Grammatical features |
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Dual (abbreviated DU) is a grammatical number that some languages use in addition to singular and plural. When a noun or pronoun appears in dual form, it is interpreted as referring to precisely two of the entities (objects or persons) identified by the noun or pronoun acting as a single unit or in unison. Verbs can also have dual agreement forms in these languages.
The dual number existed in Proto-Indo-European and persisted in many of its descendants, such as Ancient Greek and Sanskrit, which have dual forms across nouns, verbs, and adjectives; Gothic, which used dual forms in pronouns and verbs; and Old English (Anglo-Saxon), which used dual forms in its pronouns. It can still be found in a few modern Indo-European languages such as Irish, Scottish Gaelic, Lithuanian, Slovene, and Sorbian languages.
The majority of modern Indo-European languages, including modern English, have lost the dual number through their development. Its function has mostly been replaced by the simple plural. They may however show residual traces of the dual, for example in the English distinctions: both vs. all, either vs. any, neither vs. none, and so on. A commonly used sentence to exemplify dual in English is "Both go to the same school." where both refers to two specific people who had already been determined in the conversation.
Many Semitic languages have dual number. For instance, in Hebrew יים- (-ayim) or a variation of it is added to the end of some nouns, e.g. some parts of the body (eye, ear, nostril, lip, hand, leg) and some time periods (minute, hour, day, week, month, year) to indicate that it is dual (regardless of how the plural is formed). A similar situation exists in classical Arabic, where ان-ān is added to the end of any noun to indicate that it is dual (regardless of how the plural is formed).
It is also present in Khoisan languages that have a rich inflectional morphology, particularly Khoe languages, [1] as well as Kunama, a Nilo-Saharan language. [2]
Many languages make a distinction between singular and plural: English, for example, distinguishes between man and men, or house and houses. In some languages, in addition to such singular and plural forms, there is also a dual form, which is used when exactly two people or things are meant. In many languages with dual forms, the use of the dual is mandatory as in some Arabic dialects using dual in nouns as in Hejazi Arabic, and the plural is used only for groups greater than two. However, the use of the dual is optional in some languages such as other modern Arabic dialects including Egyptian Arabic.
In other languages such as Hebrew, the dual exists only for words naming time spans (day, week, etc.), a few measure words, and for words that naturally come in pairs and are not used in the plural except in rhetoric: eyes, ears, and so forth.
In Slovene, the use of the dual is mandatory except for nouns that are natural pairs, such as trousers, eyes, ears, lips, hands, arms, legs, feet, kidneys, breasts, lungs, etc., for which the plural form has to be used unless one wants to stress that something is true for both one and the other part. For example, one says oči me bolijo ('my eyes hurt'), but if they want to stress that both their eyes hurt, they say obe očesi me bolita. When using the pronoun obe/oba ('both'), the dual form that follows is mandatory. But the use of "obe (both)" is not mandatory since "očesi (two eyes)" as it is, implies that one means both eyes.
Although relatively few languages have the dual number, using different words for groups of two and groups greater than two is not uncommon. English has words distinguishing dual vs. plural number, including: both/all, either/any, neither/none, between/among, former/first, and latter/last. Japanese, which has no grammatical number, also has words dochira (どちら, 'which of the two') and dore (どれ, 'which of the three or more'), etc.
Among living languages, Modern Standard Arabic has a mandatory dual number, marked on nouns, verbs, adjectives, and pronouns. (First-person dual forms, however, do not exist; compare this to the lack of third-person dual forms in the old Germanic languages.) Many of the spoken Arabic dialects have a dual marking for nouns (only), and its use can be mandatory in some dialects, and not mandatory in others. Likewise, Akkadian had a dual number, though its use was confined to standard phrases like "two hands", "two eyes", and "two arms". The dual in Hebrew has also atrophied, generally being used for only time, number, and natural pairs (like body parts) even in its most ancient form.
Inuktitut and the related Central Alaskan Yup'ik language use dual forms; however, the related Greenlandic language does not (though it used to have them).
Khoekhoegowab and other Khoe languages mark dual number in their person-gender-number enclitics, though the neuter gender does not have a dual form.
Austronesian languages, particularly Polynesian languages such as Hawaiian, Niuean, and Tongan, possess a dual number for pronouns but not for nouns, as nouns are generally marked for plural syntactically and not morphologically. Other Austronesian languages, particularly those spoken in the Philippines, have a dual first-person pronoun; these languages include Ilokano (data), Tausug (kita), and Kapampangan (ìkatá). These forms mean "we", but specifically "you and I". This form once existed in Tagalog (katá or sometimes kitá) but has disappeared from standard usage (save for certain dialects such as in Batangas) since the middle of the 20th century, with kitá as the only surviving form (e.g. Mahál kitá, loosely "I love you").
