Catalan / Valencian cultural domain |
---|
Catalan grammar, the morphology and syntax of the Catalan language, is similar to the grammar of most other Romance languages. Catalan is a relatively synthetic, fusional language. (Note, the Valencian grammar, a standardised variety of Western Catalan, is also included in this article).
Features include:
Some distinctive features of Catalan among Romance languages include the general lack of masculine markers (like Italian -o), a trait shared with French and Occitan; and the fact that the remote preterite tense of verbs is usually formed with a periphrasis consisting of the verb "to go" plus infinitive.
Catalan has two types of article, definite and indefinite. They are declined for gender and number, and must agree with the noun they qualify. As with other Romance languages, Catalan articles are subject to complex elision and contraction processes.
The inflection of articles is complex, especially because of frequent elision, but is similar to neighboring languages. [2] Catalan has more preposition–article contractions than Spanish, like dels ("of + the [plural]"), but fewer than Italian (which has sul, col, nel, etc.). [2]
The tables below summarize the forms of the definite article, its elisions, and its contractions.
masculine | feminine | |
---|---|---|
singular | el (l') | la (l') |
plural | els | les |
preposition | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
a | de | per | ||
article | el | al (a l') | del (de l') | pel (per l') |
els | als | dels | pels | |
Forenames and surnames must carry a definite article. In addition to the ordinary singular forms, alternative forms derived from the Latin vocative domine can be used. The elision rules are the same for el and la.
masculine | feminine |
---|---|
en (n') | na (n') |
In Western Catalonia the dialectal versions lo and los are used instead of el and els. [3]
In some regions, especially in the Balearic islands, the definite article derives from the Latin determiner ipse. These forms are referred to as articles salats. Similar forms are found in Sardinian and some varieties of Occitan.
masculine | feminine | |
---|---|---|
singular | es (s') | sa (s') |
plural | es, ets | ses |
masculine | feminine | |
---|---|---|
singular | amb so | amb sa (amb s') |
plural | amb sos | amb ses |
The table below summarize the forms of the indefinite article. Indefinite articles are not elided nor contracted.
masculine | feminine | |
---|---|---|
singular | un | una |
plural | uns | unes |
Most adjectives, and a fair number of nouns, inflect for gender. This usually follows a regular pattern of endings. The two main patterns are generally referred to as "four-form" and "two-form" adjectives. Four-form adjectives have distinct masculine and feminine forms, whereas two-form adjectives have the same form for both masculine and feminine. They are derived from the Latin first/second, and the third declension respectively. Many nouns follow the four-form inflection, but some may follow the two-form inflection. Some are irregular in some way.
masculine | feminine | |
---|---|---|
singular | verd | verda |
plural | verds | verdes |
masculine | feminine | |
---|---|---|
singular | indiferent | |
plural | indiferents |
Similar to French, but unlike Portuguese, Spanish or Italian, the Latin/Romance final -o and -e have disappeared. Thus, the alternance of -o/-a in the four-form words has been substituted by -/-a. [5] There are only a few exceptions, like minso/minsa ("scarce"). [5]
Among nouns, Catalan has few suppletive couplets, like Italian and Spanish, and unlike French. Thus, Catalan has noi/noia ("boy"/"girl") and gall/gallina ("cock"/"chicken"), whereas French has garçon/fille and coq/poule. [5]
There is a tendency to inflect adjectives as four-form instead of two-form, something that is prevalent in Occitan and standard in French. Thus, alongside traditional two-form bullent/bullent ("boiling"), one can also find four-form bullent/bullenta. [5]
Many not completely predictable morphological alternations may occur between masculine and feminine, like: [5]
In words that end in a sibilant sound, the masculine plural ending is -os instead of just -s. Feminines still have -es or, if they follow the two-form declension, no ending at all. Compare: el pols/els polsos ("the pulse"/"the pulses") vs. la pols/les pols ("the dust"/"the dusts"). [6]
Adjectives that end in -ç follow the two-form declension in the singular, but four-form in the plural, so that they actually have three forms:
masculine | feminine | |
---|---|---|
singular | feliç | |
plural | feliços | felices |
Catalan nouns are inflected for gender (masculine or feminine), and number (singular or plural). There is no case inflection. Articles and adjectives agree in gender and number with the noun they refer to.
