Re: Wenedyk - Nouns
From: | Padraic Brown <elemtilas@...> |
Date: | Monday, September 2, 2002, 15:34 |
--- Christian Thalmann <cinga@...> wrote:
> I didn't know about the Slav cases, but they seem to
> justify the
> change well. As for cross-declension leveling, I
> did the same in
> Jovian:
I guess that's a "me too" for Kerno. Well, Old Kerno,
to be specific. All declensions adopted -i as the
possessive singular and -ór as the plural. However,
the possessive rapidly merged with the dative, with -i
in the singular and -bo in the plural for all
declensions (and also the accusative). You can form
the possessive via the dative (the old "there is a
book at me") or the oblique. Note that this was before
the great Shift, so Kerno still had the five
declension system of Latin:
O.K.
nom. la gwenna li gwenni
pos. li gwenni lor gwennór
dat. li gwenni lis gwennabo
acc. lâ gwennâ las gwennas
abl. lâ gwenno li gwennas
M.K.
nom. la gwenna i gwenni
dat. li gwenni lis gwennab
obl. lâ gwennâ i gwennas
Late M.K.
nom. la gwenna i gwennas
dat. li gwenni lis gwennib
obl. lâ gwenna i gwennas
Early Mod.K.
nom. la gwenna i gwennes / i gwennen
dat. li gwenni lis gwennib
obl. lâ gwenna i gwennes / i gwennas
Mod.K.
nom. la gouenna y gouennón
obl. lâ gouenna y gouennón / y gouennas
The great Shift took place sometime in the premodern
language. Unhappily, very little Kerno is found
between about 1300 and 1870 (and what was found was
_mostly_ an archaising, frozen formal language); so
it's hard to sort out the evolution of forms.
> The -a declination (e.g. |maenca|
> "machine") adopted |-i|
> for the genitive singular from the -u/-un
> declination
> -- Christian Thalmann
Padraic.
=====
parla, mays ben parla; et pharleir becko il maboun.
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