Conlang/Intermediate/History/Grammar changes

< Conlang < Intermediate < History

Grammar changes are when a part of the grammar of a language changes over time, so that the language now has a different way of accomplishing the same thing. For example, when French evolved from Latin it did not have a fixed word order, while it now does; much information that in Latin was conveyed by use of case, is conveyed by word order in modern French.

Grammar changes may take place in a variety of ways:

Latin
aqua, -ae
water f.
agricola, -ae
farmer m.
Singular Plural Singular Plural
Nominative aqua –a aquae –ae agricola –a agricolae –ae
Genitive aquae –ae aquārum –ārum agricolae –ae agricolārum –ārum
Dative aquae –ae aquīs –īs agricolae –ae agricolīs –īs
Accusative aquam –am aquās –ās agricolam –am agricolās –ās
Vocative aqua –a aquae –ae agricola –a agricolae –ae
Ablative aquā –ā aquīs –īs agricolā –ā agricolīs –īs
Locative aquae -ae aquīs –īs agricolae -ae agricolīs –īs
This article is issued from Wikibooks. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.