Northian nouns

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Northian nominals are the nouns, adjectives, and some adverbs of the Northian language.


Obstruent stems

The category of consonant-stems consist only of those that end in -p and -k, while resonant- and vowel-stem root nouns are discussed in their own categories, whether suffixed or not, as the phonological processes that apply to them generate similar results. The obstruents p- and k- are rarely subject to alteration, except before the nom. sing. ending -s where they become fricativized to f- and x-, respectively.

The noun āfš < PEE *h₂ēp-s "river" is often the poster-boy of the Northian nouns due to its straightforward stem and clear ablaut alteration between ā ~ a. ap "force" is used for neuter nouns, displaying PEE e ~ Ø ablaut > Galic o ~ Ø. Both these nouns are of the OX type, displaying an accented genitive ending in -ō < PNN *-os.

hā āfš, "river" θaṯ ap, "force"
sing du pl sing du pl
nom āfš āpōi̯ āpiš ap apī apa
voc ap
acc āpam āpaṇġ
gen apōḫ apōš apõ bōḫ bōš
loc api apō apšo api fšu
dat apei̯ apmō apmuš bei̯ bmō bmuš
ins apōi̯ bōi̯

t-stems

The stems ending in -t comprise both of root nouns and suffixed nouns. They are underlyingly the same as other obstruent stems but are distinguished in that final -s is preserved in the nominative case, at the expense of *-t-. t-stems not part of a compound suffix such as -tāt- and -tūt- are rare and are descended mainly from the amphikinetic ablaut type.

nēpōs "grandchild" has the stem nep-ot-, where the suffix undergoes ablaut to zero grade in the oblique cases as *nep-t- > nef-θ-.

ha nēpōs, "grandchild"
sing du pl
nom nēpōs nepotōi̯ nepotiš
voc
acc nepotam nefθā̊
gen nefθōḫ nefθōš nefθõm
loc nepoti nefθō nefšu
dat nefθei̯ nefθmō nefšmuš
ins nefθa

The PEE suffix *-teh₂ts created nouns of states of being. Inherited examples are mainly of hysterokinetic origin, which had the zero grade of the root, but later creations may bind the full grade. The suffix is non-ablauting and takex oxytone endings. The following example has many cognates in EE languages and is from a common root *n̥-mr̥teh₂ts > PNN *ummurtāts > Galic āmmərətās.

hā āmmərətās, "immortality"
sing du pl
nom āmmərətās āmmərətātōi̯ āmmərətātiš
voc āmmərətāṯ
acc āmmərətātam āmmərətātā̊
gen āmmərətātōḫ āmmərətātōš āmmərətātõ
loc āmmərətāti āmmərətātō āmmərətāššu
dat āmmərətātei̯ āmmərətāsmō āmmərətāθmuš
ins āmmərətāta

nt-stems

The nt-stems are very closely associated with the formation of the present active participle in -nt-. But while participles have distinct masculine, feminine, and neuter forms, nt-stem nouns have the form of the masculine participle and a lexical gender (that is, the noun can have feminine gender but will always have the same inflectional endings as the masculine participle).

ha dōs, "tooth"
sing du pl
nom dōs dónδōi̯ dónδiš
voc doṇṯ
acc donδəm dónδā̊
gen dātōḫ dātōš dātõm
loc dónδi dātō dāśū
dat dātei̯ dāśmō dāśmuš
ins dāta

m-stems

This class is known from only a few but important nouns, e.g. θáɣā "earth" and zīi̯ō "winter", as well as from the root, dā̊ "house". All m-stem nouns in Northian are feminine in gender, though with only a few examples, this may not be an actual rule in the proto-language. Outside of nouns, it is also known in numerals for 1, 7, and 10—hā̊ haftā dekā—and the solitary adjective merə "particulate, ground up". Some authorities believe many m-stems may have, during the time of the proto-language, been either remade to thematic neuters or had an additional *-n added after the *m-, giving rise to the multitude of n-stems of the -mn- type, wherein the -m- is of otherwise unexplained origin.

hā giyō, "winter" = hiemps
sing du pl
nom giyō giyamōi̯ giyaēmiš
voc giyõm
acc giyā̊ gimā̊
gen gimōḫ gimōš gimõm
loc giyaēmi gimō giṃśū
dat gimāi̯ gimmō gimmuš
ins gimō gimβiiōḫ

Most suffixed nouns with OX inflection have a long o-grade suffix in the nominative singular, e.g. giyō, and in this regard they are the same as the n-stems. In fact, given the rules of phonetic change, *-ōm and *-ōn cannot be told apart, so it is possible this ending has been transported from the n-stems. But θā̀m xmōḫ "earth" has a nominative that must be disyllabic, i.e. θáɣam, with a short ultima reflecting a zero grade, in the nom. sing. Had the second vowel been a typical long o-grade, it would have become *ō and would not merge across the guttural consonant, giving *θáɣō.

In the accusative, the sequence *-em-m̥ in the proto-language resolves prehistorically to *-ēm via Stang's law and appears in Northian as -ā̊, while the equivalent sequence for n-stems *-en-m̥ yielded Northian -en-əm.  

Note that the full grade in the accusative plural θágmā̊ reverts to the root syllable; the suffix is in zero grade. I-mutation affects the locative singular and nominative plural in the usual manner.

hā θáḥàm, "ground, earth" = χθών
sing du pl
nom θáḥàm θáḥàmōi̯ θáɣaēmiš
voc
acc xā̊ θāxmā̊
gen xmōḫ xštą̄ōš xštõm
loc xštémi xštą̄ō xštāŋhū
dat xmai xštą̄mō xštą̄muš
ins xmōi

To this table above must be subjoined that xā̊ < *dʰǵʰḗm < *dʰǵʰém-m̥ is only found in a handful of instances in Galic Period I, and even there it is not exclusive. The proto-form of the accusative is uncertain, since many authorities predict this word should have a full-grade root syllable, which should result in dysyllabic *θaɣā̊. But the form actually found is monosyllabic, which could only come from a zero-grade root. If the oblique stem *dʰǵʰm- was later introduced to replace the nominative stem, the resulting form would have been expected xam, with the *m of the stem probably vocalized as short by position.

n-stems

This group of nouns had multiple subtypes, whose common feature was the stem-final consonant -n; their phonetic outcomes can be quite different due to vocalization rules.

A common subtype of the n-stems is through the suffix *-mn-, which is common in Northian. The OX pattern was normal for animate nouns, and the PX in neuter nouns.

In fraōmō "breath", the nom. singular ending -ō (which occludes the shape of the stem) arises due to the effects of a PEE sound law that deleted any resonants in the environment of *-ōR in auslaut. Ablauting nouns in this class will have an accented root in the direct cases and accented ending in oblique cases, except in the locative singular where the accented suffix is attested.

