Difference between revisions of "Language/Northern-uzbek/Grammar/Forming-sentences-with-negation"
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[[File:Uzbek-Language-PolyglotClub.png|thumb]] | [[File:Uzbek-Language-PolyglotClub.png|thumb]] | ||
<code>Verb + negative may + suffix reflecting personal pronoun.</code> | <code>Verb + negative may + suffix reflecting personal pronoun.</code> | ||
In Uzbek, negation can be made simply by adding "may" to the stem verb. But there are different other ways of negation as well. | In Uzbek, negation can be made simply by adding "may" to the stem verb. But there are different other ways of negation as well. | ||
For example "emas" and “yo’q” are the most common negatives. | For example "emas" and “yo’q” are the most common negatives. | ||
For example: Men bu ishni qilmayman (I can't do this). Ularning qiladigan hech qanday ishlari yo’q (They don't have anything to do – Double Negative). | For example: Men bu ishni qilmayman (I can't do this). Ularning qiladigan hech qanday ishlari yo’q (They don't have anything to do – Double Negative). | ||
“hech qanday” is also a negation. Bu menga yoqmaydi (I don't like it) U hali kelgani yo’q. (He hasn’t come yet) | “hech qanday” is also a negation. Bu menga yoqmaydi (I don't like it) U hali kelgani yo’q. (He hasn’t come yet) | ||
<span link>After mastering this lesson, these related pages might interest you:</span> [[Language/Northern-uzbek/Grammar/Pronouns|Pronouns]], [[Language/Northern-uzbek/Grammar/Future-Tense|Future Tense]], [[Language/Northern-uzbek/Grammar/The-verb-KELMOQ-–-to-come|The verb KELMOQ – to come]] & [[Language/Northern-uzbek/Grammar/Conditional-Sentences|Conditional Sentences]]. | |||
==Source== | ==Source== | ||
https://slaviccenters.duke.edu/sites/slaviccenters.duke.edu/files/file-attachments/uzbek.original.pdf | https://slaviccenters.duke.edu/sites/slaviccenters.duke.edu/files/file-attachments/uzbek.original.pdf | ||
== | ==Other Lessons== | ||
* [[Language/Northern-uzbek/Grammar/Expressing-a-desire-fo-an-action|Expressing a desire fo an action]] | * [[Language/Northern-uzbek/Grammar/Expressing-a-desire-fo-an-action|Expressing a desire fo an action]] | ||
* [[Language/Northern-uzbek/Grammar/Conditional-Mood|Conditional Mood]] | * [[Language/Northern-uzbek/Grammar/Conditional-Mood|Conditional Mood]] | ||
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* [[Language/Northern-uzbek/Grammar/Imperative-of-verbs|Imperative of verbs]] | * [[Language/Northern-uzbek/Grammar/Imperative-of-verbs|Imperative of verbs]] | ||
* [[Language/Northern-uzbek/Grammar/Accusative-case|Accusative case]] | * [[Language/Northern-uzbek/Grammar/Accusative-case|Accusative case]] | ||
<span links></span> |
Latest revision as of 13:06, 27 March 2023
Verb + negative may + suffix reflecting personal pronoun.
In Uzbek, negation can be made simply by adding "may" to the stem verb. But there are different other ways of negation as well.
For example "emas" and “yo’q” are the most common negatives.
For example: Men bu ishni qilmayman (I can't do this). Ularning qiladigan hech qanday ishlari yo’q (They don't have anything to do – Double Negative).
“hech qanday” is also a negation. Bu menga yoqmaydi (I don't like it) U hali kelgani yo’q. (He hasn’t come yet)
After mastering this lesson, these related pages might interest you: Pronouns, Future Tense, The verb KELMOQ – to come & Conditional Sentences.
Source[edit | edit source]
Other Lessons[edit | edit source]
- Expressing a desire fo an action
- Conditional Mood
- Verbal nouns
- Comparative Adjectives
- Plurals
- Orthographic rules
- Adjectives formed with suffix – li
- Sentence structure
- Imperative of verbs
- Accusative case