Verb stems and lexical organisation
[UPDATE: some of the verb roots listed here have
been changed since this post, so don’t take the forms below as being authoritative. But the aspect markers and the composition of verb stems remain unchanged.]
After about six months of staring at paradigm tables, I believe I’ve found a verb system I’m actually happy with. It’s an interesting one… as far as I’m aware, no natlang has a verb system quite like it (though some Afroasiatic languages get close, notably Semitic and Berber).
(It also, unfortunately, mildly invalidates some of my earlier example sentences. I did say it might happen, though!)
In brief: Eŋes forms verb stems by placing verb roots in one of five aspects. Roots are in general non-concatenative and templating, though a large proportion of simple stems are purely suffixing. Though most roots cannot appear in all aspects, and their derived stems have been lexicalised, the system retains a high degree of transparency.
(‘Aspect’ may admittedly be a bad choice of term here. Really it’s more like
Aktionsart: the intrinsic lexical aspect of an action. But I doubt it will cause confusion.)
I’ll start by setting out the forms of verb stems and their aspectual possibilities, for simple and compound stems. I’ll then discuss the functions of the five aspects in stem derivation. Finally, I’ll talk a bit about the more restricted system of auxiliaries used to derive predicative adjectives and causatives.
Simple roots
I’ll start with a summary table:
| √f- | √as- | √rw- | √wl- | √ndo- | √wgi- | √f-y- |
Iterative | fes ‘~crumble’ | ases ‘~tumble’ | rwes ‘accumulate’ | | ndos ‘circle’ | | feys ‘climb’ |
Atelic | fe ‘~shed’ | ase ‘stumble’ | | wle ‘go’ | ndok ‘bypass’ | | |
Stative | foŋ ‘be ~broken’ | asoŋ ‘be low’ | rwoŋ ‘have’ | wloŋ ‘be gone’ | ndoŋ ‘passed’ | wgiŋ ‘be’ | foyŋ ‘be high’ |
Intensive | fen ‘~grind’ | | | wlen ‘travel’ | ndon ‘pass’ | | |
Punctual | fem ‘break’ | asem ‘~trip’ | rwem ‘take’ | wlem ‘depart’ | | wgim ‘become’ | feym ‘~lift’ |
Notational conventions:
- I’m using the tilde ‘~’ to highlight when the English gloss is a particularly poor approximation to the scope of the Eŋes verb (but I’ll talk more about the semantics later)
- The sign ‘√’ is used to indicate roots; I believe this is mostly a Hebraic convention, but it seemed appropriate here too
This should give a good impression of the overall ‘flavour’ of this system. Not every root exists in every aspect, and the resulting stems exist as separate lexemes, but they’re clearly and systematically related in both form and function.
The particular roots listed above are examples of what I’m calling ‘simple’ roots. Their distinguishing characteristic is that the aspect marker appears primarily as a suffix, without the root being continuous — and when it is discontinuous, the infixed portion is a single vowel. Additionally, they vary for aspect in a much simpler way than do compound roots.
Simple roots take one of three paradigms, all of which are represented in the table. Most simple roots end in a consonant, and take a -VC or -V suffix for aspect. Other roots end in a vowel, taking a consonantal suffix instead. And a few are discontinuous, requiring an intercalated vowel as well as a suffix. These three paradigms are closely related, as follows:
Aspect | Consonant-final | Vowel-final | Intercalating |
Iterative | -es | -s | -e-s |
Atelic | -e | -∅ / -k | -e- |
Stative | -oŋ | -ŋ | -o-ŋ |
Intensive | -en | -n | -e-n |
Punctual | -em | -m | -e-m |
Which root takes which paradigm is largely predictable, except for a handful of consonant-final stems which take the ostentably ‘vowel-final’ paradigm. Additionally, the vowel-final paradigm itself has a slight irregularity, namely that a few roots take
-k in the atelic rather than a null suffix (as with
ndok above, √ndo+k).
