Language/Wolof/Grammar/Plural-Nouns-—-Indefinite-article
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Plural Nouns > Indefinite articles
The indefinite article is a grammatical terminology that refers to the English article “a” before a noun in a singular form and the “s” at the end of a noun without being preceded by any article (kids). In Wolof, for the singular form either the noun is stated without any article (xale = a kid) or in some area mainly rural, a “ab” or “as” is put before the noun (ab xale = a kid). For the plural form, they all take an “ay” before the noun which has also the connotation of the English “some.”
Singular Plural[edit | edit source]
- (Ab) rato = a rake
- ay rato = rakes
- Kaye = a notebook
- ay kaye = notebooks
- (Ab) xale = a kid
- ay xale = kids
Other lessons: Plural Nouns > Definite | Plural Nouns > Indefinite
Source[edit | edit source]
http://publish.illinois.edu/wolof201fall14/files/2014/08/NEW_WOLOF_BOOK.pdf
Other Lessons[edit | edit source]
- Gender
- Questions
- Pronouns and How to ask questions
- Conditional Mood
- Enonciative pronouns
- Negation
- The possessive expressed by “U”
- Static verbs
- Conjugation