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Triparic Verbs: Difference between revisions

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== Everything below here is from the revision ==
== Everything below here is from the revision ==
== Infinitive and Stem ==
{| class="wikitable floatright" style="width: 40%;"
|-
! colspan="2" style="background:#dbe6f0" |''sagen'', "to say"
|-
! style="background:#f0c2c2" |Stem
| style="background:#f5d6d6" | sag-
|-
! colspan="2" style="background:#dbe6f0" |''tun'', "to do"
|-
! style="background:#f0c2c2" |Stem
| style="background:#f5d6d6" | tu-
|}
The infinitive of regular verbs, which is the form used for citation of the verb, ends in '''-en''' for most verbs, but '''-n''' (with a letter other than '''e''' before it) for a few.  Remove the '''-(e)n''' and what is left is the ''stem''.
{{clear}}
== Simple Tenses ==
{| class="wikitable" style="width: 100%;"
|-
!colspan="1" style="background:#dbe6f0"|
!colspan="3" style="background:#dbe6f0"|''sagen''<br>"to say"<br>Typical verb
!colspan="1" style="background:#dbe6f0"|''brøden''<br>"to embroider"<br>D/T-stem
!colspan="1" style="background:#dbe6f0"|''fären''<br>"to make"<br>R-stem
|-
! Person
! Present
! Past
! Future
! Past
! Future
|-
| <b>ia</b>
| sag-<span style="color: green;">e</span>
| sag-<span style="color: purple;">d-</span><span style="color: green;">e</span>
| sag-<span style="color: brown;">ir-</span><span style="color: green;">e</span>
| brød-<span style="color: purple;">ed-</span><span style="color: green;">e</span>
| fär-<span style="color: brown;">sir-</span><span style="color: green;">e</span>
|-
| <b>ðŏ</b>
| sag-<span style="color: green;">est</span>
| sag-<span style="color: purple;">d-</span><span style="color: green;">est</span>
| sag-<span style="color: brown;">ir-</span><span style="color: green;">est</span>
| brød-<span style="color: purple;">ed-</span><span style="color: green;">est</span>
| fär-<span style="color: brown;">sir-</span><span style="color: green;">est</span>
|-
| <b>ei</b>
| sag-<span style="color: green;">et</span>
| sag-<span style="color: purple;">d-</span><span style="color: green;">et</span>
| sag-<span style="color: brown;">ir-</span><span style="color: green;">et</span>
| brød-<span style="color: purple;">ed-</span><span style="color: green;">et</span>
| fär-<span style="color: brown;">sir-</span><span style="color: green;">et</span>
|-
| <b>nø</b>
| sag-<span style="color: green;">am</span>
| sag-<span style="color: purple;">d-</span><span style="color: green;">am</span>
| sag-<span style="color: brown;">ir-</span><span style="color: green;">am</span>
| brød-<span style="color: purple;">ed-</span><span style="color: green;">am</span>
| fär-<span style="color: brown;">sir-</span><span style="color: green;">am</span>
|-
| <b>vø</b>
| sag-<span style="color: green;">asch</span>
| sag-<span style="color: purple;">d-</span><span style="color: green;">asch</span>
| sag-<span style="color: brown;">ir-</span><span style="color: green;">asch</span>
| brød-<span style="color: purple;">ed-</span><span style="color: green;">asch</span>
| fär-<span style="color: brown;">sir-</span><span style="color: green;">asch</span>
|-
| <b>eng</b>
| sag-<span style="color: green;">ant</span>
| sag-<span style="color: purple;">d-</span><span style="color: green;">ant</span>
| sag-<span style="color: brown;">ir-</span><span style="color: green;">ant</span>
| brød-<span style="color: purple;">ed-</span><span style="color: green;">ant</span>
| fär-<span style="color: brown;">sir-</span><span style="color: green;">ant</span>
|}
{{colorparagraph
|background=#ffffcc
|image=[[File:Ambox_delete.png|20px]]
|text='''Note:''' None of the inflected forms of the verb contain hyphens in actual use. They are used in this table, and the other tables in this article, only to clarify how the forms are constructed.
}}
=== Present ===
{| class="wikitable floatright" style="width: 40%;"
|-
!colspan="3"| Personal Endings
|-
! Person
! Singular
! Plural
|-
! 1st
| -e
| -am
|-
! 2nd
| -est
| -asch
|-
! 1st
| -et
| -ant
|}
The present of regular verbs is formed by adding the personal endings directly to the stem.
=== Future ===
The future is formed by adding '''-ir-''' between the stem and the personal ending. 
For stems ending in '''-r''', an '''-s-''' is inserted first: '''ia färsire''' "I will make".
=== Past ===
The past tense is formed by adding '''-d-''' between the stem and the personal ending.
For stems ending in a voiceless consonant, the '''-d-''' is replaced by '''-t-''': '''leste, lestest,''' and so forth.
For stems ending in '''-d''' or '''-t''', an '''-e-''' is inserted before the past tense '''-d/t-''': '''ia brødede''' "I embroidered".
{{clear}}