The dual was a standard feature of the Proto-Uralic language, and lives on in the Samoyedic branch and in most Sami languages, while other members of the family like Finnish, Estonian, and Hungarian have lost it. Sami languages also feature dual pronouns, expressing the concept of "we two here" as contrasted to "we". Nenets, two closely-related Samoyedic languages, features a complete set of dual possessive suffixes for two systems, the number of possessors and the number of possessed objects (for example, "two houses of us two" expressed in one word).
The dual form is also used in several modern Indo-European languages, such as Irish, Scottish Gaelic, Slovene, and Sorbian (see below for details). The dual was a common feature of all early Slavic languages around the year 1000.
In Modern Standard Arabic, as well as in Classical Arabic, the use of dual is compulsory when describing two units. For this purpose, ان-ān is added to the end of any noun or adjective regardless of gender or of how the plural is formed. In the case of feminine nouns ending with ةta marbuta, this letter becomes a تta. When the dual noun or adjective is rendered in the genitive or accusative cases, the ان-ān becomes ين-ain.
Besides the noun and adjective dual, there are also dual verb forms of compulsory use for second and third person, together with their pronouns, but none for the first person.
The use of dual in spoken Arabic varies widely and is mostly rendered as ين-ain even when in nominative context. Whereas its use is quite common in Levantine Arabic, for instance كيلوينkilowain meaning "two kilograms", dual forms are generally not used in Maghrebi Arabic, where two units are commonly expressed with the word زوجzuʒ, as in زوج كيلوzuʒ kilu meaning "a pair of kilograms", with the noun appearing in singular.
In Biblical, Mishnaic, and Medieval Hebrew, like Arabic and other Semitic languages, all nouns can have singular, plural or dual forms, and there is still a debate whether there are vestiges of dual verbal forms and pronouns. [3] However, in practice, most nouns use only singular and plural forms. Usually ־ים-īm is added to masculine words to make them plural for example ספר / ספריםsēfer / səfārīm "book / books", whilst with feminine nouns the ־ה-ā is replaced with ־ות-ōṯ. For example, פרה / פרותpārā / pārōṯ "cow / cows". The masculine dual form is shown in pointed text with a pathach; in a purely consonantal text, masculine dual is not indicated at all by the consonants. The dual for (two) days is יוֹמַ֫יִם with pathach under the mem. An example of the dual form is יום / יומיים / ימיםyōm / yomạyim / yāmīm "day / two days / [two or more] days". Some words occur so often in pairs that the form with the dual suffix -ạyim is used in practice for the general plural, such as עין / עיניםʿạyin / ʿēnạyim "eye / eyes", used even in a sentence like "The spider has eight eyes." Thus words like ʿēnạyim only appear to be dual, but are in fact what is called "pseudo-dual", which is a way of making a plural. Sometimes, words can change meaning depending on whether the dual or plural form is used, for example; ʿayin can mean eye or water spring in the singular, but in the plural eyes will take the dual form of ʿenayim whilst springs are ʿeynot. Adjectives, verbs, and pronouns have only singular and plural, with the plural forms of these being used with dual nouns.
In Modern Hebrew as used in Israel, there is also a dual number, but its use is very restricted. The dual form is usually used in expressions of time and number. These nouns have plurals as well, which are used for numbers higher than two, for example:
Singular | Double | Triple |
---|---|---|
פעם páʿam ("time", frequency) | פעמיים paʿamáyim ("twice") | שלוש פעמים shalosh pəʿamim ("thrice") |
יום yom ("day") | יומיים yomáyim ("two days") | שלושה ימים shəlosha yamim ("three days") |
שנה shaná ("year") | שנתיים shnatáyim ("two years") | שלוש שנים shalosh shanim ("three years") |
שבוע shavúaʿ ("week") | שבועיים shəvuʿáyim ("two weeks") | שלושה שבועות shəlosha shavuʿot ("three weeks") |
מאה meʾa ("one hundred") | מאתיים matáyim ("two hundred") | שלוש מאות shalosh meʾot ("three hundred") |
The pseudo-dual is used to form the plural of some body parts, garments, etc., for instance:
In this case, even if there are more than two, the dual is still used, for instance יש לכלב ארבע רגליים yesh lə-ḵélev arbaʿ ragláyim ("a dog has four legs").
