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Grammatical Voice

The voice of the verb describes relationship between the verb and the roles (agent or patient) of it's arguments (subject and object). Nûrlâm has two distinct voices: Active and Passive.


Active voice

Active voice is used most frequently. In active voice the agent of action is the subject of the sentence. The verb is not specially marked for active voice.


Passive voice

In Passive voice the patient (receiver, underdoer) of an action expressed by verb becomes the subject of the sentence. There are 4 ways of expressing passive voice in Nûrlâm. The first one is by adding passive voice marker -âk- before markers of tense; this is mostly done with passive past tense. The second is to use the participles for present and past tenses. The third one is using gerundive for future tense similarly to participles. However direct translation of gerundives back from Nûrlâm to English will be passive infinitives with tone of intention or purpose. In all these variants the subject (= patient) is not marked with case ending (remains in Nominative case), the agent of action is put in Instrumental case and thus strictly speaking becomes an adverbial instead of object. The fourth one is not a passive strictly speaking, but active impersonal constructions, used when agent of an action is not specified or is unknown. The patient is usually put into Dative case in such sentences. It can be rather said, that sometimes passive voice is expressed syntactically by impersonal clauses instead of special grammatical forms.


Examples

Tense Active Passive with verb suffix Passive with nonfinite verb forms Impersonal
Past Orc killed an elf Elf was killed by an orc Elf was killed
Uruk doguzâ ash golug Golug dogâkuzâ urukirzi Golug kuzâ dogaga urukirzi Doguzâ golug
Present Orc is killing an elf Elf is being killed by an orc Elf is being killed
Uruk dogâ ash golug Golug dogâkâ urukirzi Golug kulâ dogag urukirzi Dogâ golug
Future Orc will kill an elf Elf will be killed by an orc Elf will be killed
Uruk dogubâ ash golug Golug dogâkubâ urukirzi Golug (kulâ/kubâ) dogat urukirzi Dogubâ golug

Other

When reflexive pronoun -îm (self) is added to the verb as clitic it may be treated as Reflexive voice. Similarly, postposition “-sha” (with) may be added as clitic adverb (together), thus Cooperative voice (attested in real-world Manchu, Classical Mongolian, probably Old Japanese, and mixed with reciprocal in Turkmen). Due to their rarity in majority of real-world languages, and little impact on grammar and syntax, these terms are almost never used in Nûrlâm.


See also

grammar_voice.1650792876.txt.gz · Last modified: 2023/09/07 14:48 (external edit)