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Tigrinya verbs

Unless otherwise indicated, Tigrinya verbs in this article are given in the usual citation form, the third person singular masculine perfect.

Roots edit

A Tigrinya verb root consists of a set of consonants (or "literals"), usually three, for example, {sbr} 'break' (citation form: ሰበረ säbärä), {drf} 'sing' (citation form: ደረፈ däräfä). Each three-consonant (or "triliteral") root belongs to one of three conjugation classes, conventionally known as A, B, and C, and analogous to the three conjugations of verbs in Romance languages. This division is a basic feature of Ethiopian Semitic languages. Most three-consonant roots are in the A class (referred to in this article as "3A"). In the citation form (perfect), these have no gemination and the vowel ä between both pairs of consonants. Examples are ሰበረ säbärä and ደረፈ däräfä. The B class (referred to in this article as "3B") is distinguished by the gemination of the second consonant in all forms. Examples are ደቀሰ k'k'äsä 'sleep' and ወሰኸ ssäxä 'add'. The relatively few members of the C class (referred to in this article as "3C") take the vowel a between the first and second consonants. Examples are ባረኸ baräxä 'bless' and ናፈቐ nafäx'ä 'long for, miss'.

Tigrinya also has a significant number of four-consonant (or "quadriliteral") roots (referred to in this article as "4"). These fall into a single conjugation class. Examples are መስከረ mäskärä 'testify' and ቀልጠፈ k'ält'äfä 'hurry'.

The language also has five-consonant (or "quinquiliteral") roots (referred to in this article as "5"). Most, if not all, of these are "defective" in the sense described below; that is, their simplest form takes the tä- prefix. Examples are ተንቀጥቀጠ tä-nk'ät'k'ät'ä 'tremble' and ተምበርከኸ tä-mbärkäxä 'kneel'.

As is common in Semitic languages, roots containing "laryngeal" (that is, pharyngeal or glottal) consonants in any position or semivowels (y or w) in any but first position undergo various modifications. These are dealt with below under Conjugation.

Derivation edit

Each verb root can be modified through one or more basic derivational processes. Each can be described in terms of its form and its function.

Form edit

Changes to the root form are of two types: prefixes and internal changes.

The prefixes are tä- and ’a- or their combination. When the prefix tä- follows ’a-, it loses its vowel and assimilates to the following consonant (that is, the first root consonant). Without ’a- its realization depends on the tense/aspect/mood of the verb.

Internal changes are of two types. One is a form of reduplication. This produces an extra syllable, consisting of a copy of the second consonant from the end of the root followed by the vowel a; this syllable appears third from the end of the verb stem. A second type of internal change inserts the vowel a, or replaces the existing vowel with a, following the third consonant from the end of the stem. For three-consonant roots, this results in a pattern similar to that of C class verbs.

The table below shows the possible combinations of prefixes and internal changes and their functions, illustrating each with the verb {sbr} (3A).

Tigrinya Verb Derivation
Prefix(es) Internal change Function Examples
ACTIVE ሰበረ säbärä 'break'
Reduplication FREQUENTATIVE ሰባበረ babärä 'break repeatedly'
tä- PASSIVE, REFLEXIVE ተሰብረ tä-säbrä 'be broken'
-a- RECIPROCAL ተሳበረ tä-sabärä 'break one another'
Reduplication ተሰባበረ tä-säbabärä
’a- CAUSATIVE ኣስበረ ’a-sbärä 'cause to break'
’a- + -tä- -a- RECIPROCAL CAUSATIVE ኣሳበረ ’a-s-sabärä 'cause to break one another'
Reduplication ኣሰባበረ ’a-s-säbabärä

Function edit

For the most part, the two derivational prefixes signal grammatical voice; that is, they govern how the participants in the sentence map onto the roles in the event conveyed by the verb. With neither prefix, the verb is normally in ACTIVE voice; the subject is the agent of the event. By itself, the prefix tä- usually signals PASSIVE voice or REFLEXIVE voice. Some participant which is not the subject of the active sentence, the patient or recipient, becomes the subject; or the subject is both the agent and the patient or recipient of the event. By itself, the prefix ’a- usually signals CAUSATIVE voice; the subject of the sentence is then a causer of the event who is not the immediate agent.

Reduplication with neither of the prefixes signals FREQUENTATIVE, the repetition of the event conveyed by the verb. Together with the prefix tä-, reduplication and internal -a- both signal RECIPROCAL; the subject, most often plural, represents both the agent and patient or recipient of the event. In English, and some other languages, the reciprocal is marked by a pronoun, 'each other'. The addition of ’a- to this patterns yields the RECIPROCAL CAUSATIVE: 'cause to DO to each other'.

Here are examples of the different derivational patterns, using the roots {sbr} (3A) 'break', {ls'y} (3C) 'shave', and sḥk (3A) 'laugh'. The verbs are all in the gerundive tense/aspect form.

  • መስኮት ሰቢሩ mäskot säbiru 'He broke a window'; {sbr}, no prefix, no internal change, ACTIVE
  • መስኮት (ብተኽሉ) ተሰቢሩ mäskot (bǝtäxlu) -säbiru 'a window was broken (by Teklu)'; {sbr}, tä-, no internal change, PASSIVE
  • መስኮት ሰባቢሩ mäskot säbabiru 'He repeatedly broke windows'; {sbr}, no prefix, reduplication, FREQUENTATIVE
  • መስኮት ኣስቢሩ mäskot ’a-sbiru 'He caused a window to be broken (by somebody else)'; {sbr}, ’a-, no internal change, CAUSATIVE
  • ተላጺዩ -las'iyu 'He shaved (himself)'; {ls'y}, tä-, no internal change, REFLEXIVE
  • ተሳሒቖም -saḥix'om / ተሰሓሒቖም -säḥaḥix'om 'they (m.) laughed at each other'; sḥk, tä-, -a- / reduplication, RECIPROCAL
  • ኣሳሒቑዎም ’a'-s-saḥix'uwwom / ኣሰሐሒቑዎም ’a-s-säḥaḥix'uwwom 'he made them (m.) laugh at each other'; {sḥk}, ’a- + tä-, -a- / reduplication, RECIPROCAL CAUSATIVE

Defective verbs edit

Some verb roots are defective in the sense that they must occur with either or both of the derivational prefixes. For example, from the root {k'mt'} (3B) 'sit' there are the forms täx'ämmät'ä 'sit', ax'ämmät'ä 'cause to sit, put' but no form *k'ämmät'ä. Other examples: {ktl} (3B) täxättälä 'follow', {zrb} (3C) täzaräbä 'speak', {ggy} (3C) tägagäyä 'err'. Note that the tä- does not necessarily signify passive or reflexive with these verbs.

Tense, aspect, and mood edit

The pattern of vowels between the consonants of a verb root, as well as the gemination of one or more consonants in some cases, is determined in part by the verb class (3A, 3B, 3C, 4, 5) and the presence (or absence) of derivational morphemes (ACTIVE, PASSIVE, RECIPROCAL, etc.). But it also depends on the selection of the tense/aspect or mood.

Most Semitic languages make a basic two-way distinction between a tense/aspect stem that is conjugated with suffixes and another stem that is conjugated with prefixes and, in some forms, suffixes as well. In Ethiopian Semitic and in Arabic, the first, known as the perfective, is used for past tense, and the second, known as the imperfective, is used for present and sometimes future tenses.

In Tigrinya the bare imperfective is used mainly for the habitual present: ኩሉ መዓልቲ መስኮት ይሰብር kullu mä‘alti mäskot yǝsäbbǝr 'he breaks a window every day'. In other present and future contexts, auxiliaries are usually used along with the imperfective.