Another case of the pseudo-dual is duale tantum (a kind of plurale tantum) nouns:
In Nama, nouns have three genders and three grammatical numbers. [4]
Singular | Dual | Plural | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Feminine | piris | pirira | piridi | goat |
Masculine | arib | arikha | arigu | dog |
Neuter | khoe-i | khoera | khoen | people |
The non-Khoe Khoesan languages (Tuu and Kx'a), do not have dual number marking of nouns. [5]
The category of dual can be reconstructed for Proto-Indo-European, the ancestor of all Indo-European languages, and it has been retained as a fully functioning category in the earliest attested daughter languages. The best evidence for the dual among ancient Indo-European languages can be found in Old Indo-Iranian (Vedic Sanskrit and Avestan), Homeric Greek and Old Church Slavonic, where its use was obligatory for all inflected categories including verbs, nouns, adjectives, pronouns and some numerals. Various traces of dual can also be found in Gothic, Old Irish, and Latin (more below).
Due to the scarcity of evidence, the reconstruction of dual endings for Proto-Indo-European is difficult, but at least formally according to the comparative method it can be ascertained that no more than three dual endings are reconstructible for nominal inflection. [6] Mallory & Adams (2006) reconstruct the dual endings as:
The Proto-Indo-European category of dual did not only denote two of something: it could also be used as an associative marker, the so-called elliptical dual. [7] For example, the Vedic deity Mitrá, when appearing in dual form Mitrā́, refers to both Mitra and his companion Varuṇa. Homeric dual Αἴαντε refers to Ajax the Greater and his fighting companion Teucer, and Latin plural Castorēs is used to denote both the semi-god Castor and his twin brother Pollux.
Beside nominal (nouns, adjectives and pronouns), the dual was also present in verbal inflection where the syncretism was much lower.
Of living Indo-European languages, the dual can be found in dialects of Scottish Gaelic, [8] but fully functioning as a paradigmatic category only in Slovene, and Sorbian. Remnants of the dual can be found in many of the remaining daughter languages, where certain forms of the noun are used with the number two (see below for examples).
The dual is widely used in Sanskrit, as noted above. Its use is mandatory when the number of objects is two, and the plural is not permitted in this case, with one exception (see below). It is always indicated by the declensional suffix (and some morphophonemic modifications to the root resulting from addition of the suffix).
For nouns, the dual forms are the same in the following sets of cases, with examples for the masculine noun bāla (boy):
In Sanskrit, adjectives are treated the same as nouns as far as case declensions are concerned. As for pronouns, the same rules apply, except for a few special forms used in some cases.
Verbs have distinct dual forms in the three persons in both the ātmanepada and parasmaipada forms of verbs. For instance, the root pac meaning "to cook", takes the following forms in the dual number of the present tense, called laṭ lakāra:
Person | Parasmaipada | Ātmanepada |
---|---|---|
3rd (prathama) | pacataḥ | pacete |
2nd (madhyama) | pacathaḥ | pacethe |
1st (uttama) | pacāvaḥ | pacāvahe |
(In Sanskrit, the order of the persons is reversed.)
The one exception to the rigidness about dual number is in the case of the pronoun asmad (I/we): Sanskrit grammar permits one to use the plural number for asmad even if the actual number of objects denoted is one or two (this is similar to the "royal we"). For example, while ahaṃ bravīmi, āvāṃ brūvaḥ and vayaṃ brūmaḥ are respectively the singular, dual and plural forms of "I say" and "we say", vayaṃ brūmaḥ can be used in the singular and dual sense as well.
The dual can be found in Ancient Greek Homeric texts such as the Iliad and the Odyssey , although its use is only sporadic, owing as much to artistic prerogatives as dictional and metrical requirements within the hexametric meter. There were only two distinct forms of the dual in Ancient Greek.
In classical Greek, the dual was lost, except in the Attic dialect of Athens, where it persisted until the fifth century BC. Even in this case, its use depended on the author and certain stock expressions.
In Koine Greek and Modern Greek, the only remnant of the dual is the numeral for "two", δύο, dýo, which has lost its genitive and dative cases (both δυοῖν, dyoīn) and retains its nominative/accusative form. Thus it appears to be undeclined in all cases. Nevertheless, Aristophanes of Byzantium, the foremost authority of his time (early 2nd century BC) on grammar and style, and a staunch defender of "proper" High Attic tradition, admonishes those who write δυσί (dysí) (dative, plural number) rather than the "correct" δυοῖν (dyoīn) (dative, dual number).[ citation needed ]
The dual was lost in Latin and its sister Italic languages. However, certain fossilized forms remained, for example, viginti (twenty), but triginta (thirty), the words ambo / ambae (both, compare Slavic oba), duo / duae with a dual declension.
