Seuna serial verb construction
The serial verb construction (SVC) is used when two verbs (on occasion it can be more than two verbs) can be thought of as representing one single action.
how it works
In this construction one verb comes first and then the second verb follows. (there is a hint of SVC in English when you hear things like "go see" : however that is about as far as it goes in English)
In Seuna the first verb is given the full markings for tense, etc. etc. but the second verb has its final vowel deleted and the ending i added (if the verb is monosyllabic, the ending ia is added). For example ;-
1) donore nia = "S/he is walking in this direction" .... S/he is walking come
Some examples ;-
2) They caught cook eat three fish
3) She washed ironed folded the clothes
In the above examples the werbs follow each other, have the same object and have the same subject.
4) Take book come
In the above example the verbs do not stand beside each other.
5) They drink champagne eat caviar
In the above example the verbs have different objects
THere are even some constructions that have different subjects. For example;-
6) He painted the house to be green ???? really different subjects ????
the time structure in SVC's
In example 2) the verb ordering is iconic with respect to time. In example 3) it is a little less so (she probably did not do all the ironing before all the folding). In example 4) it is iconic. The time structure of example 5) is interesting. The two actions are "alternating".
If the actions were consequential, we would say...
drinkuro champagne humpurau caviar = they drink champagne and then eat caviar
If the actions were simultaneous, we would say...
drinkuro champagne humpurai caviar = they drink champagne as they eat caviar
But as the action is alternating, we say ...
drinkuro champagne humpia caviar
So we can see that many different time structure are handle by morphology in Seuna.
the 9 SVC verbs of motion
Going back to example 1)
Here nia is a second verb indicating motion. Verbs of motion often occur as the non-initial element in SVC's. In this position the motion verb is not so pertinent as the main verb but it certainly clarifies/colours the event described in the clause.
There are nine verbs of motion which are very commonly used as such.
along | lia | to follow | l??? |
past | swia | to pass | sw??? |
across | dia | to cross | d??? |
through | dwia | to go through | dw?? |
up | sia | to ascend | s??? |
down | jia | to descend | j??? |
back | wia | to return | w??? |
away from speaker | gia | go | g?? |
towards speaker | nia | come | n??? |
Some examples ;-
he telephoned (to this location) = wire-speakori nia
he telephoned (from this location) = wire-speakori gia
to returned a call = wire-speak wia
These eight words often corespond to prepositions in English. As with prepositions they are often followed by nouns to which they relate.
the copula in SVC
In Seuna "he painted the green house" would mean the same as "he painted the house green" because of word order. Therefor to avoid confusion we must say "he painted the house to be green". "to be" in this position is treated as a normal second element in a SVC. It is represented by ya which is a sort of modified ia.
other stuff
Note ;- In the Seuna writing system ia is represented by the active verb symbol (i.e. "r") unadorned with a vowel subscript.
Some more example ;-
he broke into the bathroom = breakori enter the bathroom
normally when the first verb is a word of motion, the word "enter" is not used.
donori pidwolo = "S/he walked in the house" or "S/he walked into the house"
However with "break", which is not a verb of motion, you use "enter".
prepositions not supplanted by the SVC, but by case
As mentioned above, the second element in many SVC are functionally equivalent to prepositions in English.
Other English prepositions are functionally equivalent case tags in Seuna.
Having a second verb in SVC's was considered but it was decided to go the "case" route.
case marking | English equivalent preposition | 2nd element of SVC (thought of but not used) |
-ji | for | "to give" or "to help" |
-u | with | "to use" |
-ho | with | to accompany |
-fi | at | to be at |
-le | than | to surpass |
Also the cases -le, -yo and -wa ; could maybe have been reoplaced by verbs meaning "come", "go", "arrive there", "arrive here", "reach", etc. etc.
other verbs commonly used as SVC elements
meaning when independent verb | Form when independent | Meaning when 2nd element of SVC | Form when 2nd element |
to oppose | w??? | against | wia |
to do carelessly | f??? | fia | |
to botch | b??? | mis- | bia |
to hurry,
to gather, to scratter
to repeat, ............... (again)
to enter, to exit
to stop off .................. for a time on a journey(when second element "to take five"??)
to connect, to disconnect ... on and off
to stay ......................continue, keep on
arrive, leave ................... to start, to stop ??
deliberate and accidental actions
swela by itself means "to pounce on","to jump on", to swoop down on", "to fall on"
toko by itself means "to fall"
sweli after a verb means that that verb was done deliberately
toki after a verb means that that verb was done accidentally
Index
- Introduction to Seuna
- Seuna : Chapter 1
- Seuna word shape
- The script of Seuna
- Seuna sentence structure
- Seuna pronouns
- Seuna nouns
- Seuna verbs (1)
- Seuna adjectives
- Seuna demonstratives
- Seuna verbs (2)
- Asking a question in Seuna
- Seuna relative clauses
- Seuna verbs (3)
- Methods for deriving words in Seuna
- List of all Seuna derivational affixes
- Numbers in Seuna
- Naming people in Seuna
- The Seuna calendar
- Seuna units