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User:Masako/pataka: Difference between revisions

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* <b>tsa'o</b> - six
* <b>tsa'o</b> - six
* <b>ue'o</b> - ten
* <b>ue'o</b> - ten
<h2>foods</h2>
* <b>tsala</b> - sauce
* <b>nyoki</b> - noodle
* <b>tiya</b> - bread
<h2>actions</h2>
* <b>kala</b> - speak; say
* <b>anya</b> - look; see
* <b>yoha</b> - have; possess


<h2>phrases</h2>
<h2>phrases</h2>
Line 62: Line 74:
:O bird eat-PST
:O bird eat-PST
:<i>The bird was eaten.</i>
:<i>The bird was eaten.</i>
<h2>John</h2>
* <b>yohano tsikua nila tsa'o yoha</b>
:John bird blue six have
:<i>John has six blue birds.</i>

Revision as of 17:23, 7 May 2015

Kala’s grammar is fairly regular and equally as simple. This is an explanation based on a story. The story is fairly simple and involves a few situations that are common to the human experience.

characters

  • yohano - John
  • mikelo - Michael
  • susana - Susan

creatures

  • kuatla - snake
  • mita - dog
  • tsikua - bird

colors

  • yana - yellow
  • nila - blue
  • oya - black

numbers

  • na'o - one
  • tsa'o - six
  • ue'o - ten

foods

  • tsala - sauce
  • nyoki - noodle
  • tiya - bread

actions

  • kala - speak; say
  • anya - look; see
  • yoha - have; possess

phrases

  • na ina
1sg eat
I eat. or I am eating.
  • This is the simplest type of phrase in Kala. It includes the subject na and the action ina. The important thing to recognize is that ina can also mean food. The clue to its meaning in this phrase is word order, which, in Kala, is always (Subject)-(Object)-Verb. Verbs can be used alone when the phrase is an interjection, simply a statement of observance, or response to a question. Note the example below:
  • pana
rain
It is raining or Rain!

tense

  • To express the tense, simple suffixes are used:
  • mita inaye
dog eat-PST
The dog ate.
  • (note the lack of a definite article)
  • tsikua ilatli
bird fly-FUT
The bird will fly.

subject vs object

  • kuatla tsikua inaye
snake bird eat-PST
The snake ate the bird.
  • In the above the strict SVO word order indicates that the bird is the object, or patient (recipient of the action). The particle ke marks the patient. It also function as a nominalizer (makes it a noun). The below is an example of a phrase that lacks a subject:
  • ke tsikua inaye
O bird eat-PST
The bird was eaten.

John

  • yohano tsikua nila tsa'o yoha
John bird blue six have
John has six blue birds.