Reconstructed Proto-Celtic nominal and adjectival declensions contain distinct dual forms; pronouns and verbs do not. In Old Irish, nouns and the definite article still have dual forms, but only when accompanied by the numeral *da "two". Traces of the dual remain in Middle Welsh, in nouns denoting pairs of body parts that incorporate the numeral two: e.g. deulin (from glin "knee"), dwyglust (from clust "ear"). [9]
In the modern languages, there are still significant remnants of dual number in Irish and Scottish Gaelic in nominal phrases containing the numeral dhá or dà (including the higher numerals 12, 22, etc.). As the following table shows, dhá and dà combines with a singular noun, which is lenited. Masculine nouns take no special inflection, but feminine nouns have a slenderized dual form, which is in fact identical to the dative singular. [10]
Singular | Dual | Plural |
---|---|---|
lámh ("a hand" in Irish) | dhá láimh ("two hands") | trí lámh ("three hands") |
clach ("a stone" in Scottish Gaelic) | dà chloich ("two stones") | trì clachan ("three stones") |
Languages of the Brythonic branch do not have dual number. As mentioned above for Middle Welsh, some nouns can be said to have dual forms, prefixed with a form of the numeral "two" (Breton daou- / div-, Welsh dau- / deu- / dwy-, Cornish dew- / diw-). This process is not fully productive, however, and the prefixed forms are semantically restricted. For example, Breton daouarn (< dorn "hand") can only refer to one person's pair of hands, not any two hands from two different people. Welsh deufis must refer to a period of two consecutive months, whereas dau fis can be any two months (compare "fortnight" in English as opposed to "two weeks" or "14 days"; the first must, but the second and third need not, be a single consecutive period). [11] The modern Welsh term dwylo (= hands) is formed by adding the feminine (and conjoining) form of 'two' (dwy) with the word for 'hand' — llaw becoming lo as it is no longer in a stressed syllable.
In Proto-Germanic, the dual had been entirely lost in nouns, and since verbs agreed with nouns in number, the third person dual form of verbs was also lost. The dual therefore remained only in the first and second person pronouns and their accompanying verb forms. Old English further lost all remaining dual verbs, keeping only first and second person dual pronouns. The Old English first person dual pronoun was wit in the nominative and unc in the accusative, and the second person equivalents were git and inc respectively. The West Saxon dialect also had the genitive forms of uncer for first person and incer for second person. The dual lasted beyond Old English into the Early Middle English period in the Southern and Midland dialects. Middle English saw git evolve into ȝit, and inc can be seen in various different forms including ȝinc, ȝunc, unk, hunk, and hunke. The dual mostly died out in the early 1200s, surviving to around 1300 only in the East Midland dialect. [12]
In a small number of modern English dialects, dual pronouns have independently returned. These include:
Gothic retained the dual more or less unchanged from Proto-Germanic. It had markings for the first and second person for both the verbs and pronouns, for example wit "we two" as compared to weis "we, more than two". Old Norse and other old Germanic languages, like Old English, had dual marking only in the personal pronouns and not in the verbs.
The dual has disappeared as a productive form in all the living languages, with loss of the dual occurring in North Frisian dialects only quite recently. [17] In Austro-Bavarian, the old dual pronouns have replaced the standard plural pronouns: nominative es, accusative enk (from Proto-Germanic *jut and *inkw, *inkwiz). A similar development in the pronoun system can be seen in Icelandic and Faroese. Another remnant of the dual can be found in the use of the pronoun begge ("both") in the Scandinavian languages of Norwegian and Danish, bägge in Swedish and báðir / báðar / bæði in Faroese and Icelandic. In these languages, in order to state "all + number", the constructions are begge to / báðir tveir / báðar tvær / bæði tvö ("all two") but alle tre / allir þrír / allar þrjár / öll þrjú ("all three"). In German, the expression beide ("both") is equivalent to, though more commonly used than, alle zwei ("all two").
Norwegian Nynorsk also retains the conjunction korgje ("one of two") and its inverse korkje ("neither of two").
A remnant of a lost dual also survives in the Icelandic and Faroese ordinals first and second, which can be translated two ways: First there is fyrri / fyrri / fyrra and seinni / seinni / seinna, which mean the first and second of two respectively, while fyrsti / fyrsta / fyrsta and annar / önnur / annað mean first and second of more than two. In Icelandic the pronouns annar / önnur / annað ("one") and hinn / hin / hitt ("other") are also used to denote each unit of a set of two in contrast to the pronouns einn / ein / eitt ("one") and annar / önnur / annað ("second"). Therefore in Icelandic "with one hand" translates as með annarri hendi not með einni hendi, and as in English "with the other hand" is með hinni hendinni. An additional element in Icelandic worth mentioning are the interrogative pronouns hvor / hvor / hvort ("who / which / what" of two) and hver / hver / hvert ("who / which / what" of more than two). [18]
Among the Baltic languages, the dual form existed but is now nearly obsolete in standard Lithuanian. The dual form Du litu was still used on two-litas coins issued in 1925, but the plural form (2 litai) is used on later two-litas coins.