Depending on the exact phonetic environment, the -m- of the suffix may be vocalized in different ways. See the notes above for the formation of the zero-grade in Northian, which are unusually sensitive to phonetic environment.

ha fraōmō, "lung"
sing du pl
nom fraōmō fraōmanōi̯ fraōmaēniš
voc fraōman
acc fraōmanəm fraōmanā̊
gen fərəuụą̄nōḫ fərəuụānōš fərəuụą̄nõm
loc frumen fərəuụānō fərəuụāŋhū
dat fərəuụą̄nei̯ fərəuụą̄nmō fərəuụānmuš
ins fərəuụą̄n

fnaōmin "breath" is an ablauting mn-stem noun with PX inflection. Owing to its semantic connection with fraōmō "lung" as well as the shape of the oblique stem under the influence of u, the alternate spelling fraōmin is also seen, for example G.Nr. 1477 mōi̯ βā θxámin apū fraōmíñīḥ fərəuụānōš dito "By the Earth, let therefore not [his] breaths be given away from his two lungs". But these two words are from etymologically unrelated roots.

θaṯ fnaōmin, "breath"
sing du coll
nom fnaōmin fnaōmíñīḥ fnaōmō
voc
acc
gen frumaṇġ frumenuš frumenõm
loc frumíñi frumenū frumáŋhū
dat frumenma frumenmuš
ins frumā̊

There are also n-stems not part of a suffix of *-mn-. They are rarer than the type with -mn- and are sometimes emphasized as "bare" n-stems. They are of two types, distinguished in the nom. sing., those with -ō and those with -ā̊. Though less common, they are typical of family names.

In uə̄rštā̊ "male of an animal", of the type ending in -ō, PNN stems are ablauting *uors-on- and *uərəs-n-. In the nom. sing. the root vowel is lengthened, occasioning the loss of the root-final resonant prehistorically. As it will appear, the stem-final -n- is vocalized if the ending begins with a consonant; the gen. and loc. du. begin with the prehistoric laryngeal, which still trigger vocalization and are reflected as Galic hiatus and quantitative and qualitative alteration. After *r and its vocalized allophone, *s obligatorily becomes š, which cannot precede a vowel directly and to which a t is added. However, this addition is chronologically late and therefore applicable to the loc. and gen. du. forms, even though earlier they were considered to begin with consonants and trigger vocalization.

hā uə̄rštā̊, "male of an animal"
sing du pl
nom uə̄rštā̊ uə̄rštinōi̯ uə̄rštiniš
voc uə̄rštin
acc uə̄rštinəm uə̄rštinā̊
gen uərəšnōḫ uərəšta·ā̊š uərəšnõm
loc uərəšténi uərəšta·ā̊ uərəštāhū
dat uərəšnei̯ uərəštāmō uərəštāmuš
ins uərəštā

yəu̯ụə̄ "youth" < *h₂yéwHō has the same suffix as above underlying, but preceded by a laryngeal that colours the *-en- to *-on-. As a result, the rule that deletes final resonants following lengthened *-ō comes into play and produces the same ending as the animate mō-stems (but in this example it is altered to ə̄ following w-). But here in the gen. and loc. du. it is the suffix *-n- that becomes vocalized when followed by a consonant. The resulting vowel is shortened on account of the preceding laryngeal, with regular alterations of quality and quantity to surrounding vowels.

ha yəu̯ụə̄, "youth"
sing du pl
nom yəu̯ụə̄ yəu̯ụənōi̯ yəu̯ụiñiš
voc yəu̯ụən
acc yəu̯ụənəm yəu̯ụənā̊
gen yūnōḫ yuụa·ā̊š yūnõm
loc yəu̯ụəni yuụa·ā̊ yuụahū
dat yūnei̯ yuụamō yuụamuš
ins yūna

r-stems

dugitṓ "daughter" represents the oxytone group of the r-stems, which includes many agentive nouns that terminate in *-tēr. They are recognizable by their zero-grade nom. endings and full-grade -ō endings in gen.

hā dugitṓ, "daughter"
sing du pl
nom dugitṓ dugiterōi̯ dugitériš
voc
acc dugiterəm dúgiδrā̊
gen duxθrōḫ dugitarṓš duxθrõm
loc duxθrai dugitarṓ duhitušštū
dat duxtərəmṓ duxtərəmō
ins duxθrōi̯ duxθəramβiiōḫ

mātar "mother" represents the group with inherited acrostatic pattner, whose accent persists on the root syllable and always takes suffix and ending in zero-grade. βrātar "brother" is declined in like manner.

hā mātar, "mother"
sing du pl
nom mātar māδəra māδriš
voc
acc māδrəm māδərą̄s
gen māδərəš māδərouš māδrõm
loc māδri mātəroū māδərəštū
dat māδərəma māδərəmuš
ins māδəra māδərəβiiōḫ

Gen. māδərəš < *meh₂tr̥s. The acc. pl. māδərą̄s seems to reflect PEE *meh₂tr̥ns (for expected *meh₂tern̥s), while other Nordic languages reflect *meh₂tern̥s. The form is a deviation from the general rule of resonant vocalization, but the vocalization of *r̥ could have been carried over from the gen. sing., where it is the only resonant that could be vocalized; moreover, it is a perfect match with Xevdenite mātərąs, hinting that the vocalization of -n̥s was not (yet) a firm rule in the proto-language. In Galic, māδra "two mothers" is often an ellipsis for "mother and father".

There is also

hā yatar, "husband's brother's wife"
sing du pl
nom yatar yatiri yatiriš
voc
acc yaδrəm yaterā̊
gen yatās mātərouš māδrõm
loc yatiri mātəroū mātərəšū
dat māδərəma mātərəmuš
ins yatiri

s-stems

The s-stem nouns can be divided into two classes, more numerous, neuter nouns like xrétāḫ and animate nouns like aōštā̊. The former suffix exhibits qualitative ablaut from *-os ~ es-, while the second class has a more conventional, quantitative -os ~ s- pattern.

The os/es-stems are a class of very common neuter nouns in Northian and are directly cognate to those found in Nordic languages, where the ablaut surfaces as -az ~ iz-. Though in Galic times and later only the PX pattern is productive, there a few common s-stem nouns exhibiting an original acrostatic accent. In this class, the root was consistently accented.

In PX the nom. sing. ended in -āḫ < unaccented *-os; this *-os is a bare stem. The suffix ablauted to -es- for all oblique cases, but here the ending once again acts prominently on the suffix. If the ending began with a vowel, the final -s of the suffix would be intervocalic and become -h, which colours any neighbouring /e/ to /a/. As a result, the gen. ended in -ah-āḫ < *-es-os. If the ending began with a consonant, the -s remained and the unaccented /e/ usually became /i/. The gen. and loc. du. endings began with a laryngeal consonant, not vowels. When the /s/ comes into contact with a vowel with the loss of the laryngeal, an epenthetic /t/ was added at the same time for the conservation of euphony. The lack of accent causes the ins. pl. also to end in -βiiāḫ < *-bʰyos.

The gen. sing. has an allomorph xrétahas that often appears before compounds and enclitics, e.g. xrétahás-ka "and of power". It is uncertain if this form may reflect the alternate genitive ending *-es in the proto-language, which would be coloured to -as following /h/, or if it is merely a regular development from the familiar ending -os when unaccented. However, the enclitic should regularly accent this syllable. Additionally, the early literature has the combining form xrétahós-ka, showing the regular retention of *-os in accented position, though these can be editorial alterations, as changes would affect neither metre nor rhyme.

