Béu : Chapter 3 : The Noun
..... The ergative marker and word order
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In English it is the order of the verb and the participants involved with the action (arguments) that shows who did what to who. In béu the order of the verb and the arguments does not give this information. Rather the form of one argument changes. The argument which initiates the action is given the suffix -s. For example ...
glás bàu timpori = The woman has hit the man
glá bàus timpori = The man has hit the woman
By the way, we will call "that which initiates the action" the A argument, and "that which is affected by the action" the O argument. This terminology is used for convenience (after the manner of RMW Dixon).
But what about a verb that takes only one noun : an intransitive verb (we will call this lonely noun the S argument).
In most languages the S argument is marked the same way as the A argument. However in a minority of languages the S argument is marked the same way as the O argument. These are called ergative languages.
béu is an ergative language. About a quarter of the world languages are ergative or partly ergative.
In English only 2 orders are found. Namely ... SV and AVO ... (V = verb). However in béu you have what is called "free word order". This means that you can come across the following 8 orders ... SV, VS, AVO, AOV, VAO, OVA, OAV and VOA.
But actually in a piece of discourse, it is most likely that the S or A argument are old information and probably the topic (the thing that you have been going on about for some time). In béu the topic is dropped and so the 8 sentence types shown above collapse into 3 sentence types. Namely ... V(s), O V(a) and V(a) O*
* V(s) represents a verb marked for the person/number of the S argument and V(a) represents a verb marked for the person/number of the A argument.
Note on ambitransitive verbs ...
In English there are some verbs that sometimes take one participant and sometimes involve two participants. For example "knit" or "turn". In English you know if the verb is appearing in its intransitive form if an extra argument turns up after the verb (that is ... an O argument has turned up) ... S and A appear the same in English.
Similarly in béu there are some verbs that sometimes take one participant and sometimes take two participants. For example mekeu "knit" or kwèu "turn". In béu you know if the verb is appearing in its intransitive form if an extra argument turns up with the ergative marker -s attached (that is ... an A argument has turned up) ... S and O appear the same in béu.
Further notes on nomenclature ...
Dixon calls "knit"/mekeu an ambitransitive verb of type S=A or an [S=A ambitransitive verb].
I call "knit"/mekeu an ambitransitibe verb of type "one unaffected argument" or an [unaffected ambitransitive verb].
For "knit" the preverb argument* is either S or A .... For mekeu the unaffected argument is either S or A.
Dixon calls "turn"/kwèu is an ambitransitive verb of the type S=O or an [S=O ambitransitive verb].
I call "turn"/kwèu an ambitransitibe verb of type "one affected argument" or an [affected ambitransitive verb].
For "turn" the affected argument is either S or O .... For kwèu the naked argument** (i.e. no -s) is either S or O.
*It is also the unaffected argument.
**It is also the affected argument.
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..... Possession & Existence
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The verb yái (to have, to own) indicates possession when used as a transitive verb. For example ...
jonos yór ama = John has an apple
jenes wèu dè yór = Jane owns that car
However yái is similar to mekeu and kwèu in that it can sometimes appear with only one participant. When this happens yái is acting as a verb of existence*. For example ...
yór ??? = there is a God
glavan yór = don't forget the reserves
Notice that yái is marked as agreeing with a third person singular subject. However this subject never appears.
However it is more usual for this verb to convey existence in a certain place rather than just general existence as in the above two examples.
In béu the place is grammatically an adverb qualifying yái hence it must follow directly after the verb. For example ...
1) yór ʔupain bode = "there are small birds in the tree" or possibly "there are small birds in a tree"
Notice that in English, it is common to rearrange the above sentence to "in the tree there are small birds" with no change of meaning.
This is not possible in béu. However (with a change of meaning) it is possible to say ...
2) bode yór ʔupain = "the small birds are in the tree"
And the following example has the exact same meaning as the above ...
3) bode (sùr) ʔupain = "the small birds are in the tree"
And we can modify the above with a quantifying and get ...
4) è bode (sùr) ʔupain = "some small birds are in the tree" ... which means exactly the same as 1)
*English has no verb of existence as such, but uses the phrase "there is", "there are" etc. etc.
So to recap ...
1) and 4) ... existence relative to position ... indefinite object
2) and 3) ... existence relative to position ... definite object
A degree of redundancy is no bad thing.
I guess yái could be called an affected ambitransitive verb ... but a bit of a strange one as in no real way can the possessed or the "existing thing" be called affected. On second thoughts ... better to not call it an affected ambitransitive verb ... better call it a word with two separate meanings ... one transitive and one intransitive. Of course the two separate meanings are related to each other ... it is not just by chance that the two meanings are both expressed as yái.
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..... Definiteness
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Actually the two common orders usually found in transitive sentences ( O V(a) and V(a) O ) are used to code definiteness. For example ...
1) glá timpori = he hit the woman (the woman is known to the addressee and (probably) known to the speaker)
In the above example the noun comes before the verb and is taken as definite. However If a noun comes after the verb it is indefinite ...
2) timpori glá = he hit a woman (the woman is unknown to the addressee, whether she is known to the speaker is unspecified)
béu also has two other kinds of indefinite ...