== Imperative ==
== Imperative ==
Line 500: Line 376:
|The chocolate shall have been desired by the man.
|The chocolate shall have been desired by the man.
|-
|-
|}
== Subjunctive ==
{| class="wikitable floatright" style="width: 40%;"
|-
!colspan="3" style="background:#dbe6f0"|''sagen'', "to say"
|-
! Person
! Present Subj.
! Perfect Subj.
|-
| <b>ia</b>
| sagðe
| haðe gesagt
|-
| <b>ðŏ</b>
| sagðest
| haðest gesagt
|-
| <b>ei</b>
| sagðet
| haðet gesagt
|-
| <b>nø</b>
| sagðam
| haðam gesagt
|-
| <b>vø</b>
| sagðasch
| haðasch gesagt
|-
| <b>eng</b>
| sagðant
| haðant gesagt
|}
The subjunctive has only two tenses: a present and a perfect.
=== Present ===
The present subjunctive is formed just like the simple past tense, but with '''-ð-''' instead of '''-d-'''.
Verbs which use '''-t-''' to mark their past use '''-þ-''' rather than '''-ð-''' to mark the subjunctive.  Verbs with stems ending in '''-d''' or '''-t''' add an '''-e-''' before the subjunctive marker, just as they do for the past.
'''Ia lese.''' "I read."<br>'''Ia lesþe.''' "I may read."
'''Ia brøde.''' "I embroider.<br>'''Ia brødeðe.''' "I may embroider."
=== Perfect ===
The perfect subjunctive is formed using the present subjunctive of '''haben''' (the forms are '''haðe, haðest,''' etc.) and the past participle.
'''Er vadedet.''' "He went."<br>'''Er haðet gevadet.''' "He may have gone."
=== Passives ===
The present subjunctive passive is formed like the present indicative passive, but with using the present subjunctive of '''sän''' ('''säðe, säðest,''' etc.)  The perfect subjunctive passive is formed like the perfect indicative passive, but with the present subjunctive of '''haben'''.
{{clear}}
{|class="wikitable" style="width: 100%;"
|Present
| '''Der chocolad säðet bedeziret bä der vir.'''
|The chocolate may be desired by the man.
|-
|Perfect
| '''Der chocolad haðet gewaret bedeziret bä der vir.'''
|The chocolate may have been desired by the man.
|}
|}



Revision as of 22:42, 28 May 2022

Infinitive and Present Stem

sagen, "to say"
Stem sag-
tun, "to do"
Stem tu-

The infinitive of regular verbs, which is the form used for citation of the verb, ends in -en (or -er??) for most verbs, but -n (with a letter other than e before it) for a few. Remove the -(e)n (r) and what is left is the stem.

Personal Endings

Personal Endings
Person Singular Plural
1st -e -am
2nd -est -asch
1st -et -ant

Most inflected verbs are formed by taking a tense stem and adding the personal endings.

Simple Tenses

The present of regular verbs is formed by adding the personal endings directly to the verb stem. The imperfect and future are formed by adding an extra syllable between the verb stem and the ending; -ad- for imperfect, -ar- for future. In the plural forms, the personal ending's -a- fronts to -e-.

sagen "to say"
Person Stem + ending Present

(tense stem sag-)

Imperfect

(tense stem sagad-)

Future

(tense stem sagar-)

ego sag-e sage sagade sagare
ðö sag-est sagest sagadest sagarest
ex sag-et saget sagadet sagaret
wîn sag-am sagam sagadem sagarem
voy sag-asch sagasch sagadesch sagaresch
enge sag-ant sagant sagadent sagarent

Subjunctive

The subjunctive is formed by inserting an -i- before the personal ending (in the present) or replacing the -a- of the tense marker syllable with -i- (in past and future).