Ethiopian Semitic and Arabic verbs also have a third possibility, which like the imperfective is conjugated with prefixes and sometimes suffixes. This form, known as the jussive/imperative, is tenseless; it is used to express the imperative mood in the second person as well as notions such as 'let him DO', 'that he DO' in the first and third persons. In Ethiopian Semitic, the affirmative imperative drops the prefix, but the negative imperative maintains it. For example, in Tigrinya ንስበር nǝ-sbär 'let's break', ስበራ sǝbär-a 'break! (2p.f.pl.)', ኣየትስበራ ay-tǝ-sbär-a 'don't break! (2p.f.pl.)'.

Some Ethiopian Semitic languages, including Tigrinya, have a fourth possibility, known (somewhat confusingly) as the gerund or gerundive, which like the perfective is conjugated with suffixes only. As in Amharic, this form in Tigrinya has a tenseless, linking function: '(after) having DONE...', '...DO and (then)...'. In Tigrinya it has an additional and very important function: it is the usual way to express the affirmative past tense in independent clauses, the perfective being restricted mainly to the past negative and to verbs preceded by subordinating conjunctions and the relativizer zǝ-.

Examples:

መስኮት

mäskot

window

ሰቢሩ

säbiru

break (3SG.M, GER)

ሃዲሙ

hadimu

escape (3SG.M, GER)

መስኮት ሰቢሩ ሃዲሙ

mäskot säbiru hadimu

window {break (3SG.M, GER)} {escape (3SG.M, GER)}

'He broke a window and escaped.'

እቲ

ǝti

the

መስኮት

mäskot

window

ዝሰበረ

zǝ-säbärä

REL-break (3SG.M, PRF)

ወዲ

wäddi

boy

እቲ መስኮት ዝሰበረ ወዲ

ǝti mäskot zǝ-säbärä wäddi

the window {REL-break (3SG.M, PRF)} boy

'the boy who broke a window'

መስኮት

mäskot

window

ኣይሰበረን

ay-säbärä-n

NEG-break (3SG.M, PRF)

መስኮት ኣይሰበረን

mäskot ay-säbärä-n

window {NEG-break (3SG.M, PRF)}

'He didn't break a window.'

Conjugation edit

Tigrinya has separate suffixes, prefixes, or combinations of prefixes and suffixes for each of the ten person/number/gender combinations that are distinguished within the personal pronoun system. These are illustrated in the table below for the verb {flt'} (3A) 'know' in its ACTIVE form, that is, without derivational prefixes or internal changes.

For the second person jussive/imperative, the tǝ- prefix appears in parentheses because it is used only in the negative. Note that for verbs in the 3A class, the second consonant is geminated in the imperfect when there is no suffix.

Tigrinya Verb Conjugation: ACTIVE, Class 3A
Perfect Imperfect Jussive/
Imperative
Gerundive
I ፈለጥኩ fälät'-ku እፈልጥ ’ǝ-fällǝt' እፍለጥ ’ǝ-flät' ፈሊጠ felit'-ä
you (m.sg.) ፈለጥካ fälät'-ka ትፈልጥ tǝ-fällǝt' (ት)ፍለጥ (tǝ-)flät' ፈሊትካ felit'-ka
you (f.sg.) ፈለጥኪ fälät'-ki ትፈልጢ tǝ-fält'-i (ት)ፍለጢ (tǝ-)flät'-i ፈሊጥኪ felit'-ki
he ፈለጠ fälät'-ä ይፈልጥ yǝ-fällǝt' ይፍለጥ yǝ-flät' ፈሊጡ felit'-u
she ፈለጠት fälät'-ät ትፈልጥ tǝ-fällǝt' ትፍለጥ tǝ-flät' ፈሊጣ felit'-a
we ፈለጥና fälät'-na ንፈልጥ nǝ-fällǝt' ንፍለጥ nǝ-flät' ፈሊጥና felit'-na
you (m.pl.) ፈለጥኩም fälät'-kum ትፈልጡ tǝ-fält'-u (ት)ፍለጡ ((tǝ-)flät'-u ፈሊጥኩም felit'-kum
you (f.pl.) ፈለጥክን fälät'-kǝn ትፈልጣ tǝ-fält'-a (ት)ፍለጣ ((tǝ-)flät'-a ፈሊጥክን felit'-kin
they (m.) ፈለጡ fälät'-u ይፈልጡ yǝ-fält'-u ይፍለጡ yǝ-flät'-u ፈሊጦም felit'-om
they (f.) ፈለጣ fälät'-a ይፈልጣ yǝ-fält'-a ይፍለጣ yǝ-flät'-a ፈሊጠን felit'-en

The same subject agreement affixes appear in the various derivational patterns, but the verb stems are not predictable from the simple, ACTIVE stems.

The derivational prefixes tä- and ’a- undergo various changes when they are preceded by subject agreement affixes. In the imperative/jussive, tä- assimilates to the first consonant of the verb root (except when there is no prefix in the affirmative imperative). In the imperfect, tä- disappears altogether, though its presence can still be detected from the pattern of vowels and gemination in the verb stem. The first person imperfect and jussive prefix ’ǝ merges with a following ’a-, and the vowel of the other prefixes (, , ) merges with a following ’a-, yielding the vowel .

The perfect stem following tä- may lose the vowel between the second and third root consonants when the suffix begins with a vowel (ተፈልጠ tä-fält'-ä 'he was known'; ተፈለጥኩ tä-fälät'-ku 'I was known').

The table below shows forms for the verb {flt'} (3A) 'know' in each of the possible combinations of derivational prefixes and internal changes. Unless otherwise indicated, the forms given are the third person masculine plural for the RECIPROCAL pattern and the third person masculine singular for the other patterns.

Tigrinya Verb Conjugation: Derived Forms, Class 3A
Derivational pattern Perfect Imperfect Jussive/
Imperative
Gerundive
FREQUENTATIVE ፈላለጠ lalät'-ä ይፈላልጥ yǝ-fä'lalǝt ፈላሊጡ lalit'-u
PASSIVE/REFLEXIVE ተፈለጥኩ tä-fälät'-ku (1p.sg.)
ተፈልጠ tä-fält'-ä
ይፍለጥ yǝ-fǝllät' ይፈለጥ yǝ-f-fälät'
ተፈለጥ tä-fälät' (2p.m.sg.)
ተፈሊጡ tä-fälit'-u
RECIPROCAL ተፋለጡ tä-falät'-u
ተፈላለጡ tä-fälalät'-u
ይፋለጡ yǝ-f-falät'-u
ይፈላለጡ yǝ-f-fälalät'-u
ተፋሊጦም tä-falit'-om
ተፈላሊጦም tä-fälalit'-om
CAUSATIVE ኣፍለጠ ’a-flät'-ä የፍልጥ y-ä-fǝllǝt'
የፍልጡ y-ä-fǝlt'-u (3p.m.pl.)
የፍልጥ y-ä-flǝt' ኣፍሊጡ ’a-flit'-u
RECIPROCAL CAUSATIVE ኣፋለጠ ’a-f-falät'-ä
ኣፈላለጠ ’a-f-fälalät'-ä
የፋለጥ y-ä-f-falǝt'
የፈላለጥ y-ä-f-fälalǝt'
ኣፋሊጡ ’a-f-falit'-u
ኣፈላሊጡ ’a-f-fälalit'-u'

The subject agreement affixes are the same for verbs in other conjugation classes, but the stems differ in some cases from what would be expected for a verb in the 3A class like fälät'ä. The table below shows the third person singular masculine ACTIVE forms for verbs in other classes: {bdl} (3B) 'offend', {mrk} (3C) 'capture', {t'rt'r} (4) 'doubt'.