3) timpori é glá = he hit some woman (the woman is unknown to the addressee and unknown to the speaker)
4) timpori glá fana = he hit a certain woman (the woman is unknown to the addressee but known to the speaker)
fana literally means known. However the who that does this "knowing" can sometimes be a bit hazy. For example ...
She wants to marry a certain Norwegian ?? ... in this case the Norwegian is unknown to the addressee, presumably "she" is doing the "knowing", so in this case we would say whether the Norwegian is known to the speaker is unspecified.
So to recap ...
1) If the NP is before the main verb => NP known to addressee
2) If the NP is after the main verb => NP unknown to addressee
3) If the NP has é in front of it => NP unknown to speaker
4) If the NP has fana after it => NP known to speaker (or at least known to somebody ... you must consider the wider context) ... (fana = known ... fàu = to know)
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..... Pronouns
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Below are the pronouns for the S or O arguments. This form can be considered the "unmarked form". Pronouns are different from normal nouns in that their tones go from low to high as well the -s suffixation for the "unmarked" => "marked for ergativity" transition.
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me | pà | us | yùa |
us | wìa | ||
you | gì | you | jè |
him, her | ò | them | nù |
it | ʃì | them | ʃì |
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Below are the pronouns for the A arguments (i.e. the marked for ergativity arguments).
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I | pás | we | yúas |
we | wías | ||
you | gís | you | jés |
he, she | ós | they | nús |
it | ʃís | they | ʃís |
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jè and jés are the second person plural forms.
yùa and yúas are first person exclusive forms. That is they exclude the person being talked to.
wìa and wías are first person inclusive forms. That is they include the person being talked to.
There is one other pronoun ... the reflexive pronoun tí. This is always an O argument. Notice that it is the only O argument with a high tone.
There is a strong tendency for it to come after the A argument. For example ...
jono tí timparu = john has not yet hit myself
This particle can be amalgamated to the infinitive to give a reflexive infinitive. For example ...
timpa = to hit ... titimpa = "to self-hit"/ "to hit oneself"/"to hit yourself"
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..... The pilana
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We have just mentioned the ergative case. In total there are 17 cases (if you were to include the unmarked case as well there would be 18). They are called the pilana*.
in the béu linguistic tradition there are 17 pilana.
These are suffixed to a noun and show how that word stands in relation to the rest of the sentence.
*The word pilana is built up from ;-
pila (v) = to place, to position
pilana (a, n) = positioning, the positioner
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... Location
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The first 8 define location.
1) -pi = in
2) -la = on
3) -mau = above, over, on top of
4) -goi = below, under, underneath, beneath
5) -ce = this side of
6) -dua = beyond, at the far side of
7) -bene = right, at the right hand side of
8) -komo = left, on the left hand side of
Now these are used to give a location with respect to some object. For example …
nambopi = in the house
nambomau = on the house, over the house
Note ... in a lot of situations, where "on" would be used in English, "above" is used in béu. For example ...
John is on the mountain = "jono (sòr) mountainmau" not "jono (sòr) mountainla"
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... Motion
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The next 2 specify motion.
9) -ye = to
10 -fi = from
Now these are used to give a motion with respect to some object. For example …
namboye = to the house
nambovi = from the house
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... Roll
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The next 4 define the roll that the noun plays in the sentence.
11) -tu = with, using
12) -ji = for, for the benefit of
13) -wo = about, with respect to
14) -s = “the ergative case”
bàus glaji nambo bundori kontotu = the man built the house for the woman with a hammer
gala bauwo catura = the women are talking about the man
There are a number of words which end in n. For example gan or -van are quite common derivational suffixes.
For these words, the suffix is -os. For example ...
flovanos dè pà ?? = that food made me ill
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... General location
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The next is a “general locative”.
15) -n = at, on, in
glá (yú) pà ( sòr ) nambon = My wife is at home
flovan (yú) gì ( sòr ) pazban = Your food is on the table
jwado ( sòr ) ʔupain = The (big) bird is in the tree
For words ending in n, the suffix is -on. For example ...
boloŋgai ( sòr ) flovanon = the flies are on the food
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... Hybrids of motion & position
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The last 2 define motion and position. They are sort of hybrids.
16) -lya = onto
17) -lfe = off
They have the forms alya and alfe when they must precede a NP.
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... The parts they play
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pilana of location phrases (i.e. nouns with 1 -> 8 or 15) can be considered adjectives if they come after a noun and adverbs if they come after a verb. They must come after a noun or a verb. Sometimes they come after the copula*. In this case they are adjectives. Now often the copula is dropped ... but if this dropping results in any ambiguity it can be readily "undropped".
pilana of motional phrases (i.e. nouns with 9, 10, 16 or 17) can be considered adverbs. They can come in any position because it is understood that they are qualifying the verb.
pilana phrases defining sentence rolls(i.e. nouns with 11, 12, 13 or 14) can come anywhere. They are considered nouns.