Note that the plural personal endings of the subjunctive all shift from -a- to -e-, even in the present.

Subjunctive of sagen "to say"
Person Present Imperfect Future
ego sagie sagide sagire
ðö sagiest sagidest sagirest
ex sagiet sagidet sagiret
wîn sagiem sagidem sagirem
voy sagiesch sagidesch sagiresch
enge sagient sagident sagirent

Bits from Classical to review

The imperative of a verb is formed with the suffix : vivã "live!"

The present participle active of a verb is formed with the prefix ge- and the suffix -t: Ego süm gestandet sur ðæ fuß. "I am standing on your foot."

The passive participle is formed with the prefix be- and the suffix -t: Regas sant beschoxet bä mensches. "Laws are chosen by men."

The gerund is formed with the suffix -enty: der scriventy "the writing [process]" but der scrivàt "the writing [that which is written]"

Irregular verbs

eser, "to be"
Person Present Past
ego süm war
ðŏ yrt wyrt
ex ist wat
wîn samo war
voy asch vasch
enge sant vert
haben, "to have"
Person Present Past
ego habe hatte
ðŏ hast hattest
ex hat hatte
wîn haben hatten
voy habt hattet
enge haben hatten
gen, "to go"
Person Present Past
ego go gwen
ðŏ gast gwenst
ex gat gwent
wîn go gwen
voy gasch gwen
enge gent gwen
wilen, future auxiliary
ego wil
ðŏ wilst
ex wilt
wîn wil
voy wil
enge wil

Everything below here is from the revision

Imperative

sagen, "to say"
Imperative sag-e, sag-asch

The imperative is formed simply by adding -e (singular) or -asch (plural) to the present stem:

Färe! "Make!"
Rigardasch! "(All of you) Look!"

Participles

sagen, "to say"
Present Participle sag-ent
Past Participle ge-sag-et
Passive Participle be-sag-et

Triparic verbs have three main participles: the present participle, the past participle, and the passive participle.

The present participle is the verb stem + -ent: lesent, brødent.

The past participle is ge- + the verb stem + -et: geleset, gebrødet.

The passive participle is be- + the verb stem + -et: beleset, bebrødet.

Perfect tenses

The perfect tenses are formed by using the tenses of haben ("to have") with the past participle. The present of haben forms the (present) perfect; the past, the past perfect (pluperfect); and the future, the future perfect.

The past participle in a perfect tense construction is placed after the inflected haben.

Present Perfect (perfect) Der vir hat gescrivet zu der fem. The man has written to the woman.
Past Perfect (pluperfect) Der vir hadet gescrivet zu der fem. The man had written to the woman.
Future Perfect Der vir habret gescrivet zu der fem. The man shall have written to the woman.

Passive Voice

The passive voice is formed by using the tenses of sän ("to be") with the passive participle. The present, past, and future of sän form the simple present, past, and future passive.

For the passive perfect tenses, one uses the tenses of haben with the past participle of sän and the passive participle of the main verb.

Present Der chocolad ist bedeziret bä der vir. The chocolate is desired by the man.
Past Der chocolad wart bedeziret bä der vir. The chocolate was desired by the man.
Future Der chocolad sert bedeziret bä der vir. The chocolate will be desired by the man.
Perfect Der chocolad hat gewaret bedeziret bä der vir. The chocolate has been desired by the man.
Pluperfect Der chocolad hadet gewaret bedeziret bä der vir. The chocolate had been desired by the man.
Future Perfect Der chocolad habret gewaret bedeziret bä der vir. The chocolate shall have been desired by the man.

Irregular Verbs

sän, "to be"
Person Present Past Future Subjunctive
ia son ware sere säðe
ðŏ yrt warst serst säðest
ei ist wart sert säðet
sam waram seram säðam
sasch warasch serasch säðasch
eng sant warant serant säðant
Imperative sä, säsch
Past Participle gewaret
Passive Participle no passive form
haben, "to have"
Person Present Past Future Subjunctive
ia habe hade habre haðe
ðŏ hast hadest habrest haðest
ei hat hadet habret haðet
habam hadam habram haðam
hasch hadasch habrasch haðasch
eng hant hadant habrant haðant
Imperative habe, habasch
Past Participle gehadet
Passive Participle behabet

Modal and Catenative Verbs

In addition to the tense auxiliaries, there are verbs known as modal verbs which specify the modality of the main verb: do you want to do the thing? Must you do the thing? Can you?

