Personal PronounsYivrian personal pronouns,
while not entirely regular, display a great deal more patterning than
is typically found in European languages (though it is not
unprecedented throughout the world's languages). The case endings of
the pronouns are regular, though their stems are not, and while the
endings for gender and plural are not the same as for regular nouns,
they are regular within the pronouns themselves. Essentially the
pronominal system works as follows: for each person there is a unique
vowel that distinguishes it in the nominative, and a unique consonant
that identifies it in the other cases (the oblique cases). The third
person is divided into animate and inanimate classes that act
morphologically as different persons. Each person inflects for number,
and the second person and third person animate inflect for gender. The
stems are formed by adding a particular consonant or a vowel to the
uniqe part in each case, then adding the pronominal endings for gender
and number. The following table illustrates the nominative personal
pronouns and the unique consonant used in the other cases:
| |
Singular |
|
Plural |
|
Oblique consonant |
| | masc | fem | masc | fem | |
| First person |
al |
-- |
ala |
-- |
v |
| Second person |
ol |
olé |
ola |
olo |
s |
| Third person animate |
el |
elé |
ela |
elo |
l |
| Third person inanimate |
ul |
-- |
ula |
-- |
t |
The personal pronouns do not have a genitive case. Rather, a set of
pronominal endings is used with the noun that is possessed, as is
discussed in the nouns section. These pronominal endings reflect the
unique consonant for each person and use a slightly different set of
endings to indicate number and gender. The other cases are formed by using the vowel é
with the characteristic consonant for each person, followed by the
pronominal gender and number prefixes. The case endings are the same.
To form the contradative case, the prefix ru- is added to the dative form, as with other nouns. The following tables illustrate the case-forms of the personal pronouns:
| Ablative case |
Singular |
|
Plural |
|
| | masc | fem | masc | fem | |
| First person |
évon |
-- |
évona |
-- |
| Second person |
éson |
ésoné |
ésona |
ésono |
| Third person animate |
élon |
éloné |
élona |
élono |
| Third person inanimate |
éton |
-- |
étona |
-- |
| Dative case |
Singular |
|
Plural |
|
| | masc | fem | masc | fem | |
| First person |
évos |
-- |
évosa |
-- |
| Second person |
éos |
éosé |
éosa |
éoso |
| Third person animate |
élos |
élosé |
élosa |
éloso |
| Third person inanimate |
étos |
-- |
étosa |
-- |
Emphatic PronounsYivrian has a special
class of emphatic pronouns that are used for the personal pronouns when
one wishes to give special emphasis to the person involved. The nearest
English glosses are "he himself" and equivalents. Morphologically,
these are formed by applying the possessive suffixes to the nominative
forms of the pronouns themselves. These resulting emphatic pronouns are:
| |
Singular |
|
Plural |
|
| | masc | fem | masc | fem | |
| First person |
aileva |
-- |
alaivi |
-- |
| Second person |
oilesa |
olésé |
olaisi |
oloiso |
| Third person animate |
éyela |
eyélé |
eyaili |
eyoilo |
| Third person inanimate |
uileta |
-- |
ulaiti |
-- |
These pronouns are regular in their case forms. Thus, for example, the cases of aileva are:
| Nominative |
aileva |
| Genitive |
aaileva |
| Ablative |
ailevona |
| Dative |
ailevosa |
| Contradative |
ruailevosa |
Reflexive PronounsThere is a special
reflexive pronoun that is used in Yivrian when one of the arguments in
the sentence is the same as the subject, and when the reflexive voice
of the verb is not appropriate. Unlike English and most other European
languages, the same pronoun is used regardless of the person and gender
of the subject, although the pronoun usually agrees in number with its
antecedent. For obvious reasons this pronoun does not occur in the
nominative, and the genitive is given by the pronominal suffix pa-. The remaining cases are:
| Ablative |
épon | épona |
| Dative |
épos | éposa |
| Contradative |
ruépos | ruéposa |
The number agreement properties of this reflexive
pronoun are not absolutely standard. It is fairly common to use the
singular forms of the pronoun even when referring to a plural subject,
although the reverse does not occur.