*Notice that in English, you can either say ... "a bird is in the tree" or "in the tree is a bird"
In béu only jwado (sòr) ʔupain is valid ... also note that in this case jwado is not definite because it is left of the verb. That rule doesn't work with the copula.
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... The two forms of the pilana
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In all the above examples the noun that the pilana qualifies is a single word. However when the pilana qualifies a NP the pilana is not a suffix but appears as an independent word. This particle comes before the NP. For example …
nambodua = beyond the house
dùa nambo yinkai hauʔe = beyond the house of the pretty girl
Below are the forms that the pilana take when appearing as independent words ...
1) pí = in
2) là = on
3) máu = above
4) gòi = below
5) cè = this side of
6) dùa = beyond, at the far side of
7) bene = the right hand side of
8) komo = the left hand side of
9) yé = to
10 fì = from
11) tù = with, using
12) jì = for
13) wò = about, with respect to
14) só = “the ergative case”
15) nà = at, in, on
16) alya = onto
17) alfe = off
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... pilana truncation in the script
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Another thing that sets the pilana apart from other particles, is that they are never written in full. Whether appearing as affixes or independent words, the vowels are always dropped.
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?? OK two chapters later we introduce the relativizer and then show how the ‘’’pilana’’’ affixes to the relativizer ??
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..... Noun phrases
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There are 4 types of noun phrase in béu ...
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1) The noun phrase for countable nouns
2) The noun phrase for uncountable nouns
3) The noun phrase for pronouns
4) The noun phrase for verbs
5) The noun phrase for places
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From now on I will not be talking about "noun phrase", but will be using the béu term fandaunyo.
fandau = noun*
fandauza** = "a noun phrase"
fandaunyo*** = "a noun or a noun phrase"
*The usual word building process would give fanyədau (from nandau "word" and fanyo "thing/object"). However in this particular word, there has been a further contraction to fandau.
** the suffix -za, is a suffix used to give the meaning "something more complicated than the basic word".
*** the suffix -nyo, is a suffix used to give the meaning "something more complicated than the basic word OR the basic word.
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... The countable nouns fandauza
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It can consist of ... (1) the emphatic particle ... (2) a specifier koiʒi ... (3) a number ... (4) the head hua ... (5) adjectives saidau ... (6) a determiner ... (7) a question word ... (8) a relative clause. Only the head is mandatory.
Actually there are quite a few restrictions. For example (7) would never occurs with (8) .... mmmh why did I insert "would" here ??
Many restrictions between (2) and (3)
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.. The question words
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The set of possible question word (within a NP) is very small. Only three ... nái "which", láu "how much" or "how many", kái "what kind of".
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.. The determiners
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The set of possible determiners is very small. Only two ... dí "this", or dè "that".
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.. The adjectives
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Not much to say about this one, you can string together as many as you like ... the same as in English. Also genitives are put in this slot. A genitive is a word derived from a noun by the suffixing of -n (or -on) which indicates possession*. Genitives always come after the regular adjective.
*Actually it can also stand for a location ... where the NP is at.
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.. The head
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This is usually a noun. However it can also be an adjective. When it is an adjective it has concrete reference instead of representing a quality (as happens often in English). For instance, when talking about ... say ... a photograph, you could say "the green is too dark". In this sentence "the green" is a NP meaning the quality of being green. In béu if green is used as the head of a NP it always means "the green one" : "the person/thing that is green".
In béu, geunai would be used in a sentence such as "the green is too dark".
gèu = "green" or "the green one"
geumai = "greenness"
saco = "slow" or "the slow one"
saconi = "slowness"
Notice that the suffix has two forms ... depending upon whether the base adjective has one syllable or more than one syllable.
Sometimes the head is a determiner. In these cases the NP is understood to refer to some noun ... but it is not spoken ... it is just understood by all parties. In these cases the determiners undergo a change of form ...
dí => adi = "this one"
dè => ade = "that one"
nái => anai = "which one"
Related to dí and dè are the two nouns dían (here) and dèn (there). Although nouns, they never occur with the locative case or the ergative case.
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.. The specifiers
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The specifiers = nandau.a koiʒi or just koiʒia
koiʒi actually means "preface" as in "the preface to the book"
It also means forewarning or harbinger ... as in "that slight tremor on Tuesday night, was koizi of the quake on Friday"
Immediately before the core you can have a specifier.
There consist of the following ...
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kyà = no, í = any, é = some(for singular noun), yú = every, è = some(for plural nouns), nò = plural, ù = all, auva => ataitauta = 2=>1727, uwe = many, iyo = few, ege = more, ozo = less.
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Notice that the specifier that implies zero number has low tone, the 3 specifiers that imply singular* number have high tone and the 3 specifiers that imply plural* number have low tone.
.* Well this is true for the English translations anyway. (Side Note ... Actually I am not so sure about the "logic" of my little scheme. Also I would like to look into how a spectrum of other languages use specifiers)
Also note that nò is a noun (meaning "number") as well as a particle that denotes plurality. In the béu mathematical tradition, nò means a number from 2 -> 1727 only (of course there are expressions for expanding the concept to integers, rational numbers etc. etc.)
After a koiʒi the head is always in its base form with regard to number. For example ...