Singular | Dual | Plural |
---|---|---|
vyras ("a man") | vyru ("two men") | vyrai ("men") |
pirštas ("finger") | pirštu ("two fingers") | pirštai ("fingers") |
draugas ("a friend") | draugu ("two friends") | draugai ("friends") |
mergina ("a girl") | mergini ("two girls") | merginos ("girls") |
einu ("I go") | einava ("We two go") | einame ("We (more than two) go") |
eisiu ("I will go") | eisiva ("We two will go") | eisime ("We (more than two) will go") |
Common Slavic had a complete singular-dual-plural number system, although the nominal dual paradigms showed considerable syncretism, just as they did in Proto-Indo-European. Dual was fully operable at the time of Old Church Slavonic manuscript writings, and it has been subsequently lost in most Slavic dialects in the historical period.
Of the extant Slavic languages, only Slovene, Chakavian and certain Kajkavian dialects, and Sorbian have preserved the dual number as a productive form. In all of the remaining languages, its influence is still found in the declension of nouns of which there are commonly only two: eyes, ears, shoulders, in certain fixed expressions, and the agreement of nouns when used with numbers. [19]
In all the languages, the words "two" and "both" preserve characteristics of the dual declension. The following table shows a selection of forms for the numeral "two":
language | nom.-acc.-voc. | gen. | loc. | dat. | instr. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Common Slavic | *dъva (masc.) *dъvě (fem./nt.) | *dъvoju | *dъvěma | ||
Belarusian | дваdva (masc./nt.) дзвеdzve (fem.) | двухdvukh (masc./nt.) дзвюхdzvyukh (fem.) | двумdvum (masc./nt.) дзвюмdzvyum (fem.) | двумаdvuma (masc./nt.) дзвюмаdzvyuma (fem.) | |
Czech | dva (masc.) dvě (fem./nt.) | dvou | dvěma | ||
Polish | dwa (masc./nt.) dwie (fem.)1 | dwu dwóch | dwu dwóm | dwoma dwiema | |
Russian | дваdva (masc./nt.) двеdve (fem.) | двухdvukh | двумdvum | двумяdvumya (usual form) двемяdvemya (seldom used, dialectal; fem. in some dialects) | |
Serbo-Croatian | два / dva (masc./nt.) две / dvije (fem.) | двају / dvaju (masc./nt.) двеју / dviju (fem.) | двaма / dvama (masc./nt.)2 двема / dvjema (fem.) | ||
Slovak | dva (masc. inanim.) dvaja / dvoch (masc. anim.) dve (fem., nt.) | dvoch | dvom | dvoma / dvomi | |
Slovene | dva (masc.) dve (fem./nt.) | dveh | dvema | ||
Sorbian | dwaj (masc.) dwě (fem./nt.) | dweju | dwěmaj | ||
Ukrainian | дваdva (masc./nt.) двіdvi (fem.) | двохdvokh | двомdvom | двомаdvoma |
Notes:
In Common Slavic, the rules were relatively simple for determining the appropriate case and number form of the noun, when it was used with a numeral. The following rules apply:
With the loss of the dual in most of the Slavic languages, the above pattern now is only seen in the forms of the numbers for the tens, hundreds, and rarely thousands. This can be seen by examining the following table:
Language | 10 | 20 | 30 | 50 | 100 | 200 | 300 | 500 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Common Slavic | *desętь | *dъva desęti | *trije desęte | *pętь desętъ | *sъto | *dъvě sъtě | *tri sъta | *pętь sъtъ |
Belarusian | дзесяць dzesyats′ | дваццаць dvatstsats′ | трыццаць tritstsats′ | пяцьдзесят pyats′dzesyat | сто sto | дзвесце dzvestse | трыста trista | пяцьсот pyats′sot |
Bulgarian | десет deset | двадесет dvadeset | тридесет trideset | петдесет petdeset | сто sto | двеста dvesta | триста trista | петстотин petstotin |
Czech | deset | dvacet | třicet | padesát | sto | dvě stě | tři sta | pět set |
Macedonian | десет deset | дваесет dvaeset | триесет trieset | педесет pedeset | сто sto | двесте dveste | триста trisa | петстотини petstotini |
Polish | dziesięć | dwadzieścia | trzydzieści | pięćdziesiąt | sto | dwieście | trzysta | pięćset |
Russian | десять desyat′ | двадцать dvadtsat′ | тридцать tridtsat′ | пятьдесят pyatdesyat | сто sto | двести dvesti | триста trista | пятьсот pyatsot |
Serbo-Croatian | десет deset | двадесет dvadeset | тридесет trideset | педесет pedeset | сто sto | дв(ј)еста dv(j)esta | триста trista | петсто petsto |
Upper Sorbian [20] | dźesać | dwaceći | třiceći | pjećdźesat | sto | dwě sćě | tři sta | pjeć stow |
Slovak | desať | dvadsať | tridsať | päťdesiat | sto | dvesto | tristo | päťsto |
Slovene | deset | dvajset | trideset | petdeset | sto | dvesto | tristo | petsto |
Ukrainian | десять desyat′ | двадцять dvadtsyat′ | тридцять trydtsyat′ | п'ятдесят p″yatdesyat | сто sto | двісті dvisti | триста trysta | п'ятсот p″yatsot |
The Common Slavic rules governing the declension of nouns after numerals, which were described above, have been preserved in Slovene. In those Slavic languages that have lost the dual, the system has been simplified and changed in various ways, but many languages have kept traces of the dual in it. In general, Czech, Slovak, Polish and Ukrainian have extended the pattern of "three/four" to "two"; Russian, Belarusian and Serbo-Croatian have, on the contrary, extended the pattern of "two" to "three/four"; and Bulgarian and Macedonian have extended the pattern of "two" to all numerals. The resulting systems are as follows:
These different systems are exemplified in the table below where the word "wolf" is used to form nominative noun phrases with various numerals. The dual and forms originating from it are underlined.