Verbs whose roots contain "laryngeal" (pharyngeal or glottal: , , , h) consonants in any position or semivowels (w or y) in any position other than first deviate in various ways from the patterns shown in the tables above. For the laryngeals, most of these deviations stem from the fact that the vowel ä never occurs immediately after a laryngeal. For the semivowels, the deviations result from simplifications that occur when these consonants are preceded and followed by vowels. Some of the changes are illustrated in the following table for these seven verbs, all in the 3A class: {hdm} 'escape', {s‘m} 'kiss', {srḥ} 'do, work', {mwt} 'die', {ftw} 'like', {kyd} 'go', {sty} 'drink'. There is considerable variation in the forms; only one possibility is shown here. Third person singular masculine is given in each case, and in addition the first person singular (in the perfect) or third person masculine plural (in the imperfect) for cases where the stem changes within the paradigm.

The very common verbs {nbr} 'live, be' and {gbr} 'do' undergo simplifications in the gerundive, where the b is deleted: ነይሩ näyru, ገይሩ gäyru (3p.m.sg.); ኔርካ nerka, ጌርካ gerka (2p.m.sg.); etc.

Tigrinya has four genuinely irregular verbs: {bhl} 'say', {whb} 'give', {tḥz} 'hold', and {hlw} 'exist'. For the first three of these, which are conjugated similarly, the third personal singular masculine forms are shown in the following table. The verb of existence is discussed in a separate section.

Tigrinya Verb Conjugation: ACTIVE; Classes 3B, 3C, 4, Laryngeal and Semivowel Root Consonants, Irregular
Conjugation class Perfect Imperfect Jussive/
Imperative
Gerundive
3B በደለ bäddäl-ä ይብድል yǝ-bǝddǝl ይበድል yǝ-bäddǝl በዲሉ bäddil-u
3C ማረኸ maräx-ä ይማርኽ yǝ-marǝx ይማርኽ yǝ-marǝx ማሪኹ marix-u
4 ጠርጠረ t'ärt'är-ä ይጥርጥር yǝ-t'ǝrt'ǝr ይጠርጥር yǝ-t'ärt'ǝr ጠርጢሩ t'ärt'ir-u
Laryngeal ሃደመ hadäm-ä
ሰዓመ sä‘am-ä
ሰራሕኩ säraḥ-ku, ሰርሔ särḥ-e
ይሃድም yǝ-haddǝm
ይስዕም yǝ-sǝ‘ǝm
ይሰርሕ yǝ-särrǝḥ
ይህደም yǝ-hdäm
ይስዓም yǝ-s‘am
ይስራሕ yǝ-sraḥ
ሃዲሙ hadim-u
ስዒሙ sǝ‘im-u
ሰሪሑ säriḥ-u
Semivowel ሞተ mot-ä
ፈቶኹ fäto-xu, ፈተወ fätäw-ä
ከደ käd-ä
ሰቴኹ säte-xu, ሰተየ sätäy-ä
ይመውት yǝ-mäwwǝt, ይሞቱ yǝ-mot-u
ይፈቱ yǝ-fättu, ይፈትዉ yǝ-fätw-u
ይኸይድ yǝ-xäyyǝd, ይኸዱ yǝ-xäd-u
ይሰቲ yǝ-sätti, ይሰትዩ yǝ-säty-u
ይሙት yǝ-mut
ይፍተው yǝ-ftäw
ይኺድ yǝ-xid
ይስተይ yǝ-stäy
ሞይቱ moyt-u
ፈትዩ fäty-u
ከይዱ käyd-u
ሰትዩ säty-u
Irregular በለ bälä
ሃበ habä
ሓዘ ḥazä
ይብል yǝbǝl
ይህብ yǝhǝb
ይሕዝ yǝḥǝz
ይበል yǝbäl
ይሃብ yǝhab
ይሓዝ yǝḥaz
ኢሉ ’ilu
ሂቡ hibu
ሒዙ ḥizu

Object suffixes edit

Like other Semitic languages, Tigrinya has object pronoun suffixes that can appear on verbs in any tense-aspect-mood. As discussed under personal pronouns, there are two sets of such suffixes in the language, a set used for direct objects and a "prepositional" set used for dative, benefactive, locative, or adversative meanings ('to', 'for', 'against'); only one object suffix is permitted on a given verb.

As in some other Ethiopian Semitic languages, there are separate "light" and "heavy" suffixes for all but the second person and first-person plural prepositional object forms. The light suffixes (-ni, -xa, etc.) are characterized by initial ungeminated consonants and the heavy suffixes (-nni, -kka, etc.) by initial geminated consonants. For the third person direct object suffixes, there is a third form with no initial consonant at all (-o, -a, etc.). Roughly speaking, the light suffixes are used with verbs whose subjects are second or third person plural, the third person vowel-initial suffixes are used with verbs that have no agreement suffix, and the heavy suffixes are used in other cases. In the jussive/imperative, the vowel-initial suffixes cause the gemination of the preceding consonant. When an object suffix beginning with a consonant is added to a verb ending in a consonant (either a root or a suffix consonant), a vowel is inserted to break up the cluster, the particular vowel depending on the subject and object. The details are quite complicated; most of the possibilities are illustrated in the following table for two different object and four different subject categories, using the verb fälät'ä (3A) 'know'.

Tigrinya Object Suffix Pronouns
Object Subject Perfect Imperfect Jussive/
Imperative
Gerundive
'me' 'you(m.sg.)' ፈለጥካኒ fälät'ka-nni ትፈልጠኒ tǝfält'-ä-nni ፍለጠኒ fǝlät'-ä-nni ፈሊጥካኒ fälit'ka-nni
'he' ፈለጠኒ fälät'ä-nni ይፈልጠኒ yǝfält'-ä-nni ይፍለጠኒ yǝflät'-ä-nni ፈሊጡኒ fälit'u-nni
'they(m.)' ፈለጡኒ fälät'u-ni ይፈልጡኒ yǝfält'u-ni ይፍለጡኒ yǝflät'u-ni ፈሊጦሙኒ fälit'om-u-ni
'they(f.)' ፈለጣኒ fälät'a-ni ይፈልጣኒ yǝfält'a-ni ይፍለጣኒ yǝflät'a-ni ፈሊጠናኒ fälit'än-a-ni
'him' 'you(m.sg.)' ፈለጥካዮ fälät'ka-yyo ትፈልጦ tǝfält'-o ፍለጦ fǝlät'-t'-o ፈሊጥካዮ fälit'ka-yyo
'he' ፈለጦ fälät'-o ይፈልጦ yǝfält'-o ይፍለጦ yǝflät'-t'-o ፈሊጡዎ fälit'u-wwo
'they(m.)' ፈለጡዎ fälät'u-wo ይፈልጡዎ yǝfält'u-wo ይፍለጡዎ yǝflät'u-wo ፈሊጦሙዎ fälit'om-u-wo
'they(f.)' ፈለጣኦ fälät'a-’o ይፈልጣኦ yǝfält'a-’o ይፍለጣኦ yǝflät'a-’o ፈሊጠንኦ fälit'än-ǝ-’o

Negation edit

Verbs are negated in Tigrinya with the prefix ኣይ ay-, and, in independent tensed clauses, the suffix ን -n. The negative prefix precedes any derivational or subject agreement prefixes, and the negative suffix follows any subject agreement or object pronoun suffixes. The first person singular imperfect and jussive prefix ’ǝ is dropped following ay-. The gerundive has no negative; the negative of the perfect is used instead. Examples:

  • Perfect: ተዓጸወ tä‘as'äwä 'it was closed', ኣይተዓጸወን ay-tä‘as'äwä-n 'it wasn't closed'
  • Imperfect: ትፈልጥኒ tǝfält'ǝnni 'you (f.sg.) know me', ኣይትፈልጥንን ay-tǝfält'ǝnnǝ-n 'you (f.sg.) don't know me'
  • Imperative: ክፈቶ kǝfätto 'open (m.sg.) it', ኣይትክፈቶ ay-tǝkfätto 'don't open (m.sg.) it'
  • Gerundive: ተጋግየ tägagǝyä 'I made a mistake', ኣይተጋጌኹን ay-tägagexu-n 'I didn't make a mistake' (perfect)

Copula and verb of existence edit

Like other Ethiopian Semitic languages, Tigrinya has a copula ('be') and a separate verb of existence and location ('exist, be located'), neither of which is conjugated like other verbs. For the present tense, both the copula and the verb of existence use forms with subject agreement suffixes rather than anything resembling the imperfect. The present of the verb of existence can take conjunctive prefixes, in which case its initial ’a is absorbed: እንተሎ ǝntällo 'if there is', ዘለዉ zälläwu 'which there are'. The copula cannot take conjunctive prefixes; instead, forms of the regular verb ኮነ konä 'become' are used: እንተኾነ ǝntäxonä if he is, becomes', ዝኾነ zǝxonä 'which is, becomes'. The perfect or gerundive of the regular verb ነበረ näbärä 'live' normally serves as the past tense of both the copula and the verb of existence: ምሳና ኣይነበረን mǝsana aynäbäran 'they (f.) weren't with us'. The verbs ኮነ konä, ነበረ näbärä, and ሃለወ halläwä (a regular verb with restricted use meaning 'exist' and the historical source of allo, etc.) replace the copula and verb of existence in other grammatical roles: ይኹኑ yǝxunu 'let them (m.) be' (jussive), ኪነብር እዩ kinäbbǝr ǝyyu 'he will be (there)' (near future), ምህላውካ mǝhǝllawka 'your (m.sg.) being (there)' (infinitive).

With object pronoun suffixes, the verb of existence conveys possession; the object represents the possessor and the subject of the verb the possessed entity. Thus there are four ways to express 'have' for a given subject, depending on the number and gender of the possessed entity: ኣሎኒ allo-ni (m.sg.), ኣላትኒ allat-ǝ-nni (f.sg.), ኣለዉኒ alläwu-ni (m.pl.), ኣለዋኒ alläwa-ni (f.pl.) 'I have'. The same form is used to express obligation; the subject takes the form of an infinitive, the subject agreement is third person masculine singular, and the object suffix represents the obliged person: ምድቃስ ኣሎኒ mǝdǝqqas allo-nni, 'I have to sleep'.

The following table shows the affirmative and negative present forms of the copula and verb of existence. In the second person forms of the copula, the first vowel may be either ǝ and i. The 'o' in the verbs of existence is often replaced by 'ä' in all forms except the third person masculine singular.

Tigrinya Copula and Verb of Existence, Present Tense
Copula
'am', 'are', 'is', etc.
Verb of existence
'am (located)', etc.
Verb of existence + obj. pron.
'have, must'
Affirmative Negative Affirmative Negative Affirmative Negative
I እየ ’ǝyyä ኣይኮንኩን ’aykonkun ኣሎኹ ’alloxu የሎኹን yälloxun ኣሎኒ ’allonni የብለይን yäbǝlläyǝn
you (m.sg.) እኻ ’ǝxa,
ኢኻ ’ixa
ኣይኮንካን ’aykonkan ኣሎኻ ’alloxa የሎኻን yälloxan ኣሎካ ’allokka የብልካን yäbǝlkan
you (f.sg.) እኺ ’ǝxi,
ኢኺ ’ixi
ኣይኮንክን ’aykonkǝn ኣሎኺ ’alloxi የሎኽን yälloxǝn ኣሎኪ ’allokki የብልክን yäbǝlkǝn
he እዩ ’ǝyyu ኣይኮነን ’aykonän ኣሎ ’allo የሎን yällon,
የልቦን yälbon
ኣሎዎ ’allowwo የብሉን yäbǝllun
she እያ ’ǝyya ኣይኮነትን ’aykonätǝn ኣላ ’alla የላን yällan ኣሎዋ ’allowwa የብላን yäbǝllan
we ኢና ’ina ኣይኮንናን ’aykonnan ኣሎና ’allona የሎናን yällonan ኣሎና ’allonna የብልናን yäbǝlnan
you (m.pl.) እኹም ’ǝxum,
ኢኹም ’ixum
ኣይኮንኩምን ’aykonkumǝn ኣሎኹም ’alloxum የሎኹምን yälloxumǝn ኣሎኩም ’allokkum የብልኩምን yäbǝlkumǝn
you (f.pl.) እኽን ’ǝxǝn,
ኢኽን ’ixǝn
ኣይኮንክን ’aykonkǝnǝn ኣሎኽን ’alloxǝn የሎኽንን yälloxǝnǝn ኣሎክን ’allokkǝn የብልክንን yäbǝlkǝnǝn
they (m.) እዮም ’ǝyyom ኣይኮኑን ’aykonun ኣለዉ ’alläwu የለዉን yälläwun ኣሎዎም ’allowwom የብሎምን yäbǝllomǝn
they (f.) እየን ’ǝyyän ኣይኮናን ’aykonan ኣለዋ ’alläwa የለዋን yälläwan ኣሎወን ’allowwän የብለንን yäbǝllänǝn

Relativization edit

Tigrinya forms relative clauses by prefixing zǝ- to the perfect or imperfect form of a verb. The irregular present of the verb of existence (ኣሎ ’allo, etc.) may also take the prefix, in which case it combines with the initial ’a- to yield zä-: ዘሎ zällo 'which exists, is located', etc. The relativizing prefix precedes subject agreement, derivational, and negative prefixes. The prefix undergoes the following changes immediately preceding particular prefixes.

  • Imperfect and jussive subject agreement prefixes
    • zǝ- + ’ǝ- (1p.sg.): zǝ-, e.g., ዝገብርሉ zǝgäbrǝllu 'with which I do (it)'
    • zǝ- + yǝ- (3p.m.sg., 3p.pl.): zi- or zǝ-, e.g., ዚቈርጹ zix'ʷärs'u 'which they (m.) cut'
    • zǝ- + tǝ- (2p., 3p.f.sg.): zǝttǝ- or ’ǝttǝ-, e.g., እትርእያ ’ǝttǝrǝ’ya 'which you (f.pl.) see'
    • zǝ- + nǝ- (1p.pl.): zǝnnǝ- or ’ǝnnǝ-, e.g., e.g., እንጽሕፍ ’ǝnnǝs'ǝḥǝf 'which we write'
  • Derivational prefixes
    • zǝ- + ’a- (causative): zä-, e.g., ዘምጻእኩ zäms'a’ku 'which I brought (caused to come)'
    • zǝ- + tä- (passive): ’ǝttä- (or zǝtä-), e.g., እተሓተመ ’ǝttäḥatämä 'which was printed'
  • Negative prefix
    • zǝ- + ’ay-: zäy-, e.g., ዘይንደሊ zäynǝdälli 'which we don't want'

Relative clauses may occur without an explicit antecedent: ዝሰበርኩ zǝsäbärku 'what I broke', ዚብላዕ zibǝlla‘ 'what is eaten'

As in other Ethiopian Semitic languages very common use of relative clauses is in cleft sentences. The main verb of the corresponding unclefted sentence is replaced by a relative clause and copula, and the relative clause often comes last in the sentence.

  • ሓፍተይ እያ ዝኸደት ḥaftäy ’ǝyya zǝxädät 'it is my sister who left' (lit. 'she is my sister who left')
  • መን እዩ ዝፈለጠ män ǝyyu zǝ-fälät'ä 'who knew?' (lit. 'who is he who knew?')