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é glà = some woman
è glà = some women ... not *è gala
í toti = any child .......... not *í totai
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The are 4 cases where you can have two koiʒi together ... é nò or when you have í followed by a number greater than one. For example ...
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é nò toti = some child or children ... this is a contraction of "é toto OR nò toti"
í auva toti = any two children
ege auva toti = two more children
ozo auva toti = two less children
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.. Specifiers X determiners
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Below is a table showing all the specifiers plus a countable noun plus the proximal determiner "this".
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1 | ù báu dí | all of these men OR all these men |
2 | uwe báu dí | many of these men |
3 | iyo báu dí | few of these men OR a few of these men |
4 | auva báu dí | two of these men => ataitauta báu dí ... 1727 of these men |
5 | kyà báu dí | none of these men |
6 | í báu dí | any of these men OR any one of these men |
7 | é báu dí | one of these men |
- 8 - | è báu dí | some of these men |
9 | yú báu dí | every one of these men |
10 | nò báu dí | several of these men OR several of these men here |
11 | é nò báu dí | one or more of these men |
12 | í auva báu dí ... | any 2 of these men => í ataitauta báu dí ... any 1727 of these men |
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The above table is worth discussing ... for what it tells us about English as much as anything else.
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One line 1 ... I do not know why "all these men" is acceptable ... on every other line "of" is needed (to think about)
Similarly on line 3 ... I do not know why "a few" is a valid alternative.
Notice that *aja báu dí does not exist. It is illegal. "one of these men" is expressed on line 7. aja only used in counting ???
I should think more on the semantic difference between line 10 and line 8. ???
line 1 and line 9 are interesting. Every language has a word corresponding to "every" (or "each", same same) and a word corresponding to "all". Especially when the NP is S or A, "all" emphasises the unity of the action, while "every" emphasises the separateness of the actions. Now of course (maybe in most cases) this dichotomy is not needed. It seems to me, that in that case, English uses "every" as the default case (the Scandinavian languages use "all" as the default ??? ). In béu the default is "all" ù.
On line 9, it seems that "one" adds emphasis to the "every". Probably, not so long ago, "every" was valid by itself. The meaning of this word (in English anyway) seems particularly prone to picking up other elements (for the sake of emphasis) with a corresponding lost of power for the basic word when it occurs alone. (From Etymonline EVERY = early 13c., contraction of Old English æfre ælc "each of a group," literally "ever each" (Chaucer's everich), from each with ever added for emphasis. The word still is felt to want emphasis; as in Modern English every last ..., every single ..., etc.)
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This table is also valid for the distal determiner "that". For the third determiner ("which") the table is much truncated ...
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1 | nò báu nái | which men |
2 | ... auva báu nái | which two men => ataitauta báu nái which 1727 of these men |
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Below I have reproduced the above two tables for when the noun is dropped (but understood as background information). It is quite trivial to generate the below tables. Apart from lines 8 and 10, just delete "men" from the English phrase and báu from the béu phrase. (I must think about why 8 and 10 are different ???)
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1 | ù dí | all of these OR all these |
2 | uwe dí | many of these |
3 | iyo dí | few of these OR a few of these |
4 | auva dí | 2 of these => ataitauta dí ... 1727 of these |
5 | kyà dí | none of these |
6 | í dí | any of these OR any one of these |
7 | é dí | one of these |
- 8 - | è dí | some of these OR several of these |
9 | yú dí | every one of these |
10 | nò dí | these NOT several of these |
11 | é nò dí | one or more of these |
12 | í auva dí ... | any 2 of these => í ataitauta dí ... any 1727 of these |
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1 | nò nái | which ones |
2 | ... auva nái | which two => ataitauta nái which 1727 |
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In the last section we introduced the rule, that when a determiner is the head, then the determiner changes form (an a is prefixed to it)
Now we must introduce an exception to that rule ... when you have a specifier just to the left of a determiner (in this conjunction, the determiner MUST be the head) the determiner takes its original form.
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.. The emphatic particle
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Now even before the specifiers it is possible to have an element. This is the emphatic particle á.
This is also used as a sort of vocative case. Not really obligatory but used before a persons name when you are trying o get their attention.
When this particle comes directly in front of adi, ade and anai an amalgamation takes place ( á adi etc etc are in fact illegal)
á adi => ádí = "this one!"
á ade => ádé = "that one!"
á anai => ánái = "which one!"
These three words break the rule that only monosyllabic words can have tone. These 3 words are the only exception to that rule.
By the way, emphasis is always used when contrasting two things. as in "this is wet, but that is dry" = ádí nucoi, ádé mideu
When written using the béu writing system, only the initial a is given the dot on the RHS which indicates high tone. The second syllable is unmarked.
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.. The relative clause
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béu relative clauses work pretty much the same as English relative clauses.
bàu à glás timpori = the man whom the woman hit
bàu às glá timpori = the man who hit the woman
The relativizer is à or às. à if the NP has an S or O role within the relative clause ... às if the NP has an A role within the relative clause ... béu being an ergative language.