θaṯ xrétāḫ, "intellect, power"
sing du pl
nom xrétāḫ xrétahāḥ xrétā̊
voc
acc
gen xrétahāḫ xrétištuš xrétahõm
loc xrétāḫ xrétištū xrétišštū
dat xrétahai xrétišma xrétišmuš
ins xrétahōi xrétižβiiāḫ

The noun aōštā̊ "dawn" has feminine gender and therefore a distinct accusative. The noun had three basic stems: the strong stem which appears in the sing. nom. and voc. comes from PEE *h₂eu̯s-os-, with regular lengthening of the final syllable anticipating a zero nominative ending; the middle stem appears in the other direct cases and is from *h₂us-es-; the weak stem appears in all other cases and is from *h₂us-s-, with full-grade endings as expected in oxytone words. Note the singular voc. ended in *-os which became *-oh and then -ōḫ in Galic; the final *-h is lost except before enclitics and compounds, where it can condition phonetic changes. The effects of the former *-h is denoted orthographically as <ḫ> but is otherwise silent.

Also presented is βiịā̊ "fear", from PEE *bʰeyh₂-os, of masculine gender. The nom. sing. stem has been replaced by zero-grade PNN *bihₐ-. The stem ending in laryngeal will have as its residual effect the colouring of the oblique alloform of the suffix *-es- to -as-.

hā aōštā̊, "dawn" ha βiịā̊, "fear"
sing du pl sing du pl
nom aōštā̊ uštištōi̯ uštahāḫ βiịā̊ βii̯ahōi̯ βii̯ahāḫ
βoc aōštōḫ βii̯ōḫ
acc uštóziiam uštahā̊ βiyáziiam βi̯ahahā̊
gen ušštōḫ ušštōs ušštõm βišštōḫ βišštōs βišštõm
loc uštišti ušštō ūšštū βištišti βišštō βišštū
dat ušštei̯ uššmō uššmuš βišštei̯ βiššmō βiššmuš
ins ušštōi̯ βišštōi̯

The word mūš "mouse" is a non-ablauting s-stem noun.

sā mūš, "mouse, small rodent"
sing du pl
nom mūš mūštōi̯ mūštiš
voc mūš
acc mūštam mūštā̊
gen mūštōḫ mūštōs mūštõm
loc mūšti mūštō mūšštū
dat mūštei̯ mūšmō mūšmuš
ins mūštōi̯

i-stems

The i-stems were a prolific class of nouns in Northian during the Galic period. In the proto-language, the i-stems were completely parallel to the u-stems in virtually all ways, but due to sound changes their surface forms in Northian are quite different. Accordingly, they are considered separate classes in Northian tradition.

The PX pattern of the i-stems gained primacy early in Northian history, and these nouns proliferated, being built to a variety of roots. These nouns usually show no root ablaut, but the example provided here does. Where the root did not show ablaut, the accent was presistent on the suffix, even in zero-grade. The other forms require little comment, other than the gen. and loc. du. and gen. pl. where the suffix *-i is consonantal before endings beginning with a vowel, which here triggers the palatalization of preceding *-t.

Of the neuter nouns in -i, only one example can be considered original to the parent language, that being mori "sea". Most other neuter nouns can be shown to be petrified neuter forms of adjectives in i-stem.

hā menδiš, "thought" θaṯ mori, "sea"
sing du pl sing du coll
nom meṇδiš meṇδaiia meṇδaiiāḫ mori morai morō
voc meṇδi
acc meṇδim mātī
loc menδō māčiiū mātištū
gen mātaiš māčiiuš māčiiõm
dat mātaiiai mātima mātimuš
ins mātīḥ mātiβiiōḫ

The OX pattern of the i-stems was only moderately productive in Galic times and not productive by later ages. In the nominative du. and pl., the suffix is in long o-grade; the suffix consonantal *-i is lost. The provenance of this form has not been entirely made clear, since if the suffix did contain -i in final position, it should have survived in Northian. Nevertheless, the same deletion corresponds exactly with forms found in archaic grammars in Syaran and Tennite languages, so the dropping of final -i is likely to have been old. Some phonetic change akin to Stang's law may be responsible for its deletion either after a long vowel or before putative ending *-s.

Perhaps owing to the phonetic similarity between the dual and plural nom. forms, *-ē > -ōi̯, which is not expected after i-, often displaces the expected -āḥ. However, there is also a hapax of short -e found in Galic, which suggests the -ōi̯ may be a late alteration, inserted after -āḥ had ceased to be distinguishable in regular speech from pl. -āḫ.

This pattern has a neuter equivalent that ended in -ai < *-ei̯ in the nominative; otherwise, oblique cases inflect identically. This neuter pattern is very rare and only present in a few examples like óxϑai "palm", whose archaic dual form óxϑō means "eight". This suggests that the ordinary neuter nominative dual ending -īḥ < *-ih₁ may have originated in the i-stems and displaced an earlier ending of *-h₁; logically the earlier ending would have been preserved after an i-stems, where the composite form would be redundant.

ha hokō, "friend, ally" = socius θaṯ óxϑai, "palm"
sing du pl sing du pl
nom hokō hokoiiāḥ
hokoiiōi
hokoiiāḫ óxϑai óxϑayīḥ óxϑaiiāḫ
voc hoki
acc hokā̊ hokoiiā̊
loc hokai škiyō škištū
gen śxiiōḫ škiyōš śxiiõm
dat śxiiai škimō škimuš
ins śxiiō škiβiiōḫ

u-stems

The u-stems of Northian reflect three ablaut patterns, and excepting the acrostatic they are both attested abundantly in the Galic language. The PX pattern from the proterokinetic nouns of the parent-lanugage is the most common.

ha huiiuš, "child" = υἱύς θaṯ oiiū, "life, generation"
sing du pl sing du coll
nom huiiuš huiiáuua huiiáuuāḫ oiiū oiiāu̯ oiiō
voc huiiaō
acc huiium huiiūš
gen huiiōš huiiūš huiiuõm
loc huiiau̯i huiiū huiiuštū
dat huiiuma huiiumuš
ins huiiū huiiumβiiōḫ

The PX pattern in u-stem nouns is very prolific in both the Galic and Epic languages. Many are abstract nouns with the ending -tuš. The nom. ended in -uš. While some nouns would show root ablaut, the example provided above does not and therefore has all components in zero grade in the nom; the hypothetical forms *haōiiuš or *hōiiuš might be expected based on the general ablaut tendencies, but it is in fact the proto-form of huiiuš that is attested in all EE languages, showing that the spread of the zero-grade root probably occurred in the proto-language. The gen. ended in *-ou̯-s, whence -ōš. All the other oblique cases show *-eu̯- or *-u- in the suffix.

The gen. du. has -ūš, which must reflect *-u-us. The loc. du. has -ū, from *-u-u. The nom. pl. and acc. have the expected forms, with PNN *-uns > Galic -ūš. All other forms in the plural are straightforward and have the zero-grade suffix -u-.