Usually, masculine nouns are unmarked, feminine nouns carry the suffix -a; and the plural is marked with the suffix -s, which makes the feminine ending turn into -e-. Thus, the most common declension paradigm for Catalan names is the one that follows:
masculine | feminine | |
---|---|---|
singular | gat | gata |
plural | gats | gates |
The grammatical gender of a Catalan noun does not necessarily correspond with the real-life object's biological sex (or lack thereof). Nouns denoting a person, such as home "man" or dona "woman", generally agree with the natural gender of what is described. However, Catalan assigns gender to nouns without natural gender in arbitrary fashion. For example, the word tamboret ("stool") is masculine, while the word cadira ("chair") is feminine.
Living beings of the same species usually are designed by two nouns: one of masculine grammatical gender for biologically male individuals, and one of feminine grammatical gender for biologically female individuals. Both names, masculine and feminine, are usually only differentiated by their ending; sometimes the second is derived from the first or vice versa. Rarely, both come from different roots. [7]
becomes voiced | remains unvoiced | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
change | masculine | feminine | gloss | masculine | feminine | gloss |
⟨-t⟩ → ⟨-d-⟩ /t/ → /ð/ | nebot | neboda | "nephew – niece" | nét | neta | "grandson – granddaughter" |
⟨-p⟩ → ⟨-b-⟩ /p/ → /β/ | llop | lloba | "wolf" | |||
⟨-f⟩ → ⟨-v-⟩ /f/ → /v~β/ | serf | serva | "serf" | |||
⟨-s⟩ → ⟨-s-⟩ /s/ → /z/ | espòs | esposa | "husband – wife" | gos | gossa | "dog – bitch" |
Like all the Western Romance languages, the formation of the plural involves the addition of the suffix -s to the singular. However, the stem may undergo some changes. The number inflection of adjectives follows the same rules. [9]
sound | transformation | singular (stem underlined) | plural (stem underlined) | IPA transcription | gloss |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
/ɣ/ | ⟨g⟩ → ⟨gu⟩ | farga | fargues | /ˈfarɣə/, /ˈfarɣəs/ /ˈfarɣa/, /ˈfarɣes/ | "forge(s)" |
/k/ | ⟨c⟩ → ⟨qu⟩ | oca | oques | /ˈɔkə/, /ˈɔkəs/ /ˈɔka/, /ˈɔkes/ | "goose – geese" |
/ɣw/ | ⟨gu⟩ → ⟨gü⟩ | llengua | llengües | /ˈʎeŋɡwə/, /ˈʎeŋɡwəs/ /ˈʎeŋɡwa/, /ˈʎeŋɡwes/ | "tongue(s)" |
/kw/ | ⟨qu⟩ → ⟨qü⟩ | pasqua | pasqües | /ˈpaskwə/, /ˈpaskwəs/ /ˈpaskwa/, /ˈpaskwes/ | "Easter(s)" |
/s/ | ⟨ç⟩ → ⟨c⟩ | plaça | places | /ˈpɫasə/, /ˈpɫasəs/ /ˈplasa/, /ˈplases/ | "square(s)" |
/ʒ/ /d͡ʒ/ | ⟨j⟩ → ⟨g⟩ | pluja | pluges | /ˈpɫuʒə/, /ˈpɫuʒəs/ /ˈplud͡ʒa/, /ˈplud͡ʒes/ | "rain(s)" |
/d͡ʒ/ /d͡ʒː/ | platja | platges | /ˈpɫad͡ʒə/, /ˈpɫad͡ʒəs/ /ˈpɫad͡ʒːa/, /ˈpɫad͡ʒːes/ | "beach(es)" |
A Catalan adjective must agree in gender and number with the noun it accompanies. Most adjectives are placed after the nouns. Adjectives can be divided into three declension paradigms. The number inflection rules are the same as the nouns.
