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grammar_verb [2021/09/09 22:49] – [Mood] morgothgrammar_verb [2023/09/07 19:38] (current) – external edit 127.0.0.1
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 | Tark matû | Humans die | | Tark matû | Humans die |
  
-In some subdialects these suffixes may be used only with //transitive// verbs.+Suffix //-â// is often skipped when word "ash" (one) is the subject. In some subdialects these suffixes may be used only with //transitive// verbs.
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 ===== Tense ===== ===== Tense =====
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 ===== Voice ===== ===== Voice =====
-**//[[grammar_voice|Voice]]//** denotes relationship between action, subject and object. There are two voices in standard Nûrlâm: active and passive. When subject is the agent (doer) of the action the voice is called active. When subject is the target, patient or undergoer of the action then the verb is passive. Standard Nûrlâm uses mostly active voice. Passive voice may be expressed by using //[[grammar_participle|participles]]// and sometimes with [[syntax_impersonal|impersonal constructions]].+**//[[grammar_voice|Voice]]//** denotes relationship between action, subject and object. There are two voices in standard Nûrlâm: active and passive. When subject is the agent (doer) of the action the voice is called active. When subject is the target, patient or undergoer of the action then the verb is passive. Standard Nûrlâm uses mostly active voice. Passive voice may be expressed by adding suffix //-âk// before markers of tense or using //[[grammar_participle|participles]]// and sometimes with [[syntax_impersonal|impersonal constructions]].
  
 When direct object is the reflexive pronoun //-îm// ("self") added to the verb as a clitic, it may be analyzed as //reflexive voice//. But because this term is uncommon this wiki will rarely use it. When direct object is the reflexive pronoun //-îm// ("self") added to the verb as a clitic, it may be analyzed as //reflexive voice//. But because this term is uncommon this wiki will rarely use it.
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 ===== Mood ===== ===== Mood =====
-**//[[grammar_mood|Mood]]//** shows speaker/writer's attitude to the sentence they describe. It has strong connection to the [[syntax]] of language as the mood is usually expressed both with special grammatical forms, syntactical constructions and/or word order. Special grammatical forms include: declarative (tense and person markers), imperative (dictionary form, no markers), subjunctive (//-ulg// with no following markers), interrogative (//-mar-//). Grammatical mood is closely connected to [[modal verbs]], however Nûrlâm doesn't truly have them.+**//[[grammar_mood|Mood]]//** shows speaker/writer's attitude to the sentence they describe. It has strong connection to the [[syntax]] of language as the mood is usually expressed both with special grammatical forms, syntactical constructions and/or word order. Special grammatical forms include: [[mood_indicative|indicative]] (tense and person markers), [[mood_imperative|imperative]] (dictionary form, no markers), [[mood_subjunctive|subjunctive]] (//-ulg// with no following markers), [[mood_interrogative|interrogative]] (//-mar-//). Grammatical mood is closely connected to [[modal verbs]], however Nûrlâm doesn't truly have them.
  
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 Tolkien stated that ending //-at// considered by early researchers as infinitive is in fact closer to a participle, so it may be not a true infinitive, but some special nonfinite form of verb with functions of gerund, infinitive of purpose and present/future participle. Tolkien stated that ending //-at// considered by early researchers as infinitive is in fact closer to a participle, so it may be not a true infinitive, but some special nonfinite form of verb with functions of gerund, infinitive of purpose and present/future participle.
  
-Nonfinite forms of Nûrlâm's verbs include [[grammar_infinitive|Infinitive]], [[grammar_participle|Participles]] and [[grammar_gerundive|Gerundive]] which can take various roles in the [[syntax|sentence]]. Nûrlâm has no such distinct forms as //Supin// or //Gerund// (usually replaced by infinitives or nouns with abstract suffix //-urm//, but gerundives may be translated back to English as gerund with preposition "for").+Nonfinite forms of Nûrlâm's verbs include [[grammar_infinitive|Infinitive]], [[grammar_participle|Participles]] and [[grammar_gerundive|Gerundive]] which can take various roles in the [[syntax|sentence]]. Nûrlâm has no such distinct forms as //Supin// or //Gerund// (usually replaced by infinitives or nouns with abstract suffix //-urm// or //-aut//, but gerundives may be translated back to English as gerund with preposition "for")
 + 
 +Gerundive, infinitive, participle and regular verb may compose one predicate: "The ring was created to make people obey" => "Nazgum kuzâ krampaga ikhat hai bûrtut". Where "was created" (= "kuzâ krampaga") is verb + participle, "to make" was translated with gerundive "ikhat" as it denotes purpose, and "obey" was translated with infinitive "bûrtut".
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 ===== Suffix chain ===== ===== Suffix chain =====
grammar_verb.1631216943.txt.gz · Last modified: 2023/09/07 14:48 (external edit)