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Nordaþ verbs

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Nordaþ verbs are the fusional part of the synthetic language Nordaþ. They conjugate according to the indicative, conditional, subjunctive, potential, and imperative moods. Verbs have infinitive forms, but unlike many other languages, they do not have participle or gerund forms. They are also conjugated by two declensions which match Nordaþ nouns, wherein front-vowelled and middle-vowelled words will take a front-vowel affix over a middle-vowel affix, unless only a middle-vowel and back-vowel affix are available, and a back-vowelled word will take a back-vowelled affix over a middle-vowel affix, unless only a front-vowel and middle-vowel affix are present.

See Nordaþ verb paradigm for exhaustive conjugation tables

Mood, tense, and aspect - forms of the verb

Nordaþ language

Pronunciation
Writing system
Grammar

To illustrate the behaviour of verb conjugations in Nordaþ, let us use dekäsäm "to help". First, here is the non-finite conjugation of the verb:

Infinitive

Front-vowel: dekäsäm

(Middle-vowelled words take front-vowel affixes over middle-vowel affixes, so they will follow the front-vowel example. Thus, a back-vowel infinitive will use the -am suffix.)

Ignoring momentarily the -i suffix part of progressive verbs, the following table represents the endings of verbs according to their subject.

Indicative ic du oic ver ïr er, si, lec läc
Subject -e/ï -(e/ï)s -(e/ï)t -(e/ï)n -(e/ï)m -(e/ï)k -(e/ï)v

Indicative *e*-

Next, there is the indicative mood with its eleven tenses. The indicative mood is used to describe factual events.

Indicative Affixes Example English usage
Present er/ïï- eidekäse I help
Present Perfect er/ïr- erdekäse I have helped
Present Progressive ei/ïï- + -i/ï eidekäsei I am helping
Present Perfect Progressive er/ïr- + -i/ï erdekäsei I have been helping
Praeterite de/dï- dedekäse I helped
Pluperfect der/dïr- derdekäse I had helped
Praeterite Progressive de/dï- + -i/ï dedekäsei I was helping
Pluperfect Progressive der/dïr- + -i/ï derdekäsei I had been helping
Future be/bï- bedekäse I will help
Future Perfect ber/bïr- berdekäse I will have helped
Future Progressive be/bï- + -i/ï bedekäsei I will be helping
Future Perfect Progressive ber/bïr- + -i/ï berdekäsei I will have been helping
Imperfect ke/kï- kedekäse I used to help
Imperfect Perfect ker/kïr kerdekäse I have used to help
Imperfect Pluperfect dek(e)/k(ï)- dekdekäse I had used to help
Imperfect Progressive ke/kï- + -i/ï kedekäsei I used to be helping
Imperfect Perfect Progressive ker/kïr- + -i/ï kerdekäsei I have used to be helping
Imperfect Pluperfect Progressive dek(e)/k(ï)- dekdekäsei I had used to be helping

Subjunctive

The subjunctive mood has a separate conjugation table with fewer tenses. It is used to express the speaker's opinion or judgement, such as doubts, possibilities, emotions, and events which may or may not occur.

Jussive Affixes Example English usage
Present te/tï- tedekäse I demand that Francisco help others

Hypothetical

The hypothetical mood states an ability to take an action.

Hypothetical Affixes Example English usage
  le le eidekäse I can help

Conditional

The conditional mood takes on a separate inflection and express an ability to have taken action, but with a condition.

Conditional Affixes Example English usage
  se se bedekäse I would help
Se eidekäse icä duïïta, den dua se iceitä bedekäses.
Were I helping you, then you would help me.
Se bedekäse si...
I'd help if...
Si se desene kyningäi...
If I were king...
Si se dematjas, den se iceitä bedekäses
If you ate, then you'd help me
Dekdekäse vs. Se dekdekäse
I had used to help. vs. Had I used to help.
Se le erdekäse. Le se erdekäse.
I could have helped.

In English, the second and third conditionals are differentiated with conjugations of "to be" and "to have", respectively. In Nordaþ, this does not occur. Instead, the conditional is automatically understood depending on the tense of the verb - All but the praeterite would be second conditional in English. The progressives in English would have "to be" conjugated to "would", the non-progressives would have "to be" conjugated to "were", and the third conditional would be "had". The progressive praeterites do not take on conditionals.

Formulae:

In English, the conditional is formed as such:

Second Conditional: If + simple past/subjunctive, would + verb Third Conditional: If + past perfect, would have + past participle

In addition, in English if "if" is not present then the word order changes (If I had to Had I, etc.)

Nordaþ does the following:

If + conditional marker + indicatively declined verb. If, like in English, is not needed. Since word order doesn't exist as such, no changing in word order needs occur if "if" is not used.

Imperative

The imperative mood states a command. It only exists in present form.

The imperative is formed by a prefix attaching to other prefixes in the indicative. The imperative can attach to the present, the future, and the future progressive. The prefix is re/rï-

Imperative Affixes Example English usage
Present re/rï- reeidekäses You help
Future re/rï- rebedekäses You will help
Future Progressive re/rï- rebedekäsesi You will be helping

Rebedekäsesi. Nuvlïïs. (You will be helping. Now.)

Passive

The passive is formed by a prefix attaching to the other prefixes in the indicative. The passive attaches to all but the imperfect progressives. The prefix is "fe/fï".

Negation

To express negativity, the nän/nan prefix is used regardless of mood or aspect/tense. If the verb is imperative, the negating prefix attaches before it. If the verb isn't, the negative prefix attaches directly to the inflected verb.