Auxiliary verbs edit

Tigrinya has a complex set of possibilities for expressing tense and aspect distinctions .[1] Besides the simple perfect, imperfect, and gerundive, other possibilities consist of combinations of these three with different auxiliary verbs — the copula (እዩ ’ǝyyu, etc.), the present of the verb of existence (ኣሎ ’allo, etc.), the verb ነበረ näbärä 'live, be', the verb ኮነ konä 'become, be', and the verb ጸንሔ s'änḥe 'stay' — and sometimes with particular conjunctive prefixes such as kǝ-. In most cases both the auxiliary verb and the main verb are conjugated. Some of the more common patterns are the following:

  • imperfect + copula
The usual present tense for emotion and sense verbs: እፈትዋ እየ ’ǝfätwa ’ǝyyä 'I like her'.
  • imperfect + näbärä
Corresponds to the English past progressive: ንሰቲ ነበርና nǝsätti näbärna 'we were drinking'.
  • gerundive + present of verb of existence or copula
Corresponds to the English present perfect: መጺኣ ኣላ mäs'i’a ’alla 'she has come'.
  • gerundive + näbärä
Corresponds to the English past perfect: ከይዶም ነበሩ käydom näbäru 'they (m.) had gone'
  • imperfect + present verb of existence
Corresponds to English present progressive: ይጻወታ ኣለዋ yǝs's'awäta ’alläwa 'they (f.) are playing'. (Note how this differs from the corresponding form in Amharic, which is the normal main clause present tense.)
  • kǝ- + imperfect + copula
The usual future tense: ክዕድጎ እየ kǝ‘ǝddǝgo ’ǝyyä 'I'm going to buy it'

Bibliography edit

  • Amanuel Sahle (1998) Säwasäsǝw Tǝgrǝñña bǝsäfiḥ. Lawrencevill, NJ, USA: Red Sea Press. ISBN 1-56902-096-5
  • Dan'el Täxlu Räda (1996, Eth. Cal.) Zäbänawi säwasəw kʷ'ankʷ'a Təgrəñña. Mäx'älä
  • Leslau, Wolf (1941) Documents tigrigna: grammaire et textes. Paris: Libraire C. Klincksieck.
  • Mason, John (Ed.) (1996) Säwasǝw Tǝgrǝñña, Tigrinya grammar. Lawrenceville, NJ, USA: Red Sea Press. ISBN 0-932415-20-2 (ISBN 0-932415-21-0, paperback)
  • Praetorius, F. (1871) Grammatik der Tigriñasprache in Abessinien. Halle. ISBN 3-487-05191-5 (1974 reprint)
  • Voigt, Rainer Maria (1977). Das tigrinische Verbalsystem. Berlin: Verlag von Dietrich Reimer.

References edit

  1. ^ Voigt, Rainer M. (1977) Das tigrinische Verbalsystem. Berlin: Verlag von Dietrich Reimer.