The neuter version of the PX u-stems, in contradistinction to the animate ones, often displays root ablaut, which alternates strong and weak stems. The strong has o-grade from PEE *h₂ói̯-u > unchanged Galic oiiū, save the regular lengthening of final *-u. The oblique stem is from PEE *h₂i̯-eu̯-s > also unaltered Galic yaōš.

hā génōš, "jaw" = jaw
sing du pl
nom génōš genauuə̄ genauuāḫ
voc génaō
acc genā̊ genuuā̊
gen jñuuōḫ gnuōš jñuuõm
loc jñaō gnuō gnuštū
dat jñuuōi̯ gnumō gnumuš
ins jñuua

The OX pattern had a nom. sg. ending in PEE *-ou̯-s, which regularly gave Galic -ō-š. The gen. and dat. reflects PEE *-u-os and *-u-ei̯ as expected in a hysterokinetic pattern. The dual behaves as expected. The acc. is on account of the deletion of resonants before a syllabic nasal, genā̊ < *gen-ēm < *gen-eu̯-m̥. Note in this word some oblique forms have the stem jñuu-, which is an altered form of *gnw-. Northian generally permits up to three consonants (or four, if beginning with s-) in anlaut, but only if they contain no stops; if they do, stops are altered to fricative counterparts. This rule is not in effect for sequences of only two members in anlaut, hence the conserved gn- when the following *w is vocalized. Note also, the genitive and dative dual endings begin with a (lost) laryngeal, triggering the vocalization of *w.

ī-stems

The ī-stems in paroxytone has remained productive down to the Epic period as a feminizing suffix for athematic nouns. This suffix showed ablaut from full grade *-ieh₂ ~ -ih₂ > Northian -i̯ā ~ ī. As these nouns typically had a root that participated in ablaut, the suffix was in zero-grade in the strong cases and in full-grade in the weak ones. In the example geniδrīḥ "genitrix", the nom. is asigmatic. Notice that, in the gen. jñiδriiā̊, the laryngeal is syllabified with the preceding vowel and causes it to lengthen, but in the dat. jñiδriiayi it syllabifies with the following vowel and does not cause the one preceding to lengthen; in both cases, though, the preceding vowel is coloured. The regular syllabification is only attested in Galic; by Didaskalic and Epic times, the dative was remade according to the genitive and has a long -iiā-.

The -o- in the gen. and dat. du. forms is a Runic orthographic insertion done to prevent the incorrect scansion of dysyllabic /a.us/ as monosyllabic /aws/; the -o- is spurious and silent. It is not present in all texts: monumental inscriptions usually omit it.

hā geniδrīḥ, "genitrix" = genitrix
sing du pl
nom geniδrīḥ geniδrīya geniδriyāḫ
voc
acc geniδrī geniδrīyā̊
gen jñiδriiā̊ jñiδriiāouš jñiδri̯aõm
loc jñiδriiayi jñiδriiaoū jñiδriiāhū
dat jñiδriiāma jñiδriiāmuš
ins jñiδriiaā̊

The main points of contrast to those in PX are that the nom. singular is sigmatic and that the nom. dual ends in -ii̯āḥ, rather than PX -īi̯a; for the same reason why in PX the gen. and dat. sing suffix vary in quantity, in this ending in OX the laryngeal scans as part of the following syllable, with the pre-forms *stérih₂eh₁ > *stériā, and thus leaves the preceding *-i- short. In the dat. singular the ending becomes an offglide because it was not separated from the suffix by a laryngeal, with the preform *stérih₂e-i.

hā šterīḥ, "heifer"
sing du pl
nom šterīḥ šterii̯āḥ šteriịāḫ
voc šterī
acc šterī šteriịā̊
loc šterī štrii̯ō štrīštū
gen štrii̯ōḫ štrii̯ōš štrīi̯õm
dat štrii̯ai̯ štrīmō štrīmuš
ins štrī

ū-stems

The ū-stems were exactly parallel to the ī-stems at the PEE and PNN levels, but due to phonetic changes have become quite different. The nom. sing. of hysterokinetic stems had accented root syllable and an ending in PEE *-uh₂-s > *PNN *-ūs > Galic *-ūš. The acc. requires a proto-form *-ueh₂-m, but already has simplified to *-u̯ām > PNN *-u̯ą̄m. In the oblique cases, the stem ended in -ū-, to which full-grade endings were added. The zero-grade stem has replaced the original full-grade one in the dual nom. such that it projects the (implausible) PEE form *tn̥-uh₂-h₁.

hā θánūḥ, "body"
sing du pl
nom θánūḥ θánuuoōi θánuuaāḫ
voc θánū
acc θánuuā̊ θnuvā̊
gen θnuvōḫ θnūvōš θnuvõm
loc θnuuā θnūvō θnuŋhū
dat θnuvai θnūmō θnūmuš
ins θnuvōi θnūmβiiōḫ

r/n-stems

The r/n-stems, or heteroclitics, continue a class of EE nouns that had different suffixes for direct and oblique stems. Excepting productive derivative suffixes *-tr̥ and *-mr̥, they are all neuter nouns with fundamental meanings and show PPX inflection in the singular and dual. Many did not take plural but collective endings, which are OX and combine singular endings the nom. and plural endings in oblique forms. In the Epic language, many heteroclitics also formed ordinary plurals from the zero-grade stem, which agree with singular verbs and have meanings different from those of their collective forms.

In the Galic language, many heteroclitic nouns have opaque forms owing to their short stem and susceptibility to ablaut, vocalization, and internal sandhi.

yō·ərə = /yō.r̥/ "year", is from *yoh₁-r̥. Proto-form of gen. *yoh₁-n̥-s or *yeh₁-n̥-s should anticipate a PNR form like *yā-āh, but nowhere is this found or metrically allowed; instead, one finds monosyllabic yā̊, which according to Krueger may be an ad hoc replacement for *i-āh, logically assumed to be from < *ih₁-n̥-s. However, the contraction of syllables is very rare in Northian, so this explanation has not achieved agreement by authorities.

θaṯ yō·ərə, "year" = ὥρα
sing du coll
nom yō·ərə yōrī ya·ō
voc
acc
gen yā̊ yānuš īyõm
loc yiñi yānū īštū
dat yāŋma īmuš
ins yān

fāuuərə "fire" has PX inflection, with accented suffix in the oblique cases. In the nom. sing. the proto-form was from *péh₂wr̥; the final -ərə is paedagogically taught as /ara/, but as it is a single long syllable and not two short as the orthography implies, authorities concur it probably represents a preserved, tautosyllabic -R-r̥ sequence. This ending also occurs with the *-mr̥ compound suffix, but not *-tr̥. Oblique stem is from *ph₂wén- > *fiwen > Galic fūvon-. The collective form is fūvə̄, which is presumably from *ph₂wṓ, showing the replacement of full-grade root by zero-grade that is common in derived OX nouns, cp. direct cognate in Elder Nordic fōr.