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... The uncountable noun fandauza
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It can consist of ... (1) "the holder" ... (2) the head hua ... (3) adjectives saidau ... (4) a determiner didedau. Only the head is mandatory.
auva hoŋko ʔazwo pona dí = two cups of this hot milk
Note ... even though we have no word "of" ... there is no ambiguity. If the above was two fandaunyo, there would either be a pause between hoŋko and ʔazwo (for example if one was A and one was the O argument), or they would be separated by "and" wí if they were separate fandaunyo but comprised only one argument.
In this respect béu takes after Indonesian. For example ... five big bags of this black rice = lima tas besar beras hitam ini (literally ... five bag big rice black this)
Note that the "holder ???" can be a complete countable noun fandaunyo in itself.
lima tas besar beras hitam ini
(5 bag big) (rice black this) .... Usually languages have a linker, particular when the phrases are long. For example Chinese "de", English "of", Japanese "no". béu has no linker (similar to Indonesian) ... (however à or fí could be pressed into service if needed ??? )
(SideNote) ... ʔazwe = to suck ... ʔazweye = to suckle, to offer the breast
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... The pronoun fandauza
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Below the forms of the béu pronouns are the given for when the pronoun represent the S or O argument. This form can be considered the "base form" or the "unmarked form".
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me | pà | us | yùa |
us | wìa | ||
you | gì | you (plural) | jè |
him, her | ò | them | nù |
it | ʃì | them | ʃì |
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When they are used as an S arguments (i.e. with an intransitive verb), it might be better to translate these pronouns as "I myself", "you yourself" etc. etc.
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There is another pronoun but this one only occurs as an O argument. When a action is performed by somebody or something on themselves we use tí to represent the O argument.
Just as in English, we do not say "*I hit me", but "I hit myself" ... in béu we do not say *pás pà timpari, but pás tí timpari. ..
Below is a table with nù "they" occurring with the allowed specifiers. yùa, wìa, jè and ʃì pattern in a similar way.
1 | í nù | any of them |
2 | é nù | one of them |
3 | yú nù | every one of them |
4 | è nù | some of them |
5 | kyà nù | none of them |
6 | ù nù | all of them |
7 | kyà nù | none of them |
8 | í auva nù | any two of them |
9 | ege nù | more of them |
10 | ozo nù | less of them |
Nothing really surprising in the above. However I thought that I should lay it out in black and white. (what about emo "the most" and omo "the least" ??)
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Because the person and number of the A or S argument is expressed in the actual verb. The above are usually dropped (however the third person pronoun is occasionally retained to give the distinction between human and non-human subject) so when the pronouns above are come across, it might be better to translate them as "I myself", "you yourself" etc. etc.
It is a rule that tí must follow the A argument (if it is overtly expressed ... i.e. by a free-standing pronoun and not just in the verb)
LINGUISTIC JARGON ... "myself" is what is called a "reflexive pronoun". In English there are many reflexive pronouns (i.e. "myself", "yourself", "herself", etc. etc.) : in béu only one.
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Below the form of the béu pronouns is the given for when the pronoun is the A argument.
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I | pás | we (includes "you") | yúas |
we (doesn't include "you") | wías | ||
you | gís | you (plural) | jés |
he, she | ós | they | nús |
it | ʃís | they | ʃís |
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... The sandaunyo
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The sandaunyo is similar to the fandaunyo but built around a sandau as opposed to a fandau.
sandau = a verbal noun, an infinitive, a maSdar .... whatever you want to call it. Ultimately derived from the word sanyo which means "an event". (fanyo and sanyo are equivalent to the Japanese "mono" and "koto"). The word for "verb" is jaudau. Of course there is a one to one relationship between the jaudau and the sandau (as in English if you have an infinitive verb form, you are of course going to have a corresponding finite verb form).
In the sandaunyo there are fixed word orders. They are VS and VAO. If there are any adverbs or locatives they follow the S or the O. For example ...
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somwo pà = "my sleep"
timpa báu glà = the man's hitting of the woman ... Note that báu does not have the ergative suffix -s
solbe pà moze pona sacowe rì kéu = My drinking the cold water quickly was bad
timpwa glà = the woman being struck ... Note ... to form an passive, you infix w.
solbwe moze rì kéu = The drinking of the water was bad
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..... The hipeza
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A hipeza could be translated as "infinitive phrase"
Now a hipe is a type of nouns. So when determiners etc. etc. are added on they must conform to the rules for regular NP's.
However they differ in that they never take plurals and are never possessed (that is followed by yú ).
Now on occasion S, O and A arguments must appear in a hipeza.
Now in the hipeza béu is quite strict on how these arguments can be added.
1) The S or A argument (if it exists or is mentioned) must come before the hipe. It is preceded by hí (the same particle that indicates the agent in the passive construction)
2) The O argument (if it exists or is mentioned) must come after the hipe. It is followed by jwìa (possibly related to jwèu ... "to endure" ( but if it was this would mean this construction takes two subjects ??)
Often in fast speech, hí and jwìa are dropped, but they are always available to make things clear.
English has quite a number of different ways of including S, O and A arguments with the infinitive. See below ...