tigrinya, verbs, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, section, should, specify, language, english, content, using, lang, transliteration, tran. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article or section should specify the language of its non English content using lang transliteration for transliterated languages and IPA for phonetic transcriptions with an appropriate ISO 639 code Wikipedia s multilingual support templates may also be used See why May 2019 This article s lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article May 2019 This article includes a list of references related reading or external links but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations May 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message This article contains Ge ez alphabet characters Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols Unless otherwise indicated Tigrinya verbs in this article are given in the usual citation form the third person singular masculine perfect Contents 1 Roots 2 Derivation 2 1 Form 2 2 Function 2 3 Defective verbs 3 Tense aspect and mood 4 Conjugation 5 Object suffixes 6 Negation 7 Copula and verb of existence 8 Relativization 9 Auxiliary verbs 10 Bibliography 11 ReferencesRoots editA Tigrinya verb root consists of a set of consonants or literals usually three for example sbr break citation form ሰበረ sabara drf sing citation form ደረፈ darafa Each three consonant or triliteral root belongs to one of three conjugation classes conventionally known as A B and C and analogous to the three conjugations of verbs in Romance languages This division is a basic feature of Ethiopian Semitic languages Most three consonant roots are in the A class referred to in this article as 3A In the citation form perfect these have no gemination and the vowel a between both pairs of consonants Examples are ሰበረ sabara and ደረፈ darafa The B class referred to in this article as 3B is distinguished by the gemination of the second consonant in all forms Examples are ደቀሰ dak k asa sleep and ወሰኸ wassaxa add The relatively few members of the C class referred to in this article as 3C take the vowel a between the first and second consonants Examples are ባረኸ baraxa bless and ናፈቐ nafax a long for miss Tigrinya also has a significant number of four consonant or quadriliteral roots referred to in this article as 4 These fall into a single conjugation class Examples are መስከረ maskara testify and ቀልጠፈ k alt afa hurry The language also has five consonant or quinquiliteral roots referred to in this article as 5 Most if not all of these are defective in the sense described below that is their simplest form takes the ta prefix Examples are ተንቀጥቀጠ ta nk at k at a tremble and ተምበርከኸ ta mbarkaxa kneel As is common in Semitic languages roots containing laryngeal that is pharyngeal or glottal consonants in any position or semivowels y or w in any but first position undergo various modifications These are dealt with below under Conjugation Derivation editEach verb root can be modified through one or more basic derivational processes Each can be described in terms of its form and its function Form edit Changes to the root form are of two types prefixes and internal changes The prefixes are ta and a or their combination When the prefix ta follows a it loses its vowel and assimilates to the following consonant that is the first root consonant Without a its realization depends on the tense aspect mood of the verb Internal changes are of two types One is a form of reduplication This produces an extra syllable consisting of a copy of the second consonant from the end of the root followed by the vowel a this syllable appears third from the end of the verb stem A second type of internal change inserts the vowel a or replaces the existing vowel with a following the third consonant from the end of the stem For three consonant roots this results in a pattern similar to that of C class verbs The table below shows the possible combinations of prefixes and internal changes and their functions illustrating each with the verb sbr 3A Tigrinya Verb Derivation Prefix es Internal change Function Examples ACTIVE ሰበረ sabara break Reduplication FREQUENTATIVE ሰባበረ sababara break repeatedly ta PASSIVE REFLEXIVE ተሰብረ ta sabra be broken a RECIPROCAL ተሳበረ ta sabara break one another Reduplication ተሰባበረ ta sababara a CAUSATIVE ኣስበረ a sbara cause to break a ta a RECIPROCAL CAUSATIVE ኣሳበረ a s sabara cause to break one another Reduplication ኣሰባበረ a s sababaraFunction edit For the most part the two derivational prefixes signal grammatical voice that is they govern how the participants in the sentence map onto the roles in the event conveyed by the verb With neither prefix the verb is normally in ACTIVE voice the subject is the agent of the event By itself the prefix ta usually signals PASSIVE voice or REFLEXIVE voice Some participant which is not the subject of the active sentence the patient or recipient becomes the subject or the subject is both the agent and the patient or recipient of the event By itself the prefix a usually signals CAUSATIVE voice the subject of the sentence is then a causer of the event who is not the immediate agent Reduplication with neither of the prefixes signals FREQUENTATIVE the repetition of the event conveyed by the verb Together with the prefix ta reduplication and internal a both signal RECIPROCAL the subject most often plural represents both the agent and patient or recipient of the event In English and some other languages the reciprocal is marked by a pronoun each other The addition of a to this patterns yields the RECIPROCAL CAUSATIVE cause to DO to each other Here are examples of the different derivational patterns using the roots sbr 3A break ls y 3C shave and sḥk 3A laugh The verbs are all in the gerundive tense aspect form መስኮት ሰቢሩ maskot sabiru He broke a window sbr no prefix no internal change ACTIVE መስኮት ብተኽሉ ተሰቢሩ maskot bǝtaxlu ta sabiru a window was broken by Teklu sbr ta no internal change PASSIVE መስኮት ሰባቢሩ maskot sababiru He repeatedly broke windows sbr no prefix reduplication FREQUENTATIVE መስኮት ኣስቢሩ maskot a sbiru He caused a window to be broken by somebody else sbr a no internal change CAUSATIVE ተላጺዩ ta las iyu He shaved himself ls y ta no internal change REFLEXIVE ተሳሒቖም ta saḥix om ተሰሓሒቖም ta saḥaḥix om they m laughed at each other sḥk ta a reduplication RECIPROCAL ኣሳሒቑዎም a s saḥix uwwom ኣሰሐሒቑዎም a s saḥaḥix uwwom he made them m laugh at each other sḥk a ta a reduplication RECIPROCAL CAUSATIVEDefective verbs edit Some verb roots are defective in the sense that they must occur with either or both of the derivational prefixes For example from the root k mt 3B sit there are the forms tax ammat a sit ax ammat a cause to sit put but no form k ammat a Other examples ktl 3B taxattala follow zrb 3C tazaraba speak ggy 3C tagagaya err Note that the ta does not necessarily signify passive or reflexive with these verbs Tense aspect and mood editThe pattern of vowels between the consonants of a verb root as well as the gemination of one or more consonants in some cases is determined in part by the verb class 3A 3B 3C 4 5 and the presence or absence of derivational morphemes ACTIVE PASSIVE RECIPROCAL etc But it also depends on the selection of the tense aspect or mood Most Semitic languages make a basic two way distinction between a tense aspect stem that is conjugated with suffixes and another stem that is conjugated with prefixes and in some forms suffixes as well In Ethiopian Semitic and in Arabic the first known as the perfective is used for past tense and the second known as the imperfective is used for present and sometimes future tenses In Tigrinya the bare imperfective is used mainly for the habitual present ኩሉ መዓልቲ መስኮት ይሰብር kullu ma alti maskot yǝsabbǝr he breaks a window every day In other present and future contexts auxiliaries are usually used along with the imperfective Ethiopian Semitic and Arabic verbs also have a third possibility which like the imperfective is conjugated with prefixes and sometimes suffixes This form known as the jussive imperative is tenseless it is used to express the imperative mood in the second person as well as notions such as let him DO that he DO in the first and third persons In Ethiopian Semitic the affirmative imperative drops the prefix but the negative imperative maintains it For example in Tigrinya ንስበር