Nanshilae/Verbs: Difference between revisions
(Breaking Verbs out to their own page, organizing rules.) |
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There is no distinction in elven between the gerund (-ing ending) form of a verb turned into a noun and its non gerund form. Thus, hope and hoping are both tikvooith, and you must know the context of the sentence to figure out which is which. | There is no distinction in elven between the gerund (-ing ending) form of a verb turned into a noun and its non gerund form. Thus, hope and hoping are both tikvooith, and you must know the context of the sentence to figure out which is which. | ||
If the noun is a person, add 'ot' to the end of the noun (or 'ithot' to the end of the verb stem). Remember plurals come after the entire word (ithoten not ithenot). | If the noun is a person, add 'ot' to the end of the noun (or 'ithot' to the end of the verb stem). Remember plurals come after the entire word (ithoten not ithenot). In the few cases where a distinction between male and female would exist, add -an after the -ot. | ||
'''Examples:''' | '''Examples:''' | ||
:* ''taynas'' (to give) becomes '''taynithot''' (giver) | :* ''taynas'' (to give) becomes '''taynithot''' (giver) | ||
:* ''raytzas'' (to run) becomes '''raytzithot''' (runner) | :* ''raytzas'' (to run) becomes '''raytzithot''' (runner) | ||
:* ''tzadahlas'' (to hunt) becomes '''tzadahlithot''' or '''tzadalithotan''' (hunter or huntress) | |||
Revision as of 20:05, 24 March 2010
Rules
Finding the Stem of a Verb
Infinitives end in -as. The rest of the word is called the "stem". Therefore, in the case of 'to guard' (shemaras) the stem is shemar
Present Indicative tense
Singular verbs, remove the as ending and use the stem by itself:
- I guard 'Eni shemar
- You guard Ta shemar
- He/She/It guards Loo/Lah/Loo shemar.
Plural verbs, add -u to the stem:
- We guard Nethnu shemaru
- You guard Tem shemaru
- They guard Loom shemaru
Present Perfect tense:
In the present perfect tense, it is not necessary to use the pronoun. Thus, I guarded, "Eni shemarti", can be "shemarti". Accent is on the second syllable in this tense.
- I guarded shemarti
- You guarded shemarta
- He/It guarded shemaroe
- She guarded shemarah
- We guarded shemarnu
- You guarded shemartem
- They guarded shemaroo
Future imperfect:
- I will guard Eni e'shemar
- You will guard Ta tee'shemar
- He/She/It will guard loo/lah/loo ye'shemar
- We will guard Nethnu ne'shemar
- You (pl) will guard Tem tee'shemaru
- They will guard Loom ye'shemaru
The verb "to be".
The only irregular verb in the Avlissian elven tongue is the verb "to be" (hayas). In elven, the verb "to be" is implied in the present tense.
- I am good. Eni toova.
- You are good. Ta toova.
- He is good. Loo toova.
- She is good. Lah toova.
- We are good. Nethnu toova.
- You are good. Tem toova.
- They are good. Loom toova.
Past Perfect:
- I was good. Hayti toova.
- You were good. Hayta toova.
- He/It was good. Hayoe toova.
- She was good. Hayah toova.
- We were good. Haynu toova.
- You were good. Haytem toova.
- They were good. Hayoo toova.
Future Imperfect:
- I will be good. Eni e'hay toova.
- You will be good. Ta tee'hay toova.
- He/It will be good. Loo ye'hay toova.
- She will be good. Lah ye'hay toova.
- We will be good. Nethnu ne'hay toova.
- You will be good. Tem tee'hay toova.
- They will be good. Loom ye'hay toova.
Converting a verb to a noun:
Take the stem and add the 'ith' ending. (Some verbs like Sheras (to sing) do not follow this rule.)
Examples:
- taynas (to give) becomes taynith (giving)
- tikvooas (to hope) becomes tikvooith (hope, or hoping)
There is no distinction in elven between the gerund (-ing ending) form of a verb turned into a noun and its non gerund form. Thus, hope and hoping are both tikvooith, and you must know the context of the sentence to figure out which is which.
If the noun is a person, add 'ot' to the end of the noun (or 'ithot' to the end of the verb stem). Remember plurals come after the entire word (ithoten not ithenot). In the few cases where a distinction between male and female would exist, add -an after the -ot.
Examples:
- taynas (to give) becomes taynithot (giver)
- raytzas (to run) becomes raytzithot (runner)
- tzadahlas (to hunt) becomes tzadahlithot or tzadalithotan (hunter or huntress)
List of Common Verbs
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