qiihoskeh: myo: kanji (Default)
[personal profile] qiihoskeh
Last edited: 2006.Jan.30 Mon

  • The subject's role is indicated by a suffix on the verb; the roles of the other arguments are indicated using prepositions.

  • However, if the first argument after the verb has the expected role, the preposition is omitted; pronouns become enclitics. Are there also proclitic pronouns?

  • An affix may be needed for when the expected second argument doesn't appear. This may be implied for deverbal nouns.

  • Prepositions which don't indicate basic roles move with the phrase when it moves to the subject position. There's a single "voice" suffix for all of these.

  • Agent is marked like Donor.

  • Patient and Perceiver are marked like Recipient.

  • Intransitive subject is marked like either Patient or Agent. Note that this may require an additional argument moved to the subject to manifest.

  • Object is distinct from both Patient and Agent.

  • Possessor and Location/Reference Point are distinct from Object, Patient, and Agent.

  • There's possibly a Genitive, replacing the original Donor, Recipient, or Object marking after nouns.

  • There's probably a Vocative as well.

  • Instrument may also use a basic preposition.

  • Location, Time, and Manner may be indicated by special words.


  • A subject is marked as definite by placing the clitic |ho| before the verb (but |i| is used instead if the subject is a pronoun or a proper noun). Other arguments are marked as definite by placing |o| in front of them (but after any preposition).

  • There are probably additional determiners.


  • Words for some spatial (and other) relations may normally act as prepositions, requiring affixes in order to function as verbs or nouns.

  • Some other words may normally act as adverbs and also require conversion affixes.

  • The copula is prefixed to a simple predicate noun and otherwise stands alone.

  • Possibly, the copula morpheme is used as a prefix to convert prepositions and adverbs to verbs. Conversion to nouns will also involve prefixes (or relative particle).


  • Basic adjective forms (positive and superlative) act like nouns, but derived forms (comparative, evolutive, inceptive(?), cessative(?), viative, and satisfactive) act like verbs.


  • Relative and Serial verbs are marked as such with various proclitics.

  • Serial and Complement verbs have a special marking for when no argument is coreferential. Possibly, this marking is also used to indicate that a Main verb is impersonal.

  • Complement Verbs have a special marking for when the subject is coreferential with the auxiliary's subject.


  • Basic TAM are either prefixed to the stem or precede the verb (or other word).


  • A partitive phrase is constructed by placing a quantifier in front of a definite phrase.

  • The superlative of an adjective is indicated by placing the basic form of the adjective in front of a partitive phrase.

  • There should be a preposition indicating Standard of Comparison used with comparatives.

  • There should also be a preposition indicating Degree of Comparison.




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