nǝ sbar let s break ስበራ sǝbar a break 2p f pl ኣየትስበራ ay tǝ sbar a don t break 2p f pl Some Ethiopian Semitic languages including Tigrinya have a fourth possibility known somewhat confusingly as the gerund or gerundive which like the perfective is conjugated with suffixes only As in Amharic this form in Tigrinya has a tenseless linking function after having DONE DO and then In Tigrinya it has an additional and very important function it is the usual way to express the affirmative past tense in independent clauses the perfective being restricted mainly to the past negative and to verbs preceded by subordinating conjunctions and the relativizer zǝ Examples መስኮትmaskotwindowሰቢሩsabirubreak 3SG M GER ሃዲሙhadimuescape 3SG M GER መስኮት ሰቢሩ ሃዲሙmaskot sabiru hadimuwindow break 3SG M GER escape 3SG M GER He broke a window and escaped እቲǝtitheመስኮትmaskotwindowዝሰበረzǝ sabaraREL break 3SG M PRF ወዲwaddiboyእቲ መስኮት ዝሰበረ ወዲǝti maskot zǝ sabara waddithe window REL break 3SG M PRF boy the boy who broke a window መስኮትmaskotwindowኣይሰበረንay sabara nNEG break 3SG M PRF መስኮት ኣይሰበረንmaskot ay sabara nwindow NEG break 3SG M PRF He didn t break a window Conjugation editTigrinya has separate suffixes prefixes or combinations of prefixes and suffixes for each of the ten person number gender combinations that are distinguished within the personal pronoun system These are illustrated in the table below for the verb flt 3A know in its ACTIVE form that is without derivational prefixes or internal changes For the second person jussive imperative the tǝ prefix appears in parentheses because it is used only in the negative Note that for verbs in the 3A class the second consonant is geminated in the imperfect when there is no suffix Tigrinya Verb Conjugation ACTIVE Class 3A Perfect Imperfect Jussive Imperative GerundiveI ፈለጥኩ falat ku እፈልጥ ǝ fallǝt እፍለጥ ǝ flat ፈሊጠ felit ayou m sg ፈለጥካ falat ka ትፈልጥ tǝ fallǝt ት ፍለጥ tǝ flat ፈሊትካ felit kayou f sg ፈለጥኪ falat ki ትፈልጢ tǝ falt i ት ፍለጢ tǝ flat i ፈሊጥኪ felit kihe ፈለጠ falat a ይፈልጥ yǝ fallǝt ይፍለጥ yǝ flat ፈሊጡ felit ushe ፈለጠት falat at ትፈልጥ tǝ fallǝt ትፍለጥ tǝ flat ፈሊጣ felit awe ፈለጥና falat na ንፈልጥ nǝ fallǝt ንፍለጥ nǝ flat ፈሊጥና felit nayou m pl ፈለጥኩም falat kum ትፈልጡ tǝ falt u ት ፍለጡ tǝ flat u ፈሊጥኩም felit kumyou f pl ፈለጥክን falat kǝn ትፈልጣ tǝ falt a ት ፍለጣ tǝ flat a ፈሊጥክን felit kinthey m ፈለጡ falat u ይፈልጡ yǝ falt u ይፍለጡ yǝ flat u ፈሊጦም felit omthey f ፈለጣ falat a ይፈልጣ yǝ falt a ይፍለጣ yǝ flat a ፈሊጠን felit enThe same subject agreement affixes appear in the various derivational patterns but the verb stems are not predictable from the simple ACTIVE stems The derivational prefixes ta and a undergo various changes when they are preceded by subject agreement affixes In the imperative jussive ta assimilates to the first consonant of the verb root except when there is no prefix in the affirmative imperative In the imperfect ta disappears altogether though its presence can still be detected from the pattern of vowels and gemination in the verb stem The first person imperfect and jussive prefix ǝ merges with a following a and the vowel of the other prefixes tǝ yǝ nǝ merges with a following a yielding the vowel a The perfect stem following ta may lose the vowel between the second and third root consonants when the suffix begins with a vowel ተፈልጠ ta falt a he was known ተፈለጥኩ ta falat ku I was known The table below shows forms for the verb flt 3A know in each of the possible combinations of derivational prefixes and internal changes Unless otherwise indicated the forms given are the third person masculine plural for the RECIPROCAL pattern and the third person masculine singular for the other patterns Tigrinya Verb Conjugation Derived Forms Class 3A Derivational pattern Perfect Imperfect Jussive Imperative GerundiveFREQUENTATIVE ፈላለጠ falalat a ይፈላልጥ yǝ fa lalǝt ፈላሊጡ falalit uPASSIVE REFLEXIVE ተፈለጥኩ ta falat ku 1p sg ተፈልጠ ta falt a ይፍለጥ yǝ fǝllat ይፈለጥ yǝ f falat ተፈለጥ ta falat 2p m sg ተፈሊጡ ta falit uRECIPROCAL ተፋለጡ ta falat uተፈላለጡ ta falalat u ይፋለጡ yǝ f falat uይፈላለጡ yǝ f falalat u ተፋሊጦም ta falit omተፈላሊጦም ta falalit omCAUSATIVE ኣፍለጠ a flat a የፍልጥ y a fǝllǝt የፍልጡ y a fǝlt u 3p m pl የፍልጥ y a flǝt ኣፍሊጡ a flit uRECIPROCAL CAUSATIVE ኣፋለጠ a f falat aኣፈላለጠ a f falalat a የፋለጥ y a f falǝt የፈላለጥ y a f falalǝt ኣፋሊጡ a f falit uኣፈላሊጡ a f falalit u The subject agreement affixes are the same for verbs in other conjugation classes but the stems differ in some cases from what would be expected for a verb in the 3A class like falat a The table below shows the third person singular masculine ACTIVE forms for verbs in other classes bdl 3B offend mrk 3C capture t rt r 4 doubt Verbs whose roots contain laryngeal pharyngeal or glottal ḥ h consonants in any position or semivowels w or y in any position other than first deviate in various ways from the patterns shown in the tables above For the laryngeals most of these deviations stem from the fact that the vowel a never occurs immediately after a laryngeal For the semivowels the deviations result from simplifications that occur when these consonants are preceded and followed by vowels Some of the changes are illustrated in the following table for these seven verbs all in the 3A class hdm escape s m kiss srḥ do work mwt die ftw like kyd go sty drink There is considerable variation in the forms only one possibility is shown here Third person singular masculine is given in each case and in addition the first person singular in the perfect or third person masculine plural in the imperfect for cases where the stem changes within the paradigm The very common verbs nbr live be and gbr do undergo simplifications in the gerundive where the b is deleted ነይሩ nayru ገይሩ gayru 3p m sg ኔርካ nerka ጌርካ gerka 2p m sg etc Tigrinya has four genuinely irregular verbs bhl say whb give tḥz hold and hlw exist For the first three of these which are conjugated similarly the third personal singular masculine forms are shown in the following table The verb of existence is discussed in a separate section Tigrinya Verb Conjugation ACTIVE Classes 3B 3C 4 Laryngeal and Semivowel Root Consonants Irregular Conjugation class Perfect Imperfect Jussive Imperative Gerundive3B በደለ baddal a ይብድል yǝ bǝddǝl ይበድል yǝ baddǝl በዲሉ baddil u3C ማረኸ marax a ይማርኽ yǝ marǝx ይማርኽ yǝ marǝx ማሪኹ marix u4 ጠርጠረ t art ar a ይጥርጥር yǝ t ǝrt ǝr ይጠርጥር yǝ t art ǝr ጠርጢሩ t art ir uLaryngeal ሃደመ hadam aሰዓመ sa am aሰራሕኩ saraḥ ku ሰርሔ sarḥ e ይሃድም yǝ haddǝmይስዕም yǝ sǝ ǝmይሰርሕ yǝ sarrǝḥ ይህደም yǝ hdamይስዓም yǝ s amይስራሕ yǝ sraḥ ሃዲሙ hadim u ስዒሙ sǝ im uሰሪሑ sariḥ uSemivowel ሞተ mot aፈቶኹ fato xu ፈተወ fataw a ከደ kad aሰቴኹ sate xu ሰተየsatay a ይመውት yǝ mawwǝt ይሞቱ yǝ mot uይፈቱ yǝ fattu ይፈትዉ yǝ fatw uይኸይድ yǝ xayyǝd ይኸዱ yǝ xad uይሰቲ yǝ satti ይሰትዩ yǝ saty u ይሙት yǝ mutይፍተው yǝ ftawይኺድ yǝ xid ይስተይ yǝ stay ሞይቱ moyt uፈትዩ faty uከይዱ kayd uሰትዩ saty uIrregular በለ balaሃበ habaሓዘ ḥaza ይብል yǝbǝlይህብ yǝhǝbይሕዝ yǝḥǝz ይበል yǝbalይሃብ yǝhabይሓዝ yǝḥaz ኢሉ iluሂቡ hibuሒዙ ḥizuObject suffixes editLike other Semitic languages Tigrinya has object pronoun suffixes that can appear on verbs in any tense aspect mood As discussed under personal pronouns there are two sets of such suffixes in the language a set used for direct objects and a prepositional set used for dative benefactive locative or adversative meanings to for against only one object suffix is permitted on a given verb As in some other Ethiopian Semitic languages there are separate light and heavy suffixes for all but the second person and first person plural prepositional object forms The light suffixes ni xa etc are characterized by initial ungeminated consonants and the heavy suffixes nni kka etc by initial geminated consonants For the third person direct object suffixes there is a third form with no initial consonant at all o a etc Roughly speaking the light suffixes are used with verbs whose subjects are second or third person plural the third person vowel initial suffixes are used with verbs that have no agreement suffix and the heavy suffixes are used in other cases In the jussive imperative the vowel initial suffixes cause the gemination of the preceding consonant When an object suffix beginning with a consonant is added to a verb ending in a consonant either a root or a suffix consonant a vowel is inserted to break up the cluster the particular vowel depending on the subject and object The details are quite complicated most of the possibilities are illustrated in the following table for two different object and four different subject categories