Difference between revisions of "Verbs: Overview"

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==Mode==
 
==Mode==
'Mode describes the speaker's attitude toward a situation, including the speaker's belief in its reality, or likelihood.' (Payne, 1997; 244) In each class, there are a variety of different mode's which can be expressed. Most of them can be expressed in different tenses and in the affirmative or negative. Below is a table that summarizes these observations using the first conjugation of VAI with third person agreement.
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'Mode describes the speaker's attitude toward a situation, including the speaker's belief in its reality, or likelihood.' (Payne, 1997; 244) In each class, there are a variety of different mode's which can be expressed. Most of them can be expressed in different tenses and in the affirmative or negative. Below is a table, based on Lesson 10 in Hewson & Francis (1990), that summarizes these observations using the first conjugation of VAI with third person agreement.
 
 
  
 
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Revision as of 21:16, 1 May 2012

Verb classes

In Algonquian languages, verbs are classified for the number (i.e. transitive vs. intransitive) and animacy (i.e. animate vs. inanimate) of their arguments. (Bloomfield, 1946; 94-5). This gives us four main groups, shown in the table below. VAI refers to an intransitive verb with a single animate argument. VTA refers to a transitive verb with two animate arguments. VII refers to a transitive verb with an animate subject and an inanimate object; VTI refers to an intransitive verb with a single inanimate argument.

Algonquian verb classes
Intransitive Transitive
Animate VAI VTA
Inanimate VII VII


Mode

'Mode describes the speaker's attitude toward a situation, including the speaker's belief in its reality, or likelihood.' (Payne, 1997; 244) In each class, there are a variety of different mode's which can be expressed. Most of them can be expressed in different tenses and in the affirmative or negative. Below is a table, based on Lesson 10 in Hewson & Francis (1990), that summarizes these observations using the first conjugation of VAI with third person agreement.

mode tense +/- teluisi 'name' gloss
Indicative present + teluisi-t 'her/his name is...'
- mu teluisi-wk 'her/his name isn't...'
past + teluisi-ss/ip/isp 'her/his name was...'
- mu teluisi-wksɨp 'her/his name wasn't...'
future + tluisi-tew 'her/his name will be...'
- ma' tluisi-wk 'her/his name will not be...'
Imperative + tluisi-j 'let her/his name be...'
- mu tluisi-wj 'let her/him not be named...'
'When...' (Subjunctive) present + teluisi-jl 'when her/his name is...'
- mu teluisi-kwl 'when her/his name isn't...'
past + teluisi-tek 'When her/his name was...'
- mu teluisi-kwek 'when her/his name wasn't...'
'If...' (Subjunctive) present + tluisi-j 'if her/his name is...'
- mu tluisi-wk 'if her/his name isn't...'
past + tluisi-ss 'if her/his name was...'
- mu tluisi-wksɨp 'if her/his name wasn't...'
pluperfect + tluisi-sn 'if her/his name had been...'
- mu tluisi-wksɨpn 'if her/his name hadn't been...'
Conditional present + teluisi-ss 'her/his name would be...'
- mu teluisi-ss 'her/his name would not be...'
past + teluisi-soqq 'her/his name would have been...'
- mu teluisi-soqq 'her/his name would not have been...'
Subordinative wtluisi-n 'that her/his name is...'