"wolf" | "wolves" | "two wolves" | "three wolves" | "five wolves" | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Noun form | nom. sing. | nom. plur. | varies | ||
Common Slavic | *vьlkъ | vьlci | dъva vьlka (nom. dual) | tri vьlci (nom. pl.) | pętь vьlkъ (gen. pl.) |
Slovene | volk | volkovi | dva volka (nom. dual) | trije volkovi (nom. pl.) | pet volkov (gen. pl.) |
Czech | vlk | vlci | dva/tři vlci (nom. pl.) | pět vlků (gen. pl.) | |
Polish | wilk | wilki wilcy (rare) | dwa/trzy wilki (nom. pl.) dwaj/trzej wilcy (nom. pl.) | pięć wilków (gen. pl.) | |
Slovak | vlk | vlky (concrete) vlci (abstract) | dva/tri vlky (nom. pl.) dvaja/traja vlci (nom. pl.) | päť vlkov (gen. pl.) piati vlci (nom. pl.) | |
Ukrainian | вовкvovk | вовки́vovký | два/три во́вкиdva/try vóvky (nom. pl.) | п'ять вовківp″yat′ vovkiv (gen. pl.) | |
Belarusian | воўкvowk | ваўкіvawki | два/тры ваўкіdva/try vawki (nom. pl.) | пяць ваўкоўpyats′ vawkow (gen. pl.) | |
Russian | волкvolk | волкиvolki | два/три волкadva/tri volka (gen. sg.) | пять волковpyat volkov (gen. pl.) | |
Serbo-Croatian | вук / vuk | вукови / vukovi (concrete) вŷци / vûci (abstract) | два/три вука / dva/tri vuka (gen. sg.) | пет вукова / pet vukova (gen. pl.) | |
Bulgarian | вълкvǎlk | вълциvǎltsi | два/три/пет вълкаdva/tri/pet vălka (count form) |
The dual has also left traces in the declension of nouns describing body parts that humans customarily had two of, for example: eyes, ears, legs, breasts, and hands. Often the plural declension is used to give a figurative meaning. The table below summarizes the key such points.
Language | Examples |
---|---|
Czech | Certain paired body parts (eyes, ears, hands, legs, breasts; but not pair organs e.g. lungs) and their modifying adjectives require in the instrumental and genitive plural cases dual forms: se svýma očima (instrumental dual: "with one's own (two) eyes") or u nohou (genitive dual: "at the (two) feet"). Colloquial Czech will often substitute the dual instrumental for the literary plural instrumental case. |
Polish | Oko ("eye") and ucho ("ear") have plural stems deriving from old dual forms, and alternative instrumental and genitive plural forms with archaic dual endings: gen. pl. oczu/ócz/oczów, uszu/uszów; instr. pl. oczami/oczyma, uszami/uszyma. The declension of ręka ("hand, arm") also contains old dual forms (nom./acc./voc. pl ręce, instr. pl. rękami/rękoma, loc. sg./pl. rękach/ręku). The historically dual forms are usually used to refer a person's two hands (dziecko na ręku "child-in-arms"), while the regularized plural forms are used elsewhere. Other archaic dual forms, including dual verbs, can be encountered in older literature and in dialects: Jak nie chceta, to nie musita "If you don't want to, you don't have to". [26] |
Slovak | In Slovak, the genitive plural and instrumental plural for the words "eyes" and "ears" has also retained its dual forms: očiam/očí and ušiam/uší. |
Ukrainian | The words "eyes" and "shoulders" had dual forms in the instrumental plural case: очимаochyma ("eyes") and плечимаplechyma ("shoulders"). Furthermore, the nominative plural word вусаvusa, which is the dual of вусvus ("whisker"), refers to the moustache, while the true nominative plural word вусиvusy refers to whiskers. |
Bulgarian | Some words such as ръкаrăka "hand" use the originally dual form as a plural (ръцеrătse). |
Russian | In Russian the word коленоkoleno ("knee", "tribe (Israelites)") has different plurals: коленаkolena ("Israelites") is pure plural and колениkoleni (body part) is a dual form. Some cases are different as well: коленамиkolenami vs. коленямиkolenyami (instr.pl.). |