θaṯ fāuuərə, "fire" = πῦρ
sing du coll
nom fāuuərə fūvórīḥ fūvə̄
voc
acc
gen fūvə̄ṇġ fūvonuš fūnõm
loc fūvon fūvonū fūvoni
dat fūvoni fūvonma fūnmuš
ins fūvona

Other common heteroclitic nouns include:

  • PX azar azā̊ "day"
  • PX fetar fθā̊ "feather"
  • PP woδar woθā̊ "water" < PEE *wodr̥ *wodn̥s
  • PP ferərə ferūš "mountain"
  • PP fō ferā̊ "house"

ā-stems

The main point of interest in this paradigm is in the genitive and locative dual forms, where the form mizraaōš suggests the e-grade *-ew- instead of the anticipated zero grade -u-. Nowhere else in Northian or other Erani-Eracuran languages does this ending take the e-grade.

hā mizrā, "mist"
sing du pl
nom mizrāḥ mizrayīḥ mizraā̊ḫ
voc mizra
acc mizrā̊ mizrā̊
gen mizraā̊ḫ mizraaōš mizraą̄̊m
loc mizrayi mizraaō mizrāŋhū
dat mizraai mizrāmō mizrāmuš
ins mizraāi

o-stems

The thematic declension in o-stem could be divided into two subclasses that arose on account of the position of the accent, without which the short *o became /a/.

ha θūmōḫ, "smoke" θaṯ yuɣõm, "yoke"
sing du pl sing du pl
nom θūmōḫ θūmṓḥ θūmā̊ yuɣõm yuɣṓ(yīḥ) yuɣāḥ
voc θūmi
acc θūmõm θūmə̄ṇġ
gen θūmōiiō θūmōš θūmõm
loc θūmōi θūmō θūmohū
dat θūmoma θūmomuš
ins θūmō θūmomβiiōḫ

Where the accent was not on the thematic vowel the rules of unaccented vowel alteration come into play. Long vowels and those in final position nasalized by -m are never altered, which means neuter nouns with non-oxytone accent will still end in -õm and not *-am.

ha tónāḫ, "string"
sing du pl
nom tónāḫ tónōḥ tónā̊
voc tóni
acc tónõm tónāṇġ
gen tónōiiō tónōš tónõm
loc tónōi tónō tónahū
dat tónamōḥ tónamuš
ins tónō tónomβiiōḫ

Acrean declensions

Many words in later Northian are Early Elder Nordic loanwords from speakers of Acrean, which was used as a lingua franca in western Eracura for centuries under the influence of the Acrean Empire. These words were so numerous that many were not nativized but declined according to an approximation of the thematic declension in ELder Old Nordic. Naturally, Old Nordic vocabulary would not occur within the Galic and Epic corpora, but as the Epic language survived in literary and liturgical usages, later material did incorporate a considerable number of Acrean words.

Hybridized paradigms

The displacement of native vocabulary in favour of Acrean words was widespread and penetrating to a basic level, unlike previous assumptions that it was only introduced for topics of exotic political and commercial interest. Baker notes that the Old Nordic word sōwulą sōwulas "Sun" has hybridized with native Northian hāuuərə hūvə̄ṇġ and displaced the latter's oblique forms. Displacement concentrated in Epic forms made opaque by regular sound change. While all these forms are now analyzed as regular, at least in this noun they were no longer so understood after the Epic age.

The Northian inscriptions from the Epic age are revelatory of the extent of Nordic substitutions from an early time. Nordicisms were regarded as "vulgar substitutions" by antiquiarians, but a mid-6th-century BCE stone discovered in 2002 has the word <sōwulas> in genitive usage for the solar goddess, found within her very own temple precinct. Such finds have cast doubt whether Nordicisms were really regarded as "vulgar" forms by Northians of the Epic age, and some scholars have come to think the "correct" forms like hūvə̄ṇġ were actually poetic forms that had not been used regularly for some generations by that time.

hā hāuuərə, "Sun"
sing du & pl
nom hāuuərə sōwulōs
voc
acc
gen sōwulas sōwulōm
dat sōwulai̯ sōwulamas
ins sōwulō sōwulamiš

a-stems

For the most part, these endings are cognates with the o-stems (2nd declension) ones in Northian, but because of intervening sound changes, they are taught separately. Where there was a distinct vocative, the nominative form has displaced it. There are also no dual forms for these nouns, for which neologisms have sometimes been suggested, to no general acceptance. Since Elder Nordic had no locative case, this form is always identical to the dative where Northian syntax demands the locative.

ha wulfas, "lupine" = lupus θaṯ ētą̄, "food"
sing du & pl sing du & pl
nom wulfas wulfōs ētą̄ ētō
voc
acc wulfą̄ wulfāŋš
gen wulfas wulfõm ētas ētõm
dat wulfai̯ wulfamas ētai̯ ētamas
ins wulfō wulfamis ētō ētamis

ō-stems

These are cognates of the ā-stems in Northian.

sā erδō, "Earth"
sing du & pl
nom erδō erδōs
voc
acc erδōm erδōs
gen erδōs erδōm
dat erδōi̯ erδōmas
ins erδō erδōmiš

Venetian declensions

Old Venetian was another Erani-Eracuran language whose terms have been borrowed into Northian during the Late Canon Period. The first and second declensions of Old Venetian, in -ā and -os respectively, were directly cognate to the Northian ā- and o-stems.

Irregular nouns

ā̊ "mouth"

ā̊ (Runic <AO>) is an acrostatic neuter root noun in s-stem. Like other acrostatic nouns, its inflectional pattern can show irregularities under the influence of other, more productive ablaut patterns. After the Late Canon period, all the oblique forms of this noun were replaced by thematized forms based on the stem ā̊-, e.g. gen. ā̊oiiō, but it is the athematic originals that are discussed below. Nom. sing. ā̊ is for *ō-h < *HoH-s-Ø. Gen. sing. is written in Runic script as <AAA{S}>, whose phonoloigcal form has been heavily controverted. The form ə·ās, advanced by Rutger, would account for a pre-form of PNN *əə-h-s < *HH-s-s, with regular augmentation of the vowel in sequence with hiatus. In liturgical pronunciation, the gen. is read as , which cannot be anything but a late creation, with the OX genitive ending -ō attached ad hoc to the invariant thematic stem.

At some point in the prehistory of Northian, the position of the accent was fully dissociated with the ablaut, and it was felt that all nouns should show regular ablaut variation in direct and oblique stems, even if the accent persisted on the root syllable as in the case of acrostatic nouns. Thus, new zero-grade stems often replaced regular full-grade stems in the oblique forms of acrostatic nouns, but this remained exceptional for those with root shape √CeC-, as clashing obstruents would result. This process is particularly hard to describe for the case of ā̊ as its stem consists of two laryngeals, whose exact reflexes during the period when new oblique stems were created were uncertain, especially two of them in a row. The stem is then further disguised by the presence of /h/ and the imprecision of Runic orthography.

Rugter argues that dual laryngeals in initial position may have evolved to *əə and was still understood as consonants rather than vowels, and in the process of creating a new weak stem a union vowel was inserted between the laryngeals or their reflexes, which would (eventually) give three vowels in a row, of which two could be coloured by the following *h and then merge. However, Sally doubts that *HH- > *əə- could "really be as consonants √CC- and then require the insertion of a new vowel between them"; she says that if it was, then the expected form should be *əiə- or *əuə-, not *əəə- > *ə·ā-.

