Neo-Quenya/Verbal forms

< Neo-Quenya

Infinitive

The infinitive is used after verbs that influence the meaning of other verbs:

The verbs qYj\ pol- "can" and t$6\ mer- "wish, want":
  • qYj%5 zR1R polin quetë "I can talk"
  • t# qYj%j aR5$ 5%5À ma polil cenë nin? "Can you see me?"
  • `B 5.DaY6 t$65$6 t#1R i naucor merner matë "the dwarves wanted to eat"
  • `B hÍY5Ì^ qYj°$ ½j#7R `Bj´# zR1;E i yonyo pollë hlarë ilya quetta "the boy could hear each word"
  • t$7T5 aR2# `B qE6t# merin cenda i parma "I want to read the book"


Verbs that indicate that an action starts, ends or changes:
  • `B 5%,G qU81E5$6 j%2# i nissi pustaner linda "the women stopped to sing"
  • `B 5$7T hÎR81E5$6 t#1R i neri yestaner matë "the men began to eat"
The negating verb `M`C\ ua- (see Verbs).

Note: the word "to" that sometimes precedes an English infinitive is never translated into Neo-Quenya.


Formation:

This is easy because the infinitive is always equal to the endingless form of the aorist:


Long Infinitive

One of the most distinguishing properties of Quenya is the presence of object endings. So when an infinitive takes a personal pronoun as object then the infinitive is lengthened and the object ending is added.

When we replace "the king and queen" by a personal pronoun this is changed into:


The long infinitive is formed by adding \1E -ta to the stem of A-verbs and U-verbs, and \`B1E -ita to the stem of primitive verbs:


The long infinitive never appears without object ending, e.g.


The long infinitive can also be used with possessive endings, but this can be found on the page Possessive pronouns.


Passive Infinitive

There is a complication when we want to use an infinitive in a passive sentence.

Look at the following sentence:

The verb t#1\ mat- "to eat" is in the infinitive because it appears behind the modal verb qYj\ pol- "can".


When we make these sentences passive, the infinitive gets the prefix `C\ a-:


Verbs that begin in a vowel instead have the long infinitive suffix:


In some verbs very likely the historical stems appear when we apply the prefix:

The verb t#81E masta- "to bake" has a historical stem mbasta- that reappears when a prefix is put in front of it: `Cw#81E ambasta.


For more on this see the page on the perfect tense.


Participles

A Neo-Quenya verb has 2 participles: the active and the passive participle.

Active participle

The Active participle can be used in two ways:

as an adjective: in this case it is always put behind the noun:
as a main verb in a sub-sentence that in English begins with "while":

and sometimes we also drop "while":


The active participle doesn't have a plural:


But it can be declined in all 9 cases because it follows the rule of the last declinable word (see the page Inflected adjectives):


When the noun is in the plural, dual or the partitive plural the case ending of the participle is plural:


When an Active participle has a direct object, this object always immediately follows the participle:


Note: the Active participle is never used predicatively or as a noun. Instead of both these uses Quenya uses the present tense instead.

When used as a noun, it becomes a present tense preceded by the article (this corresponds to the use of the article as a relative pronoun without antecedent):


Formation:

The A-stems and U-stems form their active participle by lengthening the central vowel and adding the suffix -la:


When the syllable of the central vowel is already long, this vowel cannot be lengthened:


The primitive verbs also have a lengthened central vowel and they get the ending -ala:


Passive participle

The passive participle is in Quenya only used as an adjective as it isn't needed to form the perfect tenses. It is called this way because with a transitive verb it can be used predicatively to form the passive voice (see Syntaxis):

  • `B `C1E5% 5#6 9C65lD5$ i atani nar harnainë "the men are (i.e., have been) wounded"
  • `B `N2^ 5~C `N61lD5# i ondo ná ortaina "the stone is lifted"


For an intransitive verb it can only be used with a noun and in that case it is used to denote completion of the action:


From these examples it should already be clear that the passive participle has a plural form on \`V -ë, in fact it behaves like an ordinary adjective on \`C -a (so it also can get case endings when following its noun; see Inflected adjectives).


Formation:

The A-stems and U-stems form their passive participle by adding the suffix -ina. This suffix merges with the final -a or -u into the diphtongs -ai and -ui. According to the stress rules (see Phonology), these diphtongs are always stressed.


The primitive verbs can be divided into three categories:

verbs ending on -c, -p, -t, -v, -s also get the ending \`B5# -ina but in these verbs the central vowel is lengthened:


verbs in -qu also follow this rule, but the central vowel cannot be lengthened (and qui doesn't contain a diphtong as it pronounced cwi):


verbs ending on -r, -m, -n receive the ending -na:


verbs on -l get -da as ending:


Note: Verbs can also form a verbal adjective. These adjectives always denote a static condition while past participle always denote a condition in evolution:


Gerund

The gerund is a combination of a verb and a noun. In English it has the same form as the present participle, e.g. "walking is healthy". The noun "walking" is called the gerund of the verb "walk".

As an example let's look at some Quenya sentences:


A gerund can also have a direct object:

(note: the object of the gerund is in the nominative and not in the genitive as with a verbal noun)


and an indirect object:


In all these examples the gerund replaces the subject of the original sentence, it can however also replace the direct object:


There is a clear difference between infinitives (see above) and gerunds, as infinitives cannot be replaced by a normal noun:

In this sentence you cannot replace talk by e.g. "nature", because *"I can nature" is not a good English sentence. But "I love nature" is a good sentence, so tirië has to be a gerund, and quetë an infinitive.


Formation:

The ending of the gerund is \`B`V -.


Gerunds of primitive verbs are made by simply adding this ending:


A-verbs and U-verbs drop their final vowel before adding the ending:


Note that this form is identical to the verbal noun nainië. This is often the case, analysis of the context has to decide whether it is a gerund or a verbal noun.


Verbs on \hÎD -ya drop this ending completely before adding \`B`V -:


Cases of the gerund

In Quenya the gerund can be declined into three cases:

Genitive: This case appears when a gerund is dependent on a verbal noun:


Dative: We use the dative to express "in order to":

But in English the words "in order" are mostly implicitly understood, so to use this case properly you will have to be careful when meeting an English "to" + infinitive:

`M1~Mj%`V4$ aR5%`V5 `B `C7E5 utúlientë cenien i aran "they had come to see the king"


Instrumental: We use the instrumental to express "through, by":


Negation

All verbal forms are negated by use of the particle j~C (see also Negation on the page Verbs).


Infinitives:

Here we find a difference in meaning between negation with and with `M`C\ ua-:


Participles:



Gerund:



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