Along with the Sorbian languages, Chakavian, some Kajkavian dialects, and the extinct Old Church Slavonic, Slovene uses the dual. Although popular sources claim that Slovene has "preserved full grammatical use of the dual," [27] Standard Slovene (and, to varying degrees, Slovene dialects) show significant reduction of the dual number system when compared with Common Slavic. [28] In general, dual forms have a tendency to be replaced by plural forms. This tendency is stronger in oblique cases than in the nominative/accusative: in standard Slovene, genitive and locative forms have merged with the plural, and in many dialects, pluralization has extended to dative/instrumental forms. Dual inflection is better preserved in masculine forms than in feminine forms. [29] Natural pairs are usually expressed with the plural in Slovene, not with the dual: e.g. roke "hands", ušesa ears. The dual forms of such nouns can be used, in conjunction with the quantifiers dva "two" or oba "both", to emphasize the number: e.g. Imam samo dve roki "I only have two hands". The words for "parents" and "twins" show variation in colloquial Slovene between plural (starši, dvojčki) and dual (starša, dvojčka). [30] Standard Slovene has replaced the nominative dual pronouns of Common Slavic (vě "the two of us", va "the two of you", ja/ji/ji "the two of them" [m./f./n.]) with new synthetic dual forms: midva/midve (literally, "we-two"), vidva/vidve, onadva/onidve/onidve. [31]
Nominative case of noun volk "wolf", with and without numerals:
nom. sg. (wolf) | nom. dual (2 wolves) | nom. pl. (wolves) | |
---|---|---|---|
Slovene | volk | volkova | volkovi |
wolf | 2 wolves | 3 (or 4) wolves | 5(+) wolves (gen. pl.) | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Slovene | en volk | dva volkova | trije volkovi | pet volkov |
The dual is recognised by many Slovene speakers as one of the most distinctive features of the language and a mark of recognition, and is often mentioned in tourist brochures.
For verbs, the endings in the present tense are given as -va, -ta, -ta. The table below shows a comparison of the conjugation of the verb delati, which means "to do, to make, to work" and belongs to Class IV in the singular, dual, and plural.
Singular | Dual | Plural | |
---|---|---|---|
First person | delam | delava | delamo |
Second person | delaš | delata | delate |
Third person | dela | delata | delajo |
In the imperative, the endings are given as -iva for the first-person dual and -ita for the second-person dual. The table below shows the imperative forms for the verb hoditi ("to walk") in the first and second persons of the imperative (the imperative does not exist for first-person singular).
Singular | Dual | Plural | |
---|---|---|---|
First person | — | hodiva | hodimo |
Second person | hodi | hodita | hodite |
As in Slovenian, the Sorbian language (both dialects Upper and Lower Sorbian) has preserved the dual. For nouns, the following endings are used:
Masculine | Feminine or neuter | |
---|---|---|
Nominative, accusative, vocative | -aj/-ej | -e2/-y/-i |
Genitive1 | -ow | -ow |
Dative, instrumental, locative | -omaj | -omaj |
For example, the declension of sin (masculine) and crow (feminine) in the dual in Upper Sorbian would be given as
hrěch ("sin") | wróna ("crow") | |
---|---|---|
Nominative, accusative, vocative | hrěchaj | wrónje |
Genitive | hrěchow | wrónow |
Dative, instrumental, locative | hrěchomaj | wrónomaj |
For verbs, the endings in the present tense are given as -moj, -tej/-taj, -tej/-taj. The table below shows a comparison of the conjugation of the verb pisać, which means "to write" and belongs to Class I in the singular, dual, and plural.
Singular | Dual | Plural | |
---|---|---|---|
First person | pisam | pisamoj | pisamy |
Second person | pisaš | pisatej | pisaće |
Third person | pisa | pisatej | pisaja |
In linguistics, declension is the changing of the form of a word, generally to express its syntactic function in the sentence, by way of some inflection. Declensions may apply to nouns, pronouns, adjectives, adverbs, and determiners to indicate number, case, gender, and a number of other grammatical categories. Meanwhile, the inflectional change of verbs is called conjugation.
