Monzo: Difference between revisions
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[[Italo-Carune]]<br> | [[Italo-Carune]]<br> | ||
Central Carune | Central Carune | ||
'''[[Monzo]''' | '''[[Monzo]]''' | ||
|morph=Inflecting | |morph=Inflecting | ||
|ms=Fusional | |ms=Fusional |
Revision as of 14:29, 21 April 2006
Monzo is an Italo-Carune language spoken in Monze, Carune. It is similar to Carune, but incorporates grave accents as stress markers because of the loss of some final letters.
Carune | |
---|---|
Pronounced: | /karune/ /kar\une/ /ka4une/ |
Timeline and Universe: | Alternate Earth, modern era |
Species: | Human |
Spoken: | Carune |
Total speakers: | 5 million |
Writing system: | Roman |
Genealogy: | Indo-European Italic |
Typology | |
Morphological type: | Inflecting |
Morphosyntactic alignment: | Fusional |
Basic word order: | SVO |
Credits | |
Creator: | Sectori |
Created: | December 2005 |
Phonology/Orthography
Syntax and Stress
Subject Pronouns
Verbal Morphology: Indicative Mood Simple Tenses
Present Indicative Conjugation
Preterit Indicative Conjugation
Future Indicative Conjugation
Imperfect Indicative Conjugation
Present Conditional Conjugation
Nominal Morphology: Gender and Number
Direct Object Pronouns
Indirect Object Pronouns
Prepositional Object Pronouns
Reflexive Verbs/Pronouns
Verbal Morphology: Irregular Verbs
Verbal Morphology: Indicative Mood Compound Tenses
Present Perfect Indicative Conjugation
Pluperfect Indicative Conjugation
Present Progressive Indicative Conjugation
Future Perfect Indicative Conjugation
Simple Future Indicative Conjugation
Past Conditional Indicative Conjugation
Nominal Morphology: Articles
Adjective Morphology: Gender and Number
Verbal Morphology: The Passive Voice
Verbal Morphology: Subjunctive Mood Simple Tenses
The subjunctive mood (sometimes referred to as the conjunctive mood) is a grammatical mood of the verb that expresses wishes, commands (in subordinate clauses), emotion, possibility, judgment, necessity and statements that are contrary to fact.[1]