Interrogative PronounsThe Yivrian
interrogative pronouns are presented here, along with a few other
interrogative adverbs and adjectives grouped together for convenience:
| Yivrian |
Gloss |
| kel |
who |
| kul |
what |
| kai |
where |
| ku |
when |
| kulai |
why |
| kéton |
how (by what means) |
| kulon |
how (in what manner) |
| kotil | what sort, what kind |
| koton | in what manner |
| kosil | how many |
| koson | how much, to what extent |
Declension of Interrogative PronounsThe forms kel, kul are formed from the interrogative morpheme k- followed by the pronouns el, ul.
Thus, they follow the declension of those pronouns except in the
genitive case, where they take a regular formation as opposed to a
pronominal suffix. They do not inflect for number or gender, even when
the gender or number of the questioned element may be known. The
following chart illustrates:
| |
kul "what" | kel "who" |
| Nominative |
kul |
kel |
| Genitive |
akul |
akel |
| Ablative |
kéton |
kélon |
| Dative |
kétos |
kélos |
| Contradative |
rukétos |
rukélos |
From this chart, one can see that "what" in the ablative case gives the form glossed as "how (by what means)" above.The other question forms are either invariable (kai, ku, kulai) or are regular for their classes (kulon, kotil, kosil). For the declension of kulon, kotil and kosil, see Declension of Adjectives and Adverbs.
Relative PronounsAdjunct RelativesYivrian distinguishes Adjunct Relatives from Independent Relatives
according to the functions played by the phrases that they compose. The
adjunct relatives create what in English we would regard as standard
relative clauses--those that modify another element in the sentence
which is overtly expressed. There are three adjunct relatives in
Yivrian:
| Yivrian |
Gloss |
| keth |
that, which, who |
| kai |
where |
| ku |
when |
The adverbs kai, ku are invariable. Keth, on the
other hand, is declined as a U-class noun except in the genitive. In
the genitive, it is expressed by the pronominal suffix -ka, like the personal pronouns. It does not inflect for gender or number:
| Nominative |
keth |
| Genitive |
(-ka) |
| Ablative |
kathun |
| Dative |
kathus |
| Contradative |
rukathus |
Independent relativesYivrian contains a
larger number of independent relatives, which create clauses that have
no overt antecedent. The independent relatives are:
| Yivrian |
Gloss |
| katha |
who, what, which |
| kaiya |
where |
| kua |
when |
| kulaiya |
why |
All of these are invariable except for katha, which is declined as a regular V-class noun.
OtherInclusive PronounsThese pronouns are so named because they indicate "all" or "every" of their attribute.
| Yivrian |
Gloss |
| kal |
everything, all |
| kalel |
everyone |
| kalku |
always |
| kalkai |
everywhere |
Kalku and kalkai are invariable. Kal is declined as a regular U-class noun, so it's declension won't be illustrated here. Kalel is declined like kel, kul, i.e. the ending -el is declined as the personal pronoun el, as the following shows:
| Nominative |
kalel |
| Genitive |
akalel |
| Ablative |
kalélon |
| Dative |
kalélos |
| Contradative |
rukalélos |
Exclusive PronounsAs the name shows, these pronouns
indicate the opposite of the qualities indicated above. There are a few
of these that have no inclusive equivalent:
| Yivrian |
Gloss |
| kav |
nothing |
| kavel |
everyone |
| kuva |
never |
| kaiva |
nowhere |
| kavulon | in no way/manner, not at all (c.f. English nonce word "nohow" | | kavéton | by no means | | kulaiva | for no reason | Again, kav is declined as a regular U-class noun, while kavel declines its ending as the personal pronoun with a regularly formed genitive in place of a pronominal suffix.