1) Attila's destruction of Rome
2) Rome's destruction (by Attila)
3) The destruction of Rome (by Attila)
Tie in the participle phrase (equivalent to Dixon's complement clause) ???
??? Other argument relating to time, place and manner come after the S, O and A arguments ... not sure where these arguments come in, if in fact they are allowed. ???
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..... Numbers
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béu has a unique word for every number from 1 up to 172710
For example ...
ela | = 6 |
icauva | = 7212 |
idaiba | = 50312 |
idaigauba | = 54312 |
ulaigau | = 64012 |
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These 1727 words are made up from smaller elements, using the duodecimal system. These smaller elements are shown in the table below ...
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10012 = | ajai | 1012 = | ajau | one = | aja |
20012 = | uvai | 2012 = | uvau | two = | auva |
30012 = | ibai | 3012 = | ibau | three = | aiba |
40012 = | agai | 4012 = | ugau | four = | uga |
50012 = | idai | 5012 = | idau | five = | ida |
60012 = | ulai | 6012 = | ulau | six = | ela |
70012 = | icai | 7012 = | icau | seven = | oica |
80012 = | ezai | 8012 = | ezau | eight = | eza |
90012 = | okai | 9012 = | okau | nine = | oka |
T0012 = | apai | T012 = | apau | ten = | iapa |
E0012 = | atai | ............. E012 = | atau | ............ eleven = | uata |
Note ... I am using T to represent the number "ten", and E to represent the number "eleven".
To construct a number from the above ...
1) Select which elements you need. For example, for 54312, you will need the elements idai + ugau + aiba
2) If the element is non-initial, delete the initial vowel of the element => idai + gau + ba
3) And now, simply join the elements up => idaigauba
You will noticed that 12 numbers over eleven have been shortened. For example the "regular" form for 20 would be auvau, but this is actually uvau.
Also the number 6, ela has been shortened. This would have been eula if everything was perfectly regular.
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..... Punctuation and page layout
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The letters in a word are always contiguous, that is there is always a line running right through the word. Writing is firstly from top to bottom and secondly from left to right.
Between words there is a small break in the line. See the figure below ...
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When telling somebody how to spell a succession of words, this small break would be indicated by dù
Between some words there is a "gap/void" ?). This represents a pause. A pauses in English is represented by a comma, a colon or a semicolon. Whenever an orator draws breath, this will be reflected in the writing by a "gap/void". Also there are occasions where the grammar of béu demands a "gap/void" (for example when reading out items in a list*, or between two noun phrases that are contiguous).
Presumable in English, commas originally were always used for pauses in speech. However nowadays in English many pauses are not represented in any way (presumably in these cases when it is not necessary for reading comprehension). Also in English, in a surprising amount of times, unnecessary commas are inserted. In béu the use of "gap/void" in text has a one-to-one correspondence to pauses in speech.
*When listing items, béu is similar to English ... there is pause between every item except the last two items. Between these items, béu has lé, English has "and".
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When telling somebody how to spell a succession of words, the gap/void is indicated by saying ???
Single gaps are very common. Occasionally you can have "double gaps" and even "treble gaps". These rare creatures represent "pregnant pauses" which are sometimes used for comic effect.
When telling somebody how to spell a succession of words, a "double gap" is rendered by bauva "gap/void", a treble gap by baiba "gap/void".
Note the single point used in the "double gap" and the pair of points used in the "treble gap".
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There is also a punctuation mark called the "sunmark" ( kòi = sun ). This is basically a full-stop. The "sunmark" has double the diameter of omba (omba means "circle" and is used as a decimal point).
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There are also punctuation marks called "moonmark" ( dèu = moon ). These are basically brackets. The opening one is called "moonmark" damau and the closing one is called "moonmark" dagoi. Direct speech is enclosed in "moonmarks". These bits of direct speech are also highlighted. Usually the first speaker's words are highlighted in blue and the second speaker's words are highlighted in yellow. The highlighted area is lozenge shape. Every "textblock" the protagonists are reset ??. In a story, after the scene is set ... that is the time of speaking and the identity of the speakers have been established, then their names are dropped from the text and the kloi "speak" is also dropped. However somebody reading the text out loud would give this information from their understanding of the situation.
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In a normal narrative, everything is written in "textblocks".
(Please note ... the light lines surrounding the "textblocks" are not real. They are just there to assist me drawing)
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This is the first page in a "chapter". Notice the symbol at the top left hand side of the first "textblock". This is called a "heavy tile".
Textblocks fit in between "rails" about 4 inches apart. The width of a block should be between 60% and 90% * of the block height. Of course it is best to start a new block when the scene of the narrative changes or there is some discontinuity of the action, but this is not always possible. Then you just must arbitrarily split the text into two blocks. The standard practice is to stretch the text a bit so that the tops and bottoms of every column line up with their neighbours. XXXXXX
There is no way to split a word between two lines (as we can do in the West by using two hyphens). A "sunmark" must be next to the last word in a sentence (it can not go to the start of a new column by itself) However if a "sunmark" fall next to the bottom rail, then the next column will begin with a "sunmark". This is purely due to a love of symmetry.