Dat. and loc. sing. <IIHI> is yet another mystery, and ə·iši has been advanced as an interpretation to reflect *ə-is-i < *HH-s-i. However, intervocalic *s is not usually spelled as <H> in Runic orthography, and at any rate if the preceding vowel was indeed i, the following *s should regularly surface as š and yield Runic <Ḥ>.

θaṯ ā̊, "mouth"
sing du pl
nom ā̊ ōhīḥ ōhā
voc
acc
gen <AAA{S}> <AIAUUS> <AOON>
loc <IIHI> <AIAUU> <AIASU>
dat <AIAMA> <AIAMUS>
ins a·ā̊ha

ménōḫ "mind"

The PP version of the neuter s-stems had a few differences to the PX version that enabled it to withstand the general tendency to substitute PP with PX or OX forms; its preservation cannot be unrelated, according to authorities, with the prevalence and prominence of the noun ménōḫ "mind", a central idea in the religious canon. The nom. sing. was ménōḫ < PEE *mén-os, with ending -ōḫ undergoing the same changes as the PX counterpart. The gen. had māṇġs < PEE *mén-s-s.

θaṯ ménōḫ, "mind"
sing du coll
nom ménōḫ māŋhī māŋhā̊
voc
acc
gen māṇġs māŋhuš māŋhōḫ
loc māŋhi māŋhū māŋhū
dat māŋhma māŋhei̯
ins māŋha

hāuuərə "Sun"

hāuụərə (Runic <XAUUARA>) "Sun" may continue the PEE heteroclitic stem in *-l/n-, but this cannot be certain because word-final -l merges with -r and there is no separate accusative or collective disclosing the full stem. The strong stem descends from PEE *seh₂w- > hāuụ-; the weak stem from *sh₂w- > *hiw- > *hūv-. Genitive has hūvaṇġ < *hiwānh < *sh₂wens.

The word hāuuərə signifies a deified celestial body in early Northian religion and is usually found in the singular in the Galic language. There, in in the dual, "the two Suns" is an ellipsis for "the Sun and the Moon".

hā hāuuərə, "Sun"
sing du
nom hāuuərə hāwa
voc
acc
gen hūvaṇġ hānuš
loc hvíni hānui̯
dat hāŋma
ins hūva

onkā "cream"

The bare stems in -n- also contain nouns with PX inflection. These are rarer than those with OX inflection, and the only abundantly-attested noun here is onkā "cream".

θaṯ onkā, "cream"
sing du coll
nom onkā oŋginīḥ oŋgō
voc
acc
gen agāṇġ agénuš agénõm
loc agéni agénū agáŋhū
dat agénā agénmuš
ins agā̊

nomā "name"

nomā < *Hnómn̥ takes special PP endings in the singular. There is never a vowel interposed between the two resonants of the suffix. Gen. sing. nómā̊ is probably from an original *Hnómāh < *Hnómn̥s. Excepting before endings commencing in vowel, such as the nom. du., suffix *-n is vocalized as ā or ə̄. Note that the gen. and loc. du. endings actually began with a laryngeal *HuH- and therefore are considered to begin with a consonant; thus, suffix *-n becomes *-n̥ in those contexts, and the regular reflext *ā is altered by the following syllable to ə̄.

θaṯ nómā, "name"
sing du coll
nom nómā nómnīḥ nómō
voc
acc
gen nomā̊ nomə̄ụuš nomnõm
loc nomni nomə̄ụū nomāŋhū
dat nomāma nomāmuš
ins nomna

mā·ā̊ḫ "moon" and xaṇġ "goose"

This is a rare formation with only two well-attested items: mā·ā̊ḫ "moon" and xaṇġ "goose". Nevertheless they must be introduced separately, because mā·ā̊ḫ has the lengthened declension. Effectively these were n-stems extended by -s- after the resonant, which in turn triggers different vocalizations and alterations to vowel quality. For mā·ā̊ḫ the root vowel was originally long, while the following laryngeal caused the *-ns to vocalize as -ah > -āḫ, which is altered to ā̊ḫ on account of the preceding vowel; the short-vowel grade is visible in the vocative.

ha mā·ā̊ḫ, "moon, month"
sing du pl
nom mā·ā̊ḫ māŋhə̄i̯ māŋhāḫ
voc ma·ā̊ḫ
acc māŋhəm māŋhaṇġ
gen māŋhə̄ māṇśmōš māŋhą̄m
loc māṇġ māŋhə̄u̯ māŋhu
dat māŋhai̯ māṇśmō māṇśmuš
ins māŋha

The principle difference, other than the regular ablaut, is that the root here ended in a vowel, which caused the final *-ens to resolve as -aṇġ. The Northian vowel is on account of the guttural sound of the initial consonant. Final -s is an early restoration attested in some Galic texts, though not universally seen and never as the last syllable of a line.

hā xāṇġ(s), "goose"
sing du pl
nom xāṇġ(s) xaŋhōi̯ xaŋhāḫ
voc xāṇġ
acc xaŋham xaŋhaṇġ
gen xahōḫ xaṇśmōš xaŋhą̄m
loc xaṇġ xaŋhə̄u̯ xaŋhu
dat xahai̯ xaṇśmō xaṇśmuš
ins xaha

mā̊ "meat"

mā̊ < *mēm-s must be distinguished from the word for "moon", as outside of paedagogical texts they are both printed and written as . This is either a root noun or a reduplication of a root *me-ms-. The word has no dual or collective forms.

θaṯ mā̊, "meat"
sing
nom mā̊
voc
acc
gen
loc
dat meṃśi
ins meṃśa

l-stems

There are a few nouns with an ablauting stem ending in -l, the most important being nomβar "navel", oṇkar "coal-fire", and abar "apple". Aside from nomβar, which is an feminine noun with *-l- throught its stem, the other nouns are similar to those ending in -r/n- but show a collective ending in *-ōl > -ō rather than *-ōr > -ā̊, and the zero-grade nominative is indistinguishable from the r-stems, since -l̥ and -r̥ both > PNR *-r̥.

hā nomβar, "navel" = umbilicus
sing du pl
nom nomβar nomβilōi̯ nomβiliš
voc
acc nomβram nomβilā̊
gen āmβāḫ āmβeluš āmβelõm
loc āmβeli āmβelū āmβertū
dat āmβerma āmβermuš
ins āmβela

oṇkar is a noun of basic relevance that is also the source of an adjective meaning "black". The adjective takes PX inflection, while the noun has PP inflection.

θaṯ oṇkar, "coal-fire" = ignis
sing du coll
nom oṇkar oṇkra oṇkō
voc
acc
gen oṇkuš oṇkərəuš oṇkrõm
loc oṇkri oṇkərəū oṇkərəšū
dat oṇkərəma oṇkərəmuš
ins oṇkra

"shrine"

"shrine" is a heteroclitic PP noun in r-stem, which causes syncopation in the direct forms, < *per-r; otherwise the noun is regular. Genitive ferā̊ is for *pern̥s, etc.

θaṯ fō, "shrine"
sing du coll
nom ferrī ferō
voc
acc
gen ferā̊ fernuš fərənõm
loc firni fernū frāhū
dat ferāma frāmuš
ins ferna frāβiiā̊

d-stems

The d-stems consist of a small group of root nouns, most prominently OX foṯ = "foot" and PX "heart". Irregularities arise principally in the treatment of word-final -d in various contexts. For the -d follows r- and so can be assimilated; this is evidently still in progress while the Gales were written, as forms with and without -d were often poetic alternatives.