Determiner Prefixes with PronounsPersonal PronounsUnlike
in English and most other European languages, in Yivrian the personal
pronouns may be used with a determiner prefix. The resulting words are
demonstrative pronouns. The prefixes used are the same as those used
with regular nouns, with the exception that the prefixes ending in a omit the a
when used with pronouns. This usage is only common with the
third-person pronouns (animate and inanimate). The following table
shows the formation of these demonstratives in the masculine singular
and inanimate singular. Note that these prefixes can be used with any
other gender or number of the pronoun, as well.
| Yivrian |
Gloss |
Yivrian |
Gloss |
| niel |
this (person/man) |
niul |
this (thing) |
| nel |
that (person/man) |
nul |
that (person/man) |
| héel |
the same person/man |
héul |
the same thing |
| péel |
another person/man |
péul |
another thing |
| pel |
some person/man, someone |
pul |
something |
The pronouns listed in last row above (pel, pul) are rare, as the indefinite pronouns are preferred (see below).The
quantifier prefixes are also used with pronouns to limit their number
or sense. This usage is not restricted to the third person in the same
way that the determiner prefixes are. This table illustrates with the
masculine forms of the personal pronouns:
| Yivrian |
Gloss |
Yivrian |
Gloss |
Yivrian |
Gloss |
Yivrian |
Gloss |
| kéal |
all of me |
kunal |
most of me |
kuval |
a little of me |
kéval |
none of me |
| kéala |
each of us |
kunala |
several of us |
kuvala |
a few of us |
kévala |
none of us |
| kéol |
all of you |
kunol |
most of you |
kuvol |
a little of you |
kévol |
none of you |
| kéola |
each of you (pl) |
kunola |
several of you |
kuvola |
a few of you |
kévola |
none of you |
| kéel |
all of him |
kunel |
most of him |
kuvel |
a little of him |
kével |
none of him |
| kéela |
each of them |
kunela |
several of them |
kuvela |
a few of them |
kévela |
none of them |
| kéul |
all of it |
kunul |
most of it |
kuvul |
a little of it |
kévul |
none of it |
| kéula |
each of them |
kunula |
several of them |
kuvula |
a few of them |
kévula |
none of them |
In all of these, the pronominal root is inflected as usual,
except that genitive is formed in the regular (nominal) fashion, and
not with a pronominal suffix. For example:
| |
niul "this man" |
| Nominative |
niel |
| Genitive |
aniel |
| Ablative |
niélon |
| Dative |
niélos |
| Contradative |
runiélos |
Relative PronounsThe independent
relatives (see above) may be used with some of the determiner prefixes
to form a special class of relatives. The only prefixes used this way
are he-, pe-, and pa-. The resultant meanings are:
| Yivrian |
Gloss |
Yivrian |
Gloss |
Yivrian |
Gloss |
| hekatha |
the same person/thing (that) |
pekatha |
a different person/thing (than) |
pakatha | whoever/whatever |
| hekaiya |
the same place (that) |
pekaiya |
a different place (than) |
pakaiya | wherever |
| hekua |
the same time (that) |
pekua |
a different time (than) |
pakua | whenever |
| hekulaiya |
for the same reason (that) |
pekulaiya |
for a different reason (than) |
pakulaiya |
for whatever reason |
The usage of these compounds is discussed in the Syntax section.There is a final class of indefinite pronouns that is formed by applying the indefinite determiner prefix pa-
to the interrogatives. These are the only pronouns formed in this
fashion, but they are preferred to the equivalent compounds made from
personal pronouns.
| Yivrian |
Gloss |
| pakel |
someone |
| pakul |
something |
| pakai |
somewhere |
| paku |
sometime |
| pakulai |
for some reason |
| pakéton |
by some means |
| pakulon |
in some manner |
Summary ChartThe following chart describes
in breif most of the non-personal pronouns that are used in Yivrian,
and shows the relationships between them.
| English core meaning |
Adjunct Relative |
Independent Relative |
Inclusive |