Complex roots
These deserve another summary table:
| √wl-naŋ | √rw-lon | √pasi-sef | √fw-s-feʔ | √w-rfin | √asan-rnir | √lis-mŋun |
Iterative | wlesnaŋ ‘walk’ | | pasissef ‘flicker’ | fwessfeʔ ‘cry’ | wserfin ‘build’ | | lissimŋun ‘~search’ |
Atelic | wlenaŋ ‘stroll’ | | | fwesfeʔ ‘~sob’ | warfin ‘imagine’ | asanarnir ‘squat’ | |
Stative | | rwoŋlon ‘facing’ | | | | asanŋornir ‘sitting’ | lisŋumŋun ‘see’ |
Intensive | wlennaŋ ‘stride’ | rwenlon ‘face’ | pasinsef ‘shine’ | fwesnfeʔ ‘wail’ | wnerfin ‘make’ | | lisnimŋun ‘look’ |
Punctual | | | pasimsef ‘ignite’ | | | asanmarnir ‘sit’ | |
It should be clear now why I call these ‘complex roots’: they have at least two parts, with the aspect marker going between. In general it’s difficult to identify subparts of a complex stem with their own meanings, though certainly some components get repeated (e.g.
√wl-naŋ ‘related to walking’ vs earlier
√wl- ‘related to going’).
The alternations of complex roots are also more intricate than that of simple roots. They undergo three paradigms identical to those of simple roots, plus three extras:
- The ‘unmetathesised’ paradigm is identical to that of consonant-final simple stems.
- The ‘vowel-final’ paradigm is identical to that of vowel-final simple stems.
- The ‘intercalating’ paradigm is identical to that of intercalating simple stems.
- The three ‘metathesised’ paradigms have form -CV- (rather than the V+C form of the other paradigms seen so far). They are broadly similar to each other, but can be distinguished based on the vowel of the atelic and punctual aspects.
The three metathesised paradigms are as follows, with the unmetathesised paradigm for comparison:
Aspect | Unmetathesised | Metathesised-/a/ | Metathesised-/e/ | Metathesised-/o/ |
Iterative | -es- | -se- | -si- | -si- |
Atelic | -e- | -a- | -e- | -o- |
Stative | -oŋ- | -ŋo- | -ŋu- | -ŋu- |
Intensive | -en- | -ne- | -ni- | -ni- |
Punctual | -em- | -ma- | -me- | -mo- |
Five out of these six paradigms are seen in the earlier summary table (only metathesised-/o/ is missing).
In general, the vowel-initial paradigm is found where the first component of the root ends in a vowel, the intercalating paradigm is used for tripartite roots, and one of the three metathesised components is used when the second component begins with two consonants. For all other roots, either the unmetathesised or a metathesised paradigm is used, though the choice is unpredictable.
Semantics
Of course, all these tables have probably already given a reasonable impression of the semantics associated with each of these stems. Nonetheless, it’s useful to properly review the function of each.
(The names are, unfortunately, a little inadequate. Nonetheless, I can’t think of better ones.)
Before giving details, one very important thing to note:
none of these aspects change transitivity. For instance, both
fem ‘break’ and
foŋ ‘be broken’ are intransitive, and both
rwoŋlon ‘facing’ and
rwenlon ‘face’ are transitive.
The
iterative aspect is probably the most straightforward: it refers to actions which, in some way, are associated with some form of iteration. This can be event-internal (e.g.
wlesnaŋ ‘walk’,
pasisef ‘flicker’), or less commonly refer to multiple situations (e.g.
ndos ‘circle’). Notably, iterative verbs never seem to have a distributive interpretation — that is to say, the iteration is primarily in time, rather than in space. It also seems that iterative verbs are consistently atelic, never having an intrinsic ending point.
All this seems to make the iterative verbs rather difficult to gloss, at least in my experience. Thus, e.g.
ases could best be defined as something like, ‘fall in a series of short steps’. I’ve glossed it ‘tumble’, but that seems inadequate: a slinky going down steps would be
ases-ing, but ‘tumble’ isn’t really applicable there. Similarly,
fes is really ‘break off in pieces’, having wider scope than the gloss of ‘crumble’ which I gave.
The
atelic aspect is slightly more difficult. Often it has a specifically conative meaning: that is, not only does the action have no natural endpoint, but any endpoint it might have is actually averted in some way. Thus, if you started to fall but checked yourself, you have
ase ‘stumbled’; or if you passed a place and did not visit, you have
ndok ‘bypassed’ it. (As you may guess, this has been another difficult category to gloss.)