Latin declension is the set of patterns according to which Latin words are declined—that is, have their endings altered to show grammatical case, number and gender. Nouns, pronouns, and adjectives are declined, and a given pattern is called a declension. There are five declensions, which are numbered and grouped by ending and grammatical gender. Each noun follows one of the five declensions, but some irregular nouns have exceptions.
The Polabian language, also known as Drevanian–Polabian language, Drevanian language, and Lüneburg Wendish language, is a West Slavic language that was spoken by the Polabian Slavs in present-day northeastern Germany around the Elbe, from which the term Polabian comes from. It was spoken approximately until the rise to power of Prussia in the mid-18th century – when it was superseded by Low German – in the areas of Pomoré, central (Mittelmark) part of Branibor (Brandenburg) and eastern Saxony-Anhalt, as well as in eastern parts of Wendland and Dravänia (Schleswig-Holstein), Ostholstein and Lauenburg). Polabian was also relatively long spoken in and around the cities of Bukovéc (Lübeck), Starigard (Oldenburg) and Trava (Hamburg). The very poorly attested Slavic dialects of Rügen seemed to have had more in common with Polabian than with Pomeranian varieties. In the south, it bordered on the Sorbian language area in Lusatia.
The following is an overview of the grammar of the Slovene language.
This page describes the declension of nouns, adjectives and pronouns in Slovene. For information on Slovene grammar in general, see Slovene grammar.
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.
The grammar of Old English differs greatly from Modern English, predominantly being much more inflected. As a Germanic language, Old English has a morphological system similar to that of the Proto-Germanic reconstruction, retaining many of the inflections thought to have been common in Proto-Indo-European and also including constructions characteristic of the Germanic daughter languages such as the umlaut.
The grammar of the Polish language is complex and characterized by a high degree of inflection, and has relatively free word order, although the dominant arrangement is subject–verb–object (SVO). There commonly are no articles, and there is frequent dropping of subject pronouns. Distinctive features include the different treatment of masculine personal nouns in the plural, and the complex grammar of numerals and quantifiers.
Ukrainian grammar is complex and characterised by a high degree of inflection; moreover, it has a relatively free word order, although the dominant arrangement is subject–verb–object (SVO). Ukrainian grammar describes its phonological, morphological, and syntactic rules. Ukrainian has seven grammatical cases and two numbers for its nominal declension and two aspects, three tenses, three moods, and two voices for its verbal conjugation. Adjectives agree in number, gender, and case with their nouns.
Lithuanian has a declension system that is similar to declension systems in ancient Indo-European languages, such as Sanskrit, Latin or Ancient Greek. It is one of the most complicated declension systems among modern Indo-European and modern European languages.
Gothic is an inflected language, and as such its nouns, pronouns, and adjectives must be declined in order to serve a grammatical function. A set of declined forms of the same word pattern is called a declension. There are five grammatical cases in Gothic with a few traces of an old sixth instrumental case.
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.
Sanskrit has inherited from its reconstructed parent the Proto-Indo-European language an elaborate system of nominal morphology. Endings may be added directly to the root, or more frequently and especially in the later language, to a stem formed by the addition of a suffix to it.
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.
Serbo-Croatian is a South Slavic language that, like most other Slavic languages, has an extensive system of inflection. This article describes exclusively the grammar of the Shtokavian dialect, which is a part of the South Slavic dialect continuum and the basis for the Bosnian, Croatian, Montenegrin, and Serbian standard variants of Serbo-Croatian. "An examination of all the major 'levels' of language shows that BCS is clearly a single language with a single grammatical system."
Old High German is an inflected language, and as such its nouns, pronouns, and adjectives must be declined in order to serve a grammatical function. A set of declined forms of the same word pattern is called a declension. There are five grammatical cases in Old High German.
The Proto-Italic language is the ancestor of the Italic languages, most notably Latin and its descendants, the Romance languages. It is not directly attested in writing, but has been reconstructed to some degree through the comparative method. Proto-Italic descended from the earlier Proto-Indo-European language.
In Russian grammar, the system of declension is elaborate and complex. Nouns, pronouns, adjectives, demonstratives, most numerals and other particles are declined for two grammatical numbers and six grammatical cases ; some of these parts of speech in the singular are also declined by three grammatical genders. This gives many spelling combinations for most of the words, which is needed for grammatical agreement within and (often) outside the proposition. Also, there are several paradigms for each declension with numerous irregular forms.
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 grammar of the Silesian language is characterized by a high degree of inflection, and has relatively free word order, although the dominant arrangement is subject–verb–object (SVO). There commonly are no articles, and there is frequent dropping of subject pronouns. Distinctive features include the different treatment of masculine personal nouns in the plural, and the complex grammar of numerals and quantifiers.