Nouns
Nouns in general are words that refer to persons, places, or things. Some randomly-selected examples of English nouns include the words "Listuguj," "Mary," "woman," and "table." These words are also nouns in Mi'gmaq: "Listuguj," "Mali," "epit," and "ptauti."
In some ways, Mi'gmaq nouns resemble English nouns (for instance, you can have singular and plural versions of a noun). In other ways, they differ from English (for instance, there is a feature of nouns that we call "animacy" that English doesn't really display).
Number
For more detail, see Number
"Number" refers to how many of something there are. In both English and Mi'gmaq, there are two numbers for nouns: singular (only one of something) and plural (two or more of something). In English, a plural noun often looks like the singular plus an -s at the end. For example, "girl" becomes "girls." In Mi'gmaq, there are two things you can add to a noun in order to make it plural, depending on whether the noun is animate or inanimate (for more information on this, see the next section). For inanimate nouns, like ptawti "table", you generally add -l to the end of the word. For animate nouns, like
ptawti, ptawti-l table, table-PL
'table, tables'
jinm, jinm-ug man, man-PL
'man, men'
singular, plural, dual. Measure words.
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Animacy
For more detail, see Animacy animacy (mention that you can change animacy with ewei)
Possession
For more detail, see Possession
Possession covers a whole range of relationships between nouns, not necessarily relationships where there is a possession and an owner. In English, possession covers expressions such as:
- my umbrellas
- Tom's sister
- Jamie 's leg
- a friend of Alice 's
- the music of Beethoven
The verbs used in these sentences can also be thought of as "possessive":
- I have a cake.
- This dog belongs to me.
As mentioned before, these relationships aren't always strictly of ownership, but can be interpreted as a type of closeness or relatedness--so while the umbrella may be my possession in the strictest sense of the word, we also shouldn't think of Tom's sister being his possession. Instead, we use possession to show that a relationship exists between the two nouns in question. In the example "Tom's sister," we call one noun, "Tom," the possessor and the other noun, "sister," the possessum.
Pronouns
For more detail, see Pronouns
Demonstratives
For more detail, see Demonstratives
Obviation
For more detail, see Obviation
Diminutive
For more detail, see Diminutives