On occasion, it alternately takes a semelfactive meaning: that is, denoting an event which is punctual yet atelic. Often, this specifically denotes a single instance of the corresponding iterative action: thus, if you
fwessfeʔ ‘cry’ a little bit, you give a
fwesfeʔ ‘sob’. (Though note that this verb is narrower in scope than the English gloss, since you can ‘sob’ for a long time, but
fwesfeʔ is only punctual.)
The
stative aspect, as its name suggests, refers specifically to states. Very often, this state is the result of the corresponding punctual verb:
fem ‘break’ yields
foŋ ‘broken’,
wlem ‘depart’ yields
wloŋ ‘broken’, and so on. But just as often, it is some other state related to the meaning of the root: for instance,
lisŋumŋun ‘see’ is not obviously derived from any of the other stems in
√lis-mŋun.
The
intensive aspect has probably the broadest usage of any of the aspects. I’ve named this form ‘intensive’ because sometimes it does seem to denote an intensive form of one of the other stems: e.g.
fen ‘grind’ vs
fes ‘crumble’,
lisnimŋum ‘look’ vs
lisŋumŋun ‘see’,
fwesnfeʔ ‘wail’ vs
fwessfeʔ ‘cry’. But, more generally, it seems to denote all kinds of accomplishments (durative telic events); as in
ndon ‘pass’, or
rwenlon ‘face’. Curiously, it is also the only non-stative verb form which can denote states, as long as they are intensive in meaning — I gave no examples of this in the summary tables above, but e.g.
tuʔn ‘be friends’ is an example (cf.
tuʔŋ ‘accompany’).
Finally, the
punctual aspect is used with punctual events. In particular, it is used for telic punctual actions (achievements), since as already mentioned atelic punctual actions get the atelic aspect. Often, it has a specifically inchoative meaning: as in
feym ‘be lifted, start rising’ vs
foyŋ ‘be high’, or
pasimsef ‘ignite’ vs
pasinsef ‘shine’. Or, of course,
wgim ‘become’.
The verbal auxiliary
[UPDATE: the use of the auxiliary with verbs has expanded in meaning somewhat since this was written, see
viewtopic.php?p=81241#p81241.]
This accounts for the verbs proper. But it is important to note that adjectives can also be used as verbs, by prefixing them with what I call the ‘auxiliary’. This auxiliary cannot take all of the aspects mentioned above, but is restricted to only two: the
stative and
punctual (which as mentioned takes an inchoative meaning).
The form of the auxiliary is quite different to the suffixes seen earlier. There are three paradigms:
- Vowel-initial adjectives are prefixed with w- in the stative and m- in the punctual: e.g. w-enar ‘be hot’, m-enar ‘become hot’.
- Adjectives beginning with two consonants, and some others, are prefixed with wa- in the stative and ma- in the punctual: e.g. wa-snar ‘be wide’ ma-snar ‘widen’.
- Most consonant-initial adjectives get w- in the stative and ma- in the punctual: e.g. w-raw ‘be good’, ma-raw ‘become good’.
There is another use of the verbal auxiliary: prefixed to any verb stem, it derives a causative form. This prefix cannot vary for aspect at all (although the stem may). Curiously, this uses the stative form of the auxiliary, rather than the punctual:
fem ‘break (intransitive)’ ⇒
wafem ‘break (transitive)’,
asoŋ ‘be low’ ⇒
wasoŋ ‘lower’. As with the adjectival use, vowel-initial stems always receive
w- and two-consonant–initial stems always receive
wa-, while other consonant-initial stems unpredictably get one or the other.
(On reflection, for complex stems the choice of auxiliary may well be correlated with whether it takes a metathesised or unmetathesised paradigm. It’s something I should investigate, but haven’t yet.)
Of course, these two usages can combine, to get the causative form of an adjective. This uses the punctual auxiliary, then prefixes that further with
w-, yielding stems like
wmasnar ‘widen (transitive)’ and
wmenar ‘make hot’. Naturally, these stems have no possibility of taking a different aspect, but doing so wouldn’t make very much sense anyway.