Catalan adjectives can be divided in three groups according to the distinct forms it has.
masculine | feminine | |
---|---|---|
singular | verd | verda |
plural | verds | verdes |
masculine | feminine | |
---|---|---|
singular | feliç | |
plural | feliços | felices |
masculine | feminine | |
---|---|---|
singular | indiferent | |
plural | indiferents | |
In adjectives with distinct feminine singular form, the masculine is usually unmarked for gender, and ends in a consonant. The feminine singular form of regular adjectives can be created from the masculine singular.
becomes voiced | remains unvoiced | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
change | masculine | feminine | gloss | masculine | feminine | gloss |
⟨-t⟩ → ⟨-d-⟩ /t/ → /ð/ | buit | buida | "empty" | lent | lenta | "slow" |
⟨-c⟩ → ⟨-g-⟩ /k/ → /ɣ/ | groc | groga | "yellow" | ric | rica | "rich" |
⟨-s⟩ → ⟨-s-⟩ /s/ → /z/ | obès | obesa | "obese" | gras | grassa | "fat" |
If the masculine form ends in -e or -o, the final vowel is substituted with -a. Many of the adjectives ending in -o come from Spanish. [16]
Some adjectives may have the same form in the masculine singular and feminine singular.
Some feminine adjectives are formed irregularly and do not adhere to the aforementioned formation rules.
masculine | feminine | gloss |
---|---|---|
oblic | obliqua | "oblique" |
boig | boja | "insane" |
roig | roja | " red" |
lleig | lletja | "ugly" |
mig | mitja | "half" |
nul | nul·la | "null" |
tranquil | tranquil·la | "quiet" |
cru | crua | "raw" |
nu | nua | "nude" |
jueu | jueva/jueua | "Jewish" |
sueu | sueva/sueua | "Suebian" |
mal | mala | "bad" |
paral·lel | paral·lela | "parallel" |
car | cara | "expensive" |
clar | clara | "clear" |
avar | avara | "avaricious" |
rar | rara | "rare" |
Degrees of comparison are expressed with a construction implying the adverb més "more" or menys "less":
Like many other Romance languages, Catalan adjectives have an absolute superlative form, expressed with the suffix -íssim, placed between the stem and the gender / number suffix.
Catalan adverbs, like their English counterparts, are used to modify adjectives, other adverbs, and verbs or clauses. They do not display any inflection; that is, their form does not change to reflect their precise role, nor any characteristics of what they modify.
In Catalan, as in English, most adverbs are derived from adjectives. In most cases, this is done by adding the suffix -ment ("-ly") to the adjective's feminine singular form. For example, the feminine singular form of lent ("slow") is lenta, so the corresponding adverb is lentament ("slowly").
As in English, however, the adjective stem is sometimes modified to accommodate the suffix:
And, as in English, many common adverbs are not derived from adjectives at all:
The placement of Catalan adverbs is almost the same as the placement of English adverbs.
An adverb that modifies an adjective or adverb comes before that adjective or adverb:
An adverb that modifies an infinitive (verbal noun) generally comes after the infinitive:
An adverb that modifies a main verb or clause comes either after the verb, or before the clause:
Note that, unlike in English, this is true even of negative adverbs:
Possessive pronouns are inflected for person and number of the possessor, and for gender and number of the possession. The table below summarizes all the possible forms.
singular | plural | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
masculine | feminine | masculine | feminine | ||
singular | first | meu | meva meua | meus | meves meues |
second | teu | teva teua | teus | teves teues | |
third | seu | seva seua | seus | seves seues | |
plural | first | nostre | nostra | nostres | |
second | vostre | vostra | vostres | ||
third | llur | llurs |
The feminine forms meva, teva, and seva may appear dialectally with /w/ instead of /β~v/: meua, teua, and seua. Their plural forms follow the same variation (meues, teues, and seues). [18]
Possessive adjectives are, like the possessive pronouns, inflected for person and number of the possessor, and for gender and number of the possession. The table below summarizes all the possible forms. Notice how the plural possessor forms are identical to the possessive pronoun forms.
singular | plural | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
masculine | feminine | masculine | feminine | ||
singular | first | mon | ma | mons | mes |
second | ton | ta | tons | tes | |
third | son | sa | sons | ses | |
plural | first | nostre | nostra | nostres | |
second | vostre | vostra | vostres | ||
third | llur | llurs |
Central Catalan has abandoned almost completely unstressed possessives (mon, etc.) in favour of constructions of article + stressed forms (el meu, etc.), a feature shared with Italian [2] and Portuguese.
