihanmaanad - ''November''


jolmaanad - October
joridumaanad - ''December''


jorihanmaanad - November


joridumaanad - December
'''Use of dative case as temporal'''


Use of dative case (DAT) as temporal


Use the dative case (DAT) for telling time, by adding the suffix -e to temporal words:
Use the dative case (DAT) for telling time, by adding the suffix -e to temporal words:


hanscie - at one o’clock


gulsdage - on Friday
hanscie - ''at one o’clock''
 
gulsdage - ''on Friday''


semaanade - in March
semaanade - ''in March''


noga solsdage hemwge ska gaajo - you should go home on sunday
noga solsdage hemwge ska gaajo - ''you should go home on sunday''

Revision as of 13:06, 1 July 2014

Koredish is the odd child of Korean and Swedish, with some oddities thrown in...

Word Order

Subject, Object, Verb

Postpositional

Nouns before adjectives


Grammatical Cases

Nominative (NOM) - subject

Accusative (ACC) – direct object

Dative (DAT) – indirect object, telling time (temporal)

Vocative (VOC) – addressing, calling

Genitive (GEN) - possession

Instrumental (INS) – by, means, tool

Topical (TOP) – topic, emphasis

Comitative (COM) – with

Locative (LOC) – location of

Vicinitive (VIC) – nearby

Lative (LAT) – movement to

Ablative (ABL) – movement from

Postpositional (PST) – used with postpositions


hus - house (NOM)

huswl - house (ACC)

huse - house (DAT)

husya - house (VOC)

huswi - house’s (GEN)

huswro - house (INS)

huswga - house (TOP)

huswa - with house (COM)

huswso - at house (LOC)

husege - near house (VIC)

huswge - to house (LAT)

huseso - from house (ABL)

husi - house (PST)


Verbs

Infinitive


The infinitive ends in -da:


seda - to see

varda - to be

hada - to have

gojrda - to do

sajda - to say


The root of the verb is the verb minus the -da suffix:


se

var

ha

gojr

saj


Conjugation


Verbs are not conjugated for person, hence the verb ending is the same regardless of person:


Na sejo - I see

No sejo - you see

Kw sejo - he/she sees

Go sejo - it sees

Vi sejo - we see

Ni sejo - you see

De sejo - they see


Interrogative mood


Na sejka? - I see?

No sejka? - you see?

etc.


(work in progress)


Numbers

Cardinal Numbers

han - one

du - two

se - three

ne - four

tas - five

yos - six

gop - seven

dol - eight

hop - nine

jol - ten

jorihan - eleven

joridu - twelve

jorise - thirteen

… …

duhwn - twenty

duhwnihan - twenty-one

… …

sehwn - thirty

nehwn - forty

… …

hunder - hundred

hunder joriyos - one hundred sixteen

… …

duhunder - two hundred

duhunder hophwnigop - two hundred sixteen

… …

tusen - thousand

joltusen - ten thousand

hunder tusen - one hundred thousand

… …

miljon - million

biljon - billion


Ordinal numbers


Add -et to the cardinal number:


hanet - first

sehwnet - thirtieth

tusenet - thousandth


For compound numbers it is customary to hyphenate the whole number when used as an ordinal:


duhunder-hophwnigopet - two hundred sixteenth


Telling Time

Hours and minutes


Use the suffix -sci for hours, and -bun for minutes.


hansci - one o’clock

dusci - two o’clock

nehwnitasbun - 45 minutes

hansci nehwnitasbun eftermiddage - 1:45 in the afternoon


Days of the week

maansdag - Monday

brandsdag - Tuesday

vattensdag - Wednesday

trejsdag - Thursday

guldsdag - Friday

stjejrnasdag - Saturday

solsdag - Sunday


Months of the year


hanmaanad - January

dumaanad - February

semaanad - March

nemaanad - April

tasmaanad - May

yosmaanad - June

gopmaanad - July

dolmaanad - August

hopmaanad - September

jolmaanad - October

jorihanmaanad - November

joridumaanad - December


Use of dative case as temporal


Use the dative case (DAT) for telling time, by adding the suffix -e to temporal words:


hanscie - at one o’clock

gulsdage - on Friday

semaanade - in March

noga solsdage hemwge ska gaajo - you should go home on sunday