The first text block starts at the top left (as you would expect). The second textblock starts below where the first text block stops. In fact the vertical space between the stop and the start of the two textblocks is equal to the horizontal "interblockspace" (see the figure above).
If the last "sunmark" of a "textblock" falls next to the bottom rail (as indeed happens with the very first "textblock" of the "chapter", then this "sunmark" is changed into a symbol called a "bottom tile". If a "textblock" ends in a "bottom tile", then what is called a "top tile" will appear before the first word of the next "textblock". This is purely due to a love of symmetry. Note that the "top tile" is exactly the same as the "bottom tile". (Actually in modern printing techniques, the text in complete "textblocks" can be stretched to prevent the final "sunmark" falling on the bottom rail)
When you come to the end of the page (you will have some sort of margin of course and not go all the way to the edge), you simply continue the block on the LHS of the next rail (or page). Below is the second page of the chapter. This page continues on from the page above.
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In every textblock, one word or short noun phrase is highlighted in red. The shape of the highlighted area is rectangular with rounded edges. Usually a noun is chosen and the more iconic the better. Statistically these highlighted words tend to come towards the beginning of the "textblock".
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There are two sizes for books. For all hardback books the size is about 8 inches by about 11 inches. For all paperback books the size is about 5 inches by about 8 inches. They are stored as shown in the figure below.
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Unlike books produced in the West, these books are held with the spine horizontal when being read. The hardback page has two "rails" per page (i.e. three dark lines).
On the paperback book, the title is written on the spine and on the front of the book. On the hardback book the title is written on the front, also there is a flap that slides into the spine. However when the book is stored on a shelf, it is pulled out and hangs down. Hence the hardback books can be easily located, even when they are in the bookshelf.
A book will be divided into chapters. A chapter will have a number and usually a title as well. Either at the end of the book or just after the chapter, there will be a page, in which all the highlighted words for a chapter are listed in order. Instead of referencing things by page number, things are reference by chapter and textblock (indictated by the highlighted word(s) ).
Any particular word in a book can be reference by 5 parameters ...
1) "title of book"
2) number of the chapter
3) the highlighted word(s)
4) the number of the sunmarks counted. Actually they are counted backwards ... from the final "sunmark" of the "textblock". Note ... all "sunmarks" are counted, even the ones next to the top rail.
5) the number of the word. This is also counted backwards (i.e. the final word of the sentence is word "1" ... and so on)
* Occasionally very narrow blocks can not be avoided. And of course in mathematical/scientific tracts the tracts are all over the place ... interspersed with diagrams and what have you.
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..... Number symbols
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Numbers are never written out in full. As if in English you never came across the word "seven" but also came across "7". Actually in béu there are two ways to write "7" depending on what environment you find yourself..
Within a textblock they are written vertically (to fit in with everything else) and are headed up by a symbol that looks like "Z". After that the number is written using the symbol for the consonant part of the basic numbers (i.e. 1 -> 11). The symbol for h is used for inserting zeroes in the textblock form (this h symbol would never be pronounced).*. Magnitude is dependent on position.
When not in textblocks ( i.e. when on part of a page or a blackboard given over to manipulating mathematic) they are expressed by symbols based on the Western Mathematical Tradition. This is called the "free form" of the number.
Below is how five numbers (given previously in NUMBERS) would appear in both forms.
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It can be seen that the free form is written horizontally while the textblock form is written vertically.
If you have a number string more than three digits long you must have at least one "magnitude" word. The magnitude words and symbols are given below.
The circle is the béu decimal point. The other marks are equivalent to the comma's that we use to divide up large numbers into blocks of three digits. However instead of only having comma's and decimal points to divide up the number, we have 7 symbols.
Actually all the magnitude numbers are also common nouns as well. These are given on the right-hand-side.
To demonstrate the use of the magnitude words I will introduce a long number. I haven't worked out how to express it in base ten, but in base twelve it is ...
1,206,8E3,051.58T,630,559,62 ... where T represents ten and E represents eleven
In béu it would be pronounced ... aja huŋgu uvaila nàin ezaitauba wúa idauja omba idaizaupa yanfa elaibau mulu idaidauka ʔiwetu elaivau dù ... notice that all the magnitude words are spoken out.
Below is how this number is written in textblock form.
Amd below is how this number is written in free form.
The 7 magnitude words extend the range of numbers expressible. Remember that béu only actually has words for 1-> 1727. But even with the help of magnitude words, the number range expressible in béu restricted.
In textblock form a number is aways finished of with one of the three symbols given below ...
These are called exactness words. They are also spoken out when reciting a number.
The "trunkated" symbol means that some digits have been lopped off, rather being rounded up or down. For example, if you expressed "pie" as 3.1415 you would use the trunkated symbol (actually 3.1416 is closer to the actual number than 3.1415).
It should be quite obvious what "exact" means. "approximate" has a rather loose meaning ... basically anything not "exact". The "trunkated" and "approximate" symbols are both usually spoken as daula, There is a more exact technical expression for trunkated (???) but you hardly ever come across it.