As a natural pair, a person's own feet are always referred to in the dual and not the plural (unless the speaker is of a quadrupedal species). If feet are referred to in the plural, they usually denote dismembered feet, especially of another entity. An altar's two feet are referred to in the dual, even the an altar is not a person.

hā foṯ, "foot" = pes
sing du pl
nom foṯ fodōi̯ fodiš
voc
acc fodam fodā̊
gen βδōḫ βδōš βδõm
loc fodi βδō βδšū
dat βδei̯ βδmō βδmuš
ins βδōi̯

fonδā̊ "path"

The word fonδā̊ "path" had a stem ending in PEE *póntoh₁- ~ pn̥th₁-. Fundamentally, it is a regular laryngeal-stem noun of amphikinetic origin, but the difficulty arises with its two ablauting syllables affected by the laryngeal stem. In the accusative singular, the ending was *oh₁-m̥, with regular operation of Stang's law. This would result in a form identical to the nominative, and the weak stem was introduced prehistorically. The nom. pl. stands for *póntoh₁-es.

This word is a direct cognate to the Shalumite word "path", which is a borrowing from the oblique stem of the reflex in another Erani-Eracuran language.

ha fonδā̊, "path, way = "path"
sing du pl
nom fonδā̊ fonδōi̯ fónδayiš
voc
acc fātā̊ fātəṇġ
gen fātōḫ fātōš fātõm
loc fonδō fātō fāššū
dat fātai̯ fāśmō fāśmuš
ins fātā

t-stems with persistent accent

These are t-stem nouns with acrostatic inflection. The nominative was evidently asigmatic < *ses-t, from *ses- "to rest".The genitive haš represents *has-t-s, the final consonant cluster being resolved in favour of *s.

hā hašṯ, "bed"
sing du pl
nom hašt hašta haštiš
voc
acc haštəm haštā̊
gen haš haštuš haštõm
loc hašti haštū fāššū
dat haštma haštmuš
ins hašta

The very well-attested word nōxš "evening, night" is usually thought to be a root noun with persistent accent on the initial syllable at the Proto-Erani-Eracuran level, but some authorities consider the root to be *(d)negʷ-, extended by the suffix -t-. Whatever the case in the parent language, the -t- never takes full grade even in the nom. du. and pl. Thus its behaviour is identical to that of hašṯ.

The word for "ten" in compounds of multiple of ten, e.g. twenty, thirty, etc. also displays the word dekam in zero grade extended by -t, -δɣāt < *-dḱm̥-t.

  • θríδɣāt < *tri-dḱm̥-t.
  • kozuuərəδɣāt < *kʷetwr̥-dḱm̥-t.

hōxrūḥ "mother-in-law"

The ū-stems also includes one member with paroxytone accent, namely hōxrūḥ "mother-in-law".

hā hōxrūḥ, "mother-in-law" = socrus
sing du pl
nom hōxrū hōxrāu̯a hōxruuāḫ
voc
acc hōxrūm hōxruuā̊
gen hōxruuā̊ hōxru̯āu̯uš hōxru̯aõ
loc hōxru̯ā hōxru̯āu̯u hōxru̯āhu
dat hōxru̯āi̯i hōxru̯āma hōxru̯āmuš
ins hōxrūu̯a

gā̊ "woman"

gā̊ "woman" continues the PEE proterodynamic declension ending in *-h₂. This suffix also underlies the ī- and ū-stem declensions in Northian but is otherwise rarely seen alone. The full-grade stem is from *gʷénh₂ > gā̊, and the zero-grade *gʷnéh₂- > gnā-. Both nominative and accusative forms are affected by Stang's law.

hā gona, "woman" = γυνή
sing du pl
nom gā̊ gonā̊ gona·ā̊ḫ
voc
acc gonā̊ gña·ā̊
gen gnā̊ gnauuš gna·ā̊m
loc gnaēii gnāuū gnāhū
dat gna·ā̊ gnāmuš
ins gnā

Neuter nouns in -ū

Some neuter nouns in -ū, such as δorū "tree, wood", ɣanū "knee", uuəštū "settlement" descend from an acrostatic ablaut pattern in the proto-language. These words have invariant stems and are exempted from the creation of new zero-grade stems that have often supplanted their original, regular full-grade stems. Their oblique stems end in short -u, which was lengthened in auslaut in the nominative forms. These special nouns need to be learned by memory from PX nouns that also end in -ū like oiiū "life", which have a distinct oblique stem.

θaṯ δorū, "wood" = δόρυ
sing du coll
nom dorū doruụīḥ dorō
voc
acc
gen draōš doruu̯ōḫ druu̯ōḫ
loc derū doruu̯a doruu̯i
dat drauui doruma druu̯ēi̯
ins drūḥ

xāmō "human"

xāmō "human being" is an n-stem noun that has an important place in the Fonδaiš Wīštā̊ religion in Northian culture. It is used for humans of all sexes and nations, noting them as a group as opposed to gods or animals; it conveys a difference in spiritual species and not of sex or nationality. Its oblique stem takes the special form xmān- rather than the expected *xāmn-. Possibly it is assimilated to the first three consonants of the oblique forms of θaɣam xmōḫ "earth, Earth" to emphasize the nature of humans as "earthlings". There is a term xāmātā́s xāmātṓḫ "humanity" that serves to identify the condition of being human (as opposed to that of a god or animal), with pre-form *dʰǵʰm̥mn̥teh₂t-s. also > Elder Nordic gumuntāt.

ha xāmō, "human" = homo
sing du pl
nom xāmō xāminōi̯ xāminiš
voc xāmón
acc xāminəm xāminā̊
gen xmānōḫ xmānōš xmānõm
loc xmaēnin xmānō xmāŋhū
dat xmānei̯ xmānmō xmānmuš
ins xmāna

dā̊ "house"

dā̊ is a root noun ending in -m. The nom., acc., and gen. sing. forms are alike in Northian, but they have different sources in the proto-language. The accusative singular was likely *dom-m̥ and was simplified by Stang's law to *dōm early; this was identical to the nominative form. The genitive singular may reflect either *dom-s or *dem-s. The latter would reflect a very archaic *e ~ o ablaut pattern, but it cannot be confirmed as the two did not have different Northian reflexes. Nevertheless, its presence in the compound déṃpśpatōi̯š and loc. and dat. sing. démi assures that e-vocalism was present somewhere, at some point, in the paradigm.

hā dā̊, "house"
sing du pl
nom dā̊ doma domiš
voc dõm
acc dā̊ domā̊
gen dā̊ domuš domõm
loc demi domū doṃśū
dat domma dommuš
ins doma

potiš "master" in compounds

The word *potiš "lord, master" has OX-B inflection. As a word it is not seen alone but does serve as the second element in the terms déṃpśpatiš "master of the house" and uuei̯xšpatiš "lord of the settlement". The word can sometimes appear with the o-grade suffix, e.g. déṃpśpatōiš.

While the root *potiš is not seen independently, the feminine -īḥ derivative potnīḥ is used as part of certain goddesses' titles; there, the full grade root is invariant.

ha déṃpśpatiš, "master of the house" = δεσπότης
sing du pl
nom déṃpśpatiš déṃpśpačiiāḥ déṃpśpačiiāḫ
voc déṃpśpatai
acc déṃpśpatim déṃpśpatī
gen déṃpśpatiiāḫ déṃpśpatiyōš déṃpśpačiiõm
loc déṃpśpati déṃpśpatiyō déṃpśpatištū
dat déṃpśpačiiai déṃpśpatimō déṃpśpatimuš
ins déṃpśpačiiāḥ

žiiaōš "god, sky"

This word žiiaōš is a direct cognate with several theonyms across the Erani-Eracuran family. The original *ew was transformed to *aw (written ) after yod. Under the influence of that phone, the initial obstruent was palatalized to z, where it is otherwise preserved before vocalic i. There is an alternate nom. form žiiōš, which may either be a contraction or a reflex of *dyou̯-s, the o-grade of the same root. The acc. sing. žiiā̊ is a product of Stang's law, which requires the sequence of *dyeu̯-m to be simplified to *dyēm; this sequence is attested in virtually all branches and is assumed to be old. žiiā̊ is cognate to Syaran Ζῆν.

žiiaōš often co-occurs with the epithet ufšištōḫ "highest" as ufšištoz-diiaōš "Heaven Most High", in much the same way as fərətištā-taɣam "Earth Most Broad". These compounds, other than being appellations of their titular deities, were also used of their agents. Aithar, the god of numina, is almost always accompanied by the epithet ufšištṓiia-diuuō "of Heaven Most High". After Aithar, the pantheon of Valstígr was also called āhaṓuuāḫ põm ufšištṓiia diuuō, "Lords of Powers and Heaven-Most-High", defining them as celestial, rather than chthonic, deities.

It is to note that the epithet ufšištōḫ "highest" does not carry the implication that the god is highest in rank or power, at least in the Galic and Didaskalic corpora. The idea of a deity that is supreme over other deities was not endorsed by the earlier Northians, and instead a god's supremacy was envisioned more as "excellence" or "extremity", or simply the quality or domain assigned to that god in a superlative, peerless state. Thus in Northian theology, Ziiaōš was the highest, and θaɣam the broadest, and the two are both peerless in the qualities recognized in them. But, being differently or oppositely characterized, they partake in nothing in common and thus could not compare with each other. There thus could not exist a hierarchy between them.

ha žiiaōš, "sky, Sky God"
sing du pl
nom žiiaōš ziiauuōi ziiauuōḫ
voc ziiaō
acc ziiā̊ ziiauuā̊
gen dūvōḫ dūvōš dūvõm
loc dūvəi̯ dūvō dūvštū
dat dūvmō dūvmuš
ins

ošta "bone"

ošta has a stem ending in laryngeal, much like foṇδā̊ and gā̊, but the shape of its root prevented quantitative alterations. The collective form oštō means "skeleton", of a living or deceased animal. In the Didaskalic language, the plural form oštā is also known, and it means a plural number of bones.

ha ošta, "bone" = os
sing du coll
nom ošta oštī oštō
voc
acc
gen oštiš oštiyuš oštõm
loc ošti oštiyu oštišū
dat oštama oštamuš
ins oštā

hazərə "hand"

hazərə is an OX noun in r-stem with the inverted declension, with a zero-grade in the nominative singular. -ərə here is treated as a single, long syllable, representing Erani-Eracuran *-r̥. That -ərə is a consonantal is elucidated by the reflex of *s as -z- and not -h-, which would be regular had -ərə been a vowel sound. As with all nouns with inverted declension, the accusative is regarded as a weak case as to its appropriate stem, thus xšrə̄m over the expected *xšerəm; however, the syllable weight of the original is preserved in the long vowel of the ending.

hā hazərə, "hand"
sing du pl
nom hazərə xšerōi̯ xširiš
voc
acc xšrə̄m xšrā̊
gen xšrōḫ xšarōš xšrõm
loc xšrei̯ xšarō xšərəšū
dat xšərəmō xšərəmuš
ins xšroi̯

"man"

An r-stem noun not within the formation -tr is "man", gen. drūš < PNN *nr̥s. As it is seen this noun originally has hysterokinetic accent, but acc. sing. drum and pl. drāṇġ reflect PEE zero-grade stem *nr-. Nom. pl. niriš is the only place where the full-grade stem appears in the paradigm.

ha nō, "man, male person"
sing du pl
nom drōi̯ nei̯riš
voc
acc drām ndrā̊
gen ndrōḫ ndārōš ndrõm
loc níri ndārō ndāršu
dat ndrei̯ dārmō dārmuš
ins ndrōi̯

monuš "man, human"

monuš is the basic word for "human" in Northian, and it frequently appears as the principal to the adposition θxāmō "earthling". It defines the human being as "the thinking one" or "one who remembers" and is formally very similar to the perfect active participle ménuš "remembering, recalling", from móna "to remember". monuš defines mankind in opposition to beasts, and θxāmō in opposition to gods.

The word monuš has two competing etymologies: some stress its connection to the o-grade of the PEE root *men- "to think", thus characterizing the human being as a characteristically intelligent being, and others provide a more mundane connection to the very basic Nordic word mannuz "male, man". These etymologies are not necessarily incompatible. mannuz is obligatorily male in Elder Nordic and all its descendants, but monuš can be female in Northian, though the feminine form mnuuozərə < putative *mn-u-ésr̥ is more commonly seen with women.

monuš takes the oxytone declension in u-stem, gen. mŋʷuuōḫ, e.g. GNr. yōrō mŋʷuuōḫ "a person's lifetime".

Country names

All country-names in Northian are feminine in gender, though they are usually consonant-stem nouns (and with particular frequency n-stem nouns) and so may not reflect their grammatical genders readily. Nevertheless they agree with feminine adjectives and participles in all cases. The feminine gender is employed as a feminine of the special collective, since a country is envisioned as a special aggregate of people, and not in reference to any perceived quality about the country's people and their habits.

"Acrea" is named Áṃśrā̊, which is a compound from aṃśr- "lord" and rā̊ "dominion", literally "the lord's realm"; gen. Áṃśriš.

"Æþurheim", the name of the country to the southwest of Shalum, has an invariant stem with full grade throughout and persistent initial accent in Áδurō-, which takes oxytone endings. The vocative form is identical to the nominative, showing full grade.

"Shalum" behaves in a manner more reminiscent of a regular n-stem noun in oxytone and has the expected endings and accentual positions, but the stem does not display apophony as is usual in this class of nouns.

hā Aδurā̊, "Æþurheim" hā Halā̊, "Shalum" sā Aṇhrōs, "Acrea" sā Silū, "Silua" sā Hu̯inī, "Svinia" sā Ossorī, "Ossoria"
sing sing sing sing sing sing
nom Aδurā̊ Halā̊
voc
acc Aδurōnəm Halomnam
gen Aδurōnōḫ Halomnōḫ
loc Aδureni Halomini
dat Aδurōnei̯ Halomnei̯
ins Aδurōna Halomna