Additionally, there are verbs which can stand alone, or can be linked with other main verbs to give a more complex meaning. In English, these are called catenative verbs. An example would be I tried to help them. Another would be I plan to go to the concert.

In German, there are six modal verbs which behave slightly differently, grammatically, than other catenative verbs. French, English, and Triparic do not treat their modals differently, but it is still convenient to list the Triparic counterparts of the six German modals, as they are quite commonly used.

English Triparic English Triparic
may, be allowed to mogen can, be able to possen
must, have to deven should, ought to sollen
like to løken want to diziren

The difference between løken and diziren is like in English: one may like to do something but not want to do it at a particular moment, or vice versa, one may want to do something one does not generally like.

Each of these verbs is used by inflecting the modal and placing the infinitive of the main verb after it: Ia løke vaden zu Kalmont. "I like to go to Kalmont." Nø devam laboren hir. "We must work here."

Compound Verbs and Word Order

You could combine modals, the perfect tenses, the passive voice, and catenative verbs to create some very complicated ideas: They had been allowed to try to help him. They were not able to plan to leave before Wednesday.

The rule in Triparic for determining word order in such complex situations is not too difficult to state, once you distinguish between a finite verb (one which takes a personal ending) and a non-finite verb (one which takes no personal ending, that is, an infinitive or participle).

The rule is then:

The finite verb occupies the second place in the clause, followed by all the non-finite verbs in the order of their semantic importance, from least significant to most significant.

Examples

Modal plus chain of infinitives

In the complicated example They had been allowed to try to help him, the order of the clause is determined thus:

  1. First, we know that the words will be:
    • eng (they)
    • hadant (had, 3rd person plural)
    • gedurfet (to be allowed, past participle, since we are saying had been allowed, so this is the past perfect tense of durfen)
    • proben (to try)
    • helfen (to help)
    • and erm (him).
  2. Next, we identify the finite verb and put it in second place. The finite verb is the one marked for the person, so it is hadasch The sentence is now ... hadant ...
  3. Next, we gather up all the other verbs and put them in order of their semantic importance.
    • proben and helfen are linked as a chain, like catenative verbs in English, so they will go together as a pair: proben helfen.
    • gedurfet is the verb that is left, and it is describing the mode (being allowed) of the main activity (trying to help). Therefore it is less important than the main activity, and is placed before it, so that the main activity comes last, at the end of the sentence, where it carries more impact.
  4. Therefore the set of all the non-finite verbs, in order, is gedurfet proben helfen. The non-finite verbs come after the finite verb. The sentence is now ... hadant gedurfet proben helfen ...
  5. Finally, all that's left are the subject and the direct object, and in a declarative sentence, the subject occupies the slot before the verb, so we can now finish: Eng hadant gedurfet proben helfen erm.

Another way to think through the order is to start with the finite verb and ask questions:

"They had." Had what?
"Had been allowed." Had been allowed what?
"Had been allowed to try." Had been allowed to try what?
"Had been allowed to try to help." Done: hadant gedurfet proben helfen.

Passive perfect tense with a modal

Let's look at another example, a future perfect passive with a modal verb:

The man shall have been allowed to be seen by the king.

  1. Our components are der vir (the man), bä der könig (by the king), and the verbs around them. And we know that der vir is the subject, so we know all of the sentence except the second slot (the verbs).
    • Der vir ... bä der könig.
  2. We know that the finite verb is going to be 3rd person singular, since the subject of the sentence is the man.
  3. Since the sentence is going to be future perfect, the finite verb is, in particular, the 3rd person singular future of haben: habret.
    • Der vir habret ... bä der könig.
  4. Now we ask: "The man shall have what?" The immediate answer is "been allowed." That is the past participle of durfen.
    • Der vir habret gedurfet ... bä der könig.
  5. "Shall have been allowed what?" The answer is "To be seen". That's the passive voice. So we know the next piece is sän ("to be"), and the final piece must be the passive participle of viden, which is bevidet ("seen").
    • Der vir habret gedurfet sän bevidet bä der könig.