Below are some more symbols used in mathematics. Obviously these symbols would be used in a free form area (i.e. the free form part of a page)
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Note ... The symbol for four is not circular. It seems to "sag" ... it is bigger at the bottom than at the top ... not exactly egg-shaped either but ...
*If you had a leading zero you would use the word jù. 007 would be jù jù oica (three words). To deal with a telephone number, you would lump the numbers in threes (any leading zero or zeroes by themselves though) and outspeak the numbers. If you were left with a single digit (say 4) it would be pronounced agai. If you were to pronounce it uga, it would of course mean 004. Also you would probably add the particle dù at the end. This means "exactly" (or it can mean the speaker has finished outspeaking the number).
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..... Arithmetic
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nogau = arithmetic
One further point of note ...
If you wanted to express a number represented by digits 2->4 from the LHS of the monster, you would say auvaidaula nàin .... the same way as we have in the Western European tradition. However if you wanted to express a number represented digits 6 ->8 from the RHS of the monster, you would say yanfa elaibau .... not the way we do it. This is like saying "milli 630 volts" instead of "630 microvolts".
-6 is pronounced komo ela ... komo meaning left or negative.
By the way bene means right (as in right-hand-side) or positive.
4i is pronounced uga haspia** ... and what does haspia mean, well it is the name of the little squiggle that touches the number bar, for one thing.
-4i is pronounced komo uga haspia
-1/10 is pronounced komo diapa
i/4 is pronounced duga haspia
*Actually these placeholder symbols are named after 6 living things. This does not lead to confusion tho'. When you are doing arithmetic these concrete meanings are totally bleached.
**This can also be pronounced as bene uga haspia. However usually the bene bit is deemed redundent.
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Algebra
WHERE DOES THIS ONE GO ??
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haijogu = arithmetic
In the West we use x y and z to represent variables. In béu we have 3 special symbols to represent these three variables. The names of these symbols are haigan, jogan and gugan
Also in béu there are certain conventions to adhere to. If we are considering one dimension only, it is invariably called haigan and is represented by an up and down the page (see the diagram below).
If we are considering two dimension, then the variable jogan is added at 90 degrees to the haigan line (see the diagram below).
And if we are considering three dimension, then the variable gugan is added at 60 degrees to the haiganline and 30 degrees to the jogan line (see the diagram below)
I need a name for "i" 1/2 and sqrt 1/2 symbols ???
You will notice that instead of using brackets a horizontal line is placed over the elements that must be considered together. Also exponents are simple placed above the number that they qualify.
Note ... haigan is probably derived from the adjective hái. Likewise jogan from the adjective joga and gugan from the adjective guboi
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.... Calculus
laigau = calculus
yyyy = straight, straight line ... both an adjective and a noun
xxxx = curvy, a curve ............. both an adjective and a noun
Now xxxx also means function. Or at least instead of talking about putting x into a function (process) and obtaining y, the tradition in béu is to talk about xxxx defined in terms of x and y (either through an equation or simply a list of x and y values)
xxxx is usually written using the sign below.
xxxx is declared to exits in the dimensions (variabes) haigan and kyugan below.
xxxx is defined in terms of an equation below.
Now the differential of xxxx is called molgan xxxxwo and is written as .... (the image on the RHS is the second differential)
And the integral of xxxx is called fendagan xxxxwo and is written as .... (the image on the RHS is the second integral)
Note moloi = slant, slop, incline, gradient .... fenda = area
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..... Fractional and ordinal numbers
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To get an fractional number (regarded as specifiers ... as all numbers are) you just attach s- to the front of the cardinal number. So we have ;-
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a unit | saja |
a half | sauva |
a third | saiba |
a quarter | sida |
etc. | etc. |
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These are fully numbers. They are written in the same way as numbers, except the have a squiggle above them. The squiggle looks like an "8" on its side that hasn't fully closed.
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To get an ordinal number (regarded as adjectives) you just attach n- to the front of the cardinal number. So we have ;-
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first | naja |
second | nauva |
third | naiba |
fourth | nida |
etc. | etc. |
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May be this form originally came from an amalgamation of nò plus the number.
These forms are adjectives 100% and are always written out in full.
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To get (I don't know what these are called) (regarded as a noun) you just attach b- to the front of the cardinal number. So we have ;-
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alone, single | baja |
a double, a twosome, a duality | bauva |
a threesome, a trinity | baiba |
a foursome, a quartet | bida |
etc. | etc. |
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Note bajai = lonely ..
... Index
- Introduction to Béu
- Béu : Chapter 1 : The Sounds
- Béu : Chapter 2 : The Noun
- Béu : Chapter 3 : The Verb
- Béu : Chapter 4 : Adjective
- Béu : Chapter 5 : Questions
- Béu : Chapter 6 : Derivations
- Béu : Chapter 7 : Way of Life 1
- Béu : Chapter 8 : Way of life 2
- Béu : Chapter 9 : Word Building
- Béu : Chapter 10 : Gerund Phrase
- Béu : Discarded Stuff
- A statistical explanation for the counter-factual/past-tense conflation in conditional sentences