using the verb falat a 3A know Tigrinya Object Suffix Pronouns Object Subject Perfect Imperfect Jussive Imperative Gerundive me you m sg ፈለጥካኒ falat ka nni ትፈልጠኒ tǝfalt a nni ፍለጠኒ fǝlat a nni ፈሊጥካኒ falit ka nni he ፈለጠኒ falat a nni ይፈልጠኒ yǝfalt a nni ይፍለጠኒ yǝflat a nni ፈሊጡኒ falit u nni they m ፈለጡኒ falat u ni ይፈልጡኒ yǝfalt u ni ይፍለጡኒ yǝflat u ni ፈሊጦሙኒ falit om u ni they f ፈለጣኒ falat a ni ይፈልጣኒ yǝfalt a ni ይፍለጣኒ yǝflat a ni ፈሊጠናኒ falit an a ni him you m sg ፈለጥካዮ falat ka yyo ትፈልጦ tǝfalt o ፍለጦ fǝlat t o ፈሊጥካዮ falit ka yyo he ፈለጦ falat o ይፈልጦ yǝfalt o ይፍለጦ yǝflat t o ፈሊጡዎ falit u wwo they m ፈለጡዎ falat u wo ይፈልጡዎ yǝfalt u wo ይፍለጡዎ yǝflat u wo ፈሊጦሙዎ falit om u wo they f ፈለጣኦ falat a o ይፈልጣኦ yǝfalt a o ይፍለጣኦ yǝflat a o ፈሊጠንኦ falit an ǝ oNegation editVerbs are negated in Tigrinya with the prefix ኣይ ay and in independent tensed clauses the suffix ን n The negative prefix precedes any derivational or subject agreement prefixes and the negative suffix follows any subject agreement or object pronoun suffixes The first person singular imperfect and jussive prefix ǝ is dropped following ay The gerundive has no negative the negative of the perfect is used instead Examples Perfect ተዓጸወ ta as awa it was closed ኣይተዓጸወን ay ta as awa n it wasn t closed Imperfect ትፈልጥኒ tǝfalt ǝnni you f sg know me ኣይትፈልጥንን ay tǝfalt ǝnnǝ n you f sg don t know me Imperative ክፈቶ kǝfatto open m sg it ኣይትክፈቶ ay tǝkfatto don t open m sg it Gerundive ተጋግየ tagagǝya I made a mistake ኣይተጋጌኹን ay tagagexu n I didn t make a mistake perfect Copula and verb of existence editLike other Ethiopian Semitic languages Tigrinya has a copula be and a separate verb of existence and location exist be located neither of which is conjugated like other verbs For the present tense both the copula and the verb of existence use forms with subject agreement suffixes rather than anything resembling the imperfect The present of the verb of existence can take conjunctive prefixes in which case its initial a is absorbed እንተሎ ǝntallo if there is ዘለዉ zallawu which there are The copula cannot take conjunctive prefixes instead forms of the regular verb ኮነ kona become are used እንተኾነ ǝntaxona if he is becomes ዝኾነ zǝxona which is becomes The perfect or gerundive of the regular verb ነበረ nabara live normally serves as the past tense of both the copula and the verb of existence ምሳና ኣይነበረን mǝsana aynabaran they f weren t with us The verbs ኮነ kona ነበረ nabara and ሃለወ hallawa a regular verb with restricted use meaning exist and the historical source of allo etc replace the copula and verb of existence in other grammatical roles ይኹኑ yǝxunu let them m be jussive ኪነብር እዩ kinabbǝr ǝyyu he will be there near future ምህላውካ mǝhǝllawka your m sg being there infinitive With object pronoun suffixes the verb of existence conveys possession the object represents the possessor and the subject of the verb the possessed entity Thus there are four ways to express have for a given subject depending on the number and gender of the possessed entity ኣሎኒ allo ni m sg ኣላትኒ allat ǝ nni f sg ኣለዉኒ allawu ni m pl ኣለዋኒ allawa ni f pl I have The same form is used to express obligation the subject takes the form of an infinitive the subject agreement is third person masculine singular and the object suffix represents the obliged person ምድቃስ ኣሎኒ mǝdǝqqas allo nni I have to sleep The following table shows the affirmative and negative present forms of the copula and verb of existence In the second person forms of the copula the first vowel may be either ǝ and i The o in the verbs of existence is often replaced by a in all forms except the third person masculine singular Tigrinya Copula and Verb of Existence Present Tense Copula am are is etc Verb of existence am located etc Verb of existence obj pron have must Affirmative Negative Affirmative Negative Affirmative NegativeI እየ ǝyya ኣይኮንኩን aykonkun ኣሎኹ alloxu የሎኹን yalloxun ኣሎኒ allonni የብለይን yabǝllayǝnyou m sg እኻ ǝxa ኢኻ ixa ኣይኮንካን aykonkan ኣሎኻ alloxa የሎኻን yalloxan ኣሎካ allokka የብልካን yabǝlkanyou f sg እኺ ǝxi ኢኺ ixi ኣይኮንክን aykonkǝn ኣሎኺ alloxi የሎኽን yalloxǝn ኣሎኪ allokki የብልክን yabǝlkǝnhe እዩ ǝyyu ኣይኮነን aykonan ኣሎ allo የሎን yallon የልቦን yalbon ኣሎዎ allowwo የብሉን yabǝllunshe እያ ǝyya ኣይኮነትን aykonatǝn ኣላ alla የላን yallan ኣሎዋ allowwa የብላን yabǝllanwe ኢና ina ኣይኮንናን aykonnan ኣሎና allona የሎናን yallonan ኣሎና allonna የብልናን yabǝlnanyou m pl እኹም ǝxum ኢኹም ixum ኣይኮንኩምን aykonkumǝn ኣሎኹም alloxum የሎኹምን yalloxumǝn ኣሎኩም allokkum የብልኩምን yabǝlkumǝnyou f pl እኽን ǝxǝn ኢኽን ixǝn ኣይኮንክን aykonkǝnǝn ኣሎኽን alloxǝn የሎኽንን yalloxǝnǝn ኣሎክን allokkǝn የብልክንን yabǝlkǝnǝnthey m እዮም ǝyyom ኣይኮኑን aykonun ኣለዉ allawu የለዉን yallawun ኣሎዎም allowwom የብሎምን yabǝllomǝnthey f እየን ǝyyan ኣይኮናን aykonan ኣለዋ allawa የለዋን yallawan ኣሎወን allowwan የብለንን yabǝllanǝnRelativization editTigrinya forms relative clauses by prefixing zǝ to the perfect or imperfect form of a verb The irregular present of the verb of existence ኣሎ allo etc may also take the prefix in which case it combines with the initial a to yield za ዘሎ zallo which exists is located etc The relativizing prefix precedes subject agreement derivational and negative prefixes The prefix undergoes the following changes immediately preceding particular prefixes Imperfect and jussive subject agreement prefixes zǝ ǝ 1p sg zǝ e g ዝገብርሉ zǝgabrǝllu with which I do it zǝ yǝ 3p m sg 3p pl zi or zǝ e g ዚቈርጹ zix ʷars u which they m cut zǝ tǝ 2p 3p f sg zǝttǝ or ǝttǝ e g እትርእያ ǝttǝrǝ ya which you f pl see zǝ nǝ 1p pl zǝnnǝ or ǝnnǝ e g e g እንጽሕፍ ǝnnǝs ǝḥǝf which we write Derivational prefixes zǝ a causative za e g ዘምጻእኩ zams a ku which I brought caused to come zǝ ta passive ǝtta or zǝta e g እተሓተመ ǝttaḥatama which was printed Negative prefix zǝ ay zay e g ዘይንደሊ zaynǝdalli which we don t want Relative clauses may occur without an explicit antecedent ዝሰበርኩ zǝsabarku what I broke ዚብላዕ zibǝlla what is eaten As in other Ethiopian Semitic languages very common use of relative clauses is in cleft sentences The main verb of the corresponding unclefted sentence is replaced by a relative clause and copula and the relative clause often comes last in the sentence ሓፍተይ እያ ዝኸደት ḥaftay ǝyya zǝxadat it is my sister who left lit she is my sister who left መን እዩ ዝፈለጠ man ǝyyu zǝ falat a who knew lit who is he who knew Auxiliary verbs editTigrinya has a complex set of possibilities for expressing tense and aspect distinctions 1 Besides the simple perfect imperfect and gerundive other possibilities consist of combinations of these three with different auxiliary verbs the copula እዩ ǝyyu etc the present of the verb of existence ኣሎ allo etc the verb ነበረ nabara live be the verb ኮነ kona become be and the verb ጸንሔ s anḥe stay and sometimes with particular conjunctive prefixes such as kǝ In most cases both the auxiliary verb and the main verb are conjugated Some of the more common patterns are the following imperfect copulaThe usual present tense for emotion and sense verbs እፈትዋ እየ ǝfatwa ǝyya I like her imperfect nabaraCorresponds to the English past progressive ንሰቲ ነበርና nǝsatti nabarna we were drinking gerundive present of verb of existence or copulaCorresponds to the English present perfect መጺኣ ኣላ mas i a alla she has come gerundive nabaraCorresponds to the English past perfect ከይዶም ነበሩ kaydom nabaru they m had gone imperfect present verb of existenceCorresponds to English present progressive ይጻወታ ኣለዋ yǝs s awata allawa they f are playing Note how this differs from the corresponding form in Amharic which is the normal main clause present tense kǝ imperfect copulaThe usual future tense ክዕድጎ እየ kǝ ǝddǝgo ǝyya I m going to buy it Bibliography editAmanuel Sahle 1998 Sawasasǝw Tǝgrǝnna bǝsafiḥ Lawrencevill NJ USA Red Sea Press ISBN 1 56902 096 5 Dan el Taxlu Rada 1996 Eth Cal Zabanawi sawasew kʷ ankʷ a Tegrenna Max ala Leslau Wolf 1941 Documents tigrigna grammaire et textes Paris Libraire C Klincksieck Mason John Ed 1996 Sawasǝw Tǝgrǝnna Tigrinya grammar Lawrenceville NJ USA Red Sea Press ISBN 0 932415 20 2 ISBN 0 932415 21 0 paperback Praetorius F 1871 Grammatik der Tigrinasprache in Abessinien Halle ISBN 3 487 05191 5 1974 reprint Voigt Rainer Maria 1977 Das tigrinische Verbalsystem Berlin Verlag von Dietrich Reimer References edit Voigt Rainer M 1977 Das tigrinische Verbalsystem Berlin Verlag von Dietrich Reimer Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tigrinya verbs amp oldid 1169732150, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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