Emnian verbs: Difference between revisions
(→Roots) |
|||
Line 17: | Line 17: | ||
Guttural roots contain a historic guttural (ʾ, Ḥ, or ʿ in any position, H in any position except final, or R as second radical). Guttural roots behave slightly differently than strong roots. Below are the correspondences between the historic guttural radicals and their modern orthographic representations: | Guttural roots contain a historic guttural (ʾ, Ḥ, or ʿ in any position, H in any position except final, or R as second radical). Guttural roots behave slightly differently than strong roots. Below are the correspondences between the historic guttural radicals and their modern orthographic representations: | ||
===Stems=== | ===Stems=== |
Revision as of 19:17, 21 February 2022
This article is incomplete because it is pending further input from participants, or it is a work-in-progress by one author. Please comment on this article's talk page to share your input, comments and questions. Note: To contribute to this article, you may need to seek help from the author(s) of this page. |
In Emnian, verbs take the form of derived stems, and are conjugated to reflect their tense and mood, as well as to agree with their subjects in gender, number, and person. Each verb has an inherent voice, though a verb in one voice typically has counterparts in other voices. This article deals primarily with modern Emnian but the information shown here applies to some extent to Middle Emnian as well.
Verb classification
Roots
Verbs in Emnian, like nouns, adjectives, and adverbs, are formed and declined by altering a two- to five- (but usually three-) letter stem. Vowels are added between these consonants in a pattern to form a related meaning between different roots. For instance, seomháir "he kept" and cotháibh both have the same C(e)oC(h)áiC(h) pattern to indicate the third person singular past tense.
Emnian verbs can be further divided into strong verbs (wholly regular verbs), weak verbs (verbs with predictable irregularities), and irregular verbs (wholly irregular verbs).
There are three common types of weak verbs: guttural (containing ʾ, Ḥ, or ʿ in any position, H in any position except final, or R as second radical in the historic root), hollow (containing W or Y anywhere, or H as the final radical in the historic root), or repeating (ending with two of the same radical).
Guttural weak roots
Guttural roots contain a historic guttural (ʾ, Ḥ, or ʿ in any position, H in any position except final, or R as second radical). Guttural roots behave slightly differently than strong roots. Below are the correspondences between the historic guttural radicals and their modern orthographic representations:
Stems
Regular conjugation
Infinitive
Stem | ||
---|---|---|
Conjugation I | ||
Strong | l'o12ó3 | |
Conjugation II | ||
Strong | l'oi1i22éi3 | |
Conjugation III | ||
Strong | l'ai12í3 | |
Conjugation IV | ||
Strong | l'oith1i22éi3 | |
Conjugation V | ||
Strong | l'u12ái3 | |
Conjugation VI | ||
Strong | l'o1u22ái3 | |
Conjugation VII | ||
Strong | l'oi11i2éi3 |
Prefix conjugation (Nonpast Tense)
Stem | Suffix y/n | |
---|---|---|
No | Yes | |
Conjugation I | ||
Strong | -12ió3 | -12ió3- |
Conjugation II | ||
Strong | -1ai22éi3 | -1ái223- |
Conjugation III | ||
Strong | -12í3 | -12í3- |
Conjugation IV | ||
Strong | -th1i22éi3 | -th1iái223- |
Conjugation V | ||
Strong | -12ái3 | -12ái3- |
Conjugation VI | ||
Strong | -1u22ái3 | -1ú223- |
Conjugation VII | ||
Strong | -11i2éi3 | -11iái23- |
Suffix conjugation (Past Tense)
Stem | Suffix | ||
---|---|---|---|
None | Vowel | Consonant | |
Conjugation I | |||
Strong | 1o2ái3 | 1ói23- | 1o2ái3- |
Conjugation II | |||
Strong | 1oi22éi3 | 1oí223- | 1oi22éi3- |
Conjugation III | |||
Strong | i12í3 | i12í3- | i12í3- |
Conjugation IV | |||
Strong | oith1i22éi3 | oith1iái223- | oith1i22éi3- |
Conjugation V | |||
Strong | u12ái3 | u12ái3- | u12ái3- |
Conjugation VI | |||
Strong | 1u22ái3 | 1uái223- | 1u22ái3- |
Conjugation VII | |||
Strong | noi12iá3 | noi12éi3- | noi12iá3- |
Present participle
Root Type | Singular | Plural | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Masculine (no suffix) |
Feminine -e / -a |
Masculine -imh / -aimh |
Feminine -eoth / -aoth | |
Conjugation I | ||||
Strong | 1o2ai3 | 1o2ai3e | 1oi23imh | 1oi23eoth |
Conjugation II | ||||
Strong | ma1ai22ei3 | ma1ai22ei3e | ma1ai22ei3imh | ma1ai22ei3eoth |
Conjugation III | ||||
Strong | mai12í3 | mai12í3e | mai12í3imh | mai12í3eoth |
Conjugation IV | ||||
Strong | moith1i22ei3 | moith1i22ei3e | moith1i22ei3imh | moith1i22ei3eoth |
Conjugation V | ||||
Strong | mu12ái3 | mu12ái3e | mu12ái3imh | mu12ái3eoth |
Conjugation VI | ||||
Strong | ma1u22ai3 | ma1u22ai3e | ma1u22ai3imh | ma1u22ai3eoth |
Conjugation VII | ||||
Strong | noi12ia3 | noi12ia3a | noi12ia3aimh | noi12ia3aoth |