Dalmatian grammar

This article outlines the grammar of the Dalmatian language.

Alphabet

A B Č D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

Nouns

A Dalmatian noun has a gender (masculine or feminine) and is inflected for number (singular or plural). The plural is formed with the ending -i for masculine and -e for feminine nouns.

Articles

The indefinite article is yoin (one), whose feminine form is yoina.

Examples:

The definite article for masculine nouns is el in singular and i in plural. The definite article for feminine nouns is la in singular and le in plural. Before place names in the dative case, the articles are used in the forms in tel, in tela, in teli and in tele or abbreviated as nel, nela, neli and nele.

Examples:

Adjectives

The adjectives are used before nouns and also have masculine and feminine gender and singular and plural number.

Examples:

Pronouns

Personal pronouns

Singular

Person Pronoun Meaning
First ju I
Second te thou
Third jal he
jala she

Plural

Person Pronoun Meaning
First nu we
Second vu ye
Third jali they
jale they

Oblique personal pronouns

Singular

Person Pronoun Meaning
First me/main me
Second toi thee
Third joi him
joe her

Plural

Person Pronoun Meaning
First noi us
Second voi you
Third jai them

Possessive pronouns

Singular

Person Pronoun Meaning
First mi/maja my
Second to/toa thy
Third de jal his
de jala her

Plural

Person Pronoun Meaning
First nuester/nuestra our
Second vester/vestra your
Third de jali their
de jale their

Prepositions

Verbs

The Dalmatian language does not distinguish between the continuous and simple forms. The present tense is formed from the personal pronoun, the infinitive stem, and the present endings:

Singular

  1. -a, -uo
  2. -e
  3. -a, -uo

Plural

  1. -aime
  2. -aite
  3. -a, -uo

Example: favular (to speak)

Singular

  1. Ju favula (I speak, I am speaking)
  2. Te favule (Thou speakest, thou art speaking)
  3. Jal favula (He speaks, he is speaking)

Plural

  1. Nu favulaime (We speak, we are speaking)
  2. Vu favulaite (Ye speak, ye are speaking)
  3. Jali favula (They speak, they are speaking)

The past tense is formed from the personal pronoun, the infinitive stem, the suffixes -ua or -oua, and the present endings.

Singular

  1. Ju favlua (I was speaking, I spoke)
  2. Te favlue (Thou wast speaking, thou spokest)
  3. Jal favlua (He was speaking, he spoke)

Plural

  1. Nu favluaime (We were speaking, we spoke)
  2. Vu favluaite (Ye were speaking, ye spoke)
  3. Jali favlua (They were speaking, they spoke)

The future tense is formed from the infinitive form (ending in -ar, -ur, or -ro) and the future endings:

Singular

  1. -e
  2. -e
  3. -e

Plural

  1. -me
  2. -te
  3. -e

Examples:

Singular

  1. Ju favulare (I shall speak)
  2. Te favulare (Thou wilt speak)
  3. Jal favulare (He will speak)

Plural

  1. Nu favularme (We shall speak)
  2. Vu favularte (Ye will speak)
  3. Jal favulare (They will speak)

The passive is formed from the past participle (ending in -ait, -oit, or -uat) and the prefixes joi or jai.

Examples:

  1. joi nascoit (is born)
  2. jai glazait (is frozen)
  3. joi talyuat (is cut)

The Dalmatian language has also a conditional form:

The imperative is formed from the infinitive stem and endings:

Examples:

The imperative can also be formed from the imperative form of the verb "to be" and the infinitive:

The verb "to be":

Infinitive: Saite

Singular

  1. Ju sai
  2. Te sante
  3. Jal sant

Plural

  1. Nu saime
  2. Vu saite
  3. Jali sant

Adverbs

Adverbs of place and direction:

Adverbs of time:

External links

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