Difference between revisions of "Language/Basque/Grammar/Basic-elements-of-the-sentence"

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<div style="font-size:300%"> Basic elements of the sentence in Euskara (Basque language)</div>
<div style="font-size:300%"> Basic elements of the sentence in Euskara (Basque language)</div>


Basic elements of the sentence: a few examples


A declarative sentence in Euskara contains: a verb and its arguments, an aspect marker attached to the verb, and the verbal inflection, which contains the agreement morphemes, tense, and modality. It can also contain other phrases, such as adverbials or postpositional phrases. Examples are provided in (1):  
A declarative sentence in Euskara contains: a verb and its arguments, an aspect marker attached to the verb, and the verbal inflection, which contains the agreement morphemes, tense, and modality. It can also contain other phrases, such as adverbials or postpositional phrases. Examples are provided in (1):  


(1)  
==(1)==


a. umea kalean erori da  
===a===
umea kalean erori da  


child-the street-in fall-asp is  
child-the street-in fall-asp is  
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b. emakumeak gizona ikusi du  
===b===
emakumeak gizona ikusi du  


woman-the-E man-the seen has  
woman-the-E man-the seen has  
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c. gizonak umeari liburua eman dio  
===c===
gizonak umeari liburua eman dio  


man-the-E child-the-D book-the given has  
man-the-E child-the-D book-the given has  

Revision as of 18:46, 27 September 2021

Basque-Language-PolyglotClub.png
Basic elements of the sentence in Euskara (Basque language)


A declarative sentence in Euskara contains: a verb and its arguments, an aspect marker attached to the verb, and the verbal inflection, which contains the agreement morphemes, tense, and modality. It can also contain other phrases, such as adverbials or postpositional phrases. Examples are provided in (1):

(1)

a

umea kalean erori da

child-the street-in fall-asp is

'the child fell in the street'


b

emakumeak gizona ikusi du

woman-the-E man-the seen has

'the woman has seen the man'


c

gizonak umeari liburua eman dio

man-the-E child-the-D book-the given has

'the man has given the book to the child'


In (1a), there is a sentence constructed with the intransitive verb erori 'fall'. The verb is marked for perfective aspect with the morpheme i; it denotes a completed event. The auxiliary verb is da, a form of izan 'be', which is inflected for present tense, third person singular. The subject umea 'the child' is marked with absolutive case, which bears a zero morpheme, that is, no manifest ending for the case. There is also a locative postpositional phrase kalean 'in the street'. The word order in (1a) is said to be neutral, that is, the sentence in (1a) is a natural answer to a question such as zer gertatu da? 'what happened?'. In other words, the entire sentence is informationally relevant.


In (1b), the sentence is constructed with a transitive verb, ikusi 'to see', which has the perfective aspectual morpheme i attached. The auxiliary verb is a form of ukan 'have', inflected for present tense, third person subject, and third person object. The subject emakumea 'the woman' is marked for ergative case (morpheme k), and the object gizona is case marked absolutive (morpheme zero). The word order in (1b) is neutral.


In (1c), the sentence contains a transitive verb, eman 'give', which has a variant of the perfective aspectual morpheme, namely, the final -n on the verb. The auxiliary verb carries the inflection, which in this case is specified for present tense, third person object, third person dative and third person subject. The subject gizona is marked for ergative case (morpheme k), the dative phrase is marked for dative case (morpheme i) and the object is marked for absolutive case (morpheme zero). The word order in (1c) is neutral.

Sources

https://www.ehu.eus/documents/2430735/0/A-brief-grammar-of-euskara.pdf