The morphology of Catalan personal pronouns is complex, specially in unstressed forms, which are numerous (13 distinct forms, compared to 11 in Spanish or 9 in Italian; French has such a different system that comparisons are not feasible). [2] Features include the neuter gender (ho) and the great degree of freedom when combining different unstressed pronouns (65 combinations). [2]
This flexibility allows Catalan to use extraposition extensively, much more than French or Spanish. Thus, Catalan can have m'hi recomanaren ("they recommended me to him"), whereas in French one must say ils m'ont recommendé à lui, and in Spanish me recomendaron a él. [2] This allows the placement of almost any nominal term as a sentence topic, without having to use so often the passive voice (as in French or English), or identifying the direct object with a preposition (as in Spanish). [2]
singular | plural | ||
---|---|---|---|
first person | jo, mi | nosaltres | |
second person | informal | tu | vosaltres |
respectful | vós Archaic in most dialects. | ||
formal | vostè vosté | vostès vostés | |
third person | masculine | ell | ells |
feminine | ella | elles |
singular | plural | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
first person | accusative, dative, reflexive | em | ens | |
second person | et | us | ||
third person | accusative | masculine | el | els |
feminine | la | les | ||
objective neuter | ho | — | ||
dative | li | els | ||
reflexive | es | |||
adverbial | ablative, genitive | en | ||
locative | hi |
Catalan verbs express an action or a state of being of a given subject, and like verbs in most of the Indo-European languages, Catalan verbs undergo inflection according to the following categories:
mood | time | simple | perfect | |
---|---|---|---|---|
indicative | present | cantes | has cantat | |
past | imperfect | cantaves | havies cantat | |
remote preterite | cantares | hagueres cantat | ||
future | cantaràs | hauràs cantat | ||
subjunctive | present | cantis | hagis cantat | |
past | cantéssis | haguéssis cantat | ||
conditional | cantaries | hauries cantat | ||
imperative | canta | — |
simple | perfect | |
---|---|---|
infinitive | cantar | haver cantat |
gerund | cantant | havent cantat |
participle | cantat | – |
Like all the Romance languages, Catalan verbal inflection is more complex than the nominal. Suffixation is omnipresent, while morphological alternations play a secondary role. [2] Vowel alternances are active, as well as infixation and suppletion. However, these are not as productive as in Spanish, and are mostly restricted to irregular verbs. [2]
The Catalan verbal system is basically common to all Western Romance, except that most dialects replace the analytic perfect indicative with a periphrastic tense composed of vaig, vas (vares), va, vam (vàrem), vau (vàreu), van (varen) and the infinitive.
Catalan verbs are traditionally divided into three conjugations, with vowel themes -a-, -e-, -i-, the last two being split into two subtypes. However, this division is mostly theoretical. [2] Only the first conjugation is nowadays productive (with about 3500 common verbs), while the third (the subtype of servir, with about 700 common verbs) is semiproductive. The verbs of the second conjugation are fewer than 100, and it is not possible to create new ones, except by compounding. [2]
Verbal periphrases of obligation:
(*) Although it is not correct[ further explanation needed ] the usage of the verbal periphrasis *tenir + que + infinitive (obligation) in the Standard (instead of haver + de, which is roughly equivalent to English "have to"), it is widely used in colloquial Catalan and Valencian. The same occurs with *haver-hi + que + infinitive.
Verbal periphrases of probability:
Verbal periphrases of imminence, intention or future:
Other modal and aspectual verbal periphrases:
French grammar is the set of rules by which the French language creates statements, questions and commands. In many respects, it is quite similar to that of the other Romance languages.
Latin is a heavily inflected language with largely free word order. Nouns are inflected for number and case; pronouns and adjectives are inflected for number, case, and gender; and verbs are inflected for person, number, tense, aspect, voice, and mood. The inflections are often changes in the ending of a word, but can be more complicated, especially with verbs.
In Portuguese grammar, nouns, adjectives, pronouns, and articles are moderately inflected: there are two genders and two numbers. The case system of the ancestor language, Latin, has been lost, but personal pronouns are still declined with three main types of forms: subject, object of verb, and object of preposition. Most nouns and many adjectives can take diminutive or augmentative derivational suffixes, and most adjectives can take a so-called "superlative" derivational suffix. Adjectives usually follow their respective nouns.
Swedish is descended from Old Norse. Compared to its progenitor, Swedish grammar is much less characterized by inflection. Modern Swedish has two genders and no longer conjugates verbs based on person or number. Its nouns have lost the morphological distinction between nominative and accusative cases that denoted grammatical subject and object in Old Norse in favor of marking by word order. Swedish uses some inflection with nouns, adjectives, and verbs. It is generally a subject–verb–object (SVO) language with V2 word order.
Yiddish grammar is the system of principles which govern the structure of the Yiddish language. This article describes the standard form laid out by YIVO while noting differences in significant dialects such as that of many contemporary Hasidim. As a Germanic language descended from Middle High German, Yiddish grammar is fairly similar to that of German, though it also has numerous linguistic innovations as well as grammatical features influenced by or borrowed from Hebrew, Aramaic, and various Slavic languages.
Hindustani, the lingua franca of Northern India and Pakistan, has two standardised registers: Hindi and Urdu. Grammatical differences between the two standards are minor but each uses its own script: Hindi uses Devanagari while Urdu uses an extended form of the Perso-Arabic script, typically in the Nastaʿlīq style.
The grammar of Modern Greek, as spoken in present-day Greece and Cyprus, is essentially that of Demotic Greek, but it has also assimilated certain elements of Katharevousa, the archaic, learned variety of Greek imitating Classical Greek forms, which used to be the official language of Greece through much of the 19th and 20th centuries. Modern Greek grammar has preserved many features of Ancient Greek, but has also undergone changes in a similar direction as many other modern Indo-European languages, from more synthetic to more analytic structures.
In linguistics, a suffix is an affix which is placed after the stem of a word. Common examples are case endings, which indicate the grammatical case of nouns and adjectives, and verb endings, which form the conjugation of verbs. Suffixes can carry grammatical information or lexical information . Inflection changes the grammatical properties of a word within its syntactic category. Derivational suffixes fall into two categories: class-changing derivation and class-maintaining derivation.
Icelandic is an inflected language. Icelandic nouns can have one of three grammatical genders: masculine, feminine or neuter. Nouns, adjectives and pronouns are declined in four cases and two numbers, singular and plural.
This article discusses the grammar of the Western Lombard (Insubric) language. The examples are in Milanese, written according to the Classical Milanese orthography.
Somali is an agglutinative language, using many affixes and particles to determine and alter the meaning of words. As in other related Afroasiatic languages, Somali nouns are inflected for gender, number and case, while verbs are inflected for persons, number, tenses, and moods.
Punjabi is an Indo-Aryan language native to the region of Punjab of Pakistan and India and spoken by the Punjabi people. This page discusses the grammar of Modern Standard Punjabi as defined by the relevant sources below.
Dirasha is a member of the Cushitic branch of the Afro-Asiatic family. It is spoken in the Omo region of Ethiopia, in the hills west of Lake Chamo, around the town of Gidole.
Standard Kannada grammar is primarily based on Keshiraja's Shabdamanidarpana which provides the fullest systematic exposition of Kannada language. The earlier grammatical works include portions of Kavirajamarga of 9th century, Kavyavalokana and Karnatakabhashabhushana both authored by Nagavarma II in first half of the 12th century.
In linguistic morphology, inflection is a process of word formation in which a word is modified to express different grammatical categories such as tense, case, voice, aspect, person, number, gender, mood, animacy, and definiteness. The inflection of verbs is called conjugation, while the inflection of nouns, adjectives, adverbs, etc. can be called declension.
Old Norse has three categories of verbs and two categories of nouns. Conjugation and declension are carried out by a mix of inflection and two nonconcatenative morphological processes: umlaut, a backness-based alteration to the root vowel; and ablaut, a replacement of the root vowel, in verbs.
Historical linguistics has made tentative postulations about and multiple varyingly different reconstructions of Proto-Germanic grammar, as inherited from Proto-Indo-European grammar. All reconstructed forms are marked with an asterisk (*).
The morphology of the Polish language is characterised by a fairly regular system of inflection as well as word formation. Certain regular or common alternations apply across the Polish morphological system, affecting word formation and inflection of various parts of speech. These are described below, mostly with reference to the orthographic rather than the phonological system for clarity.
Catalannouns are inflected for gender, and number. There is no case inflection. Articles and adjectives agree in gender and number with the noun they refer to.
This article describes the grammar of the Old Irish language. The grammar of the language has been described with exhaustive detail by various authors, including Thurneysen, Binchy and Bergin, McCone, O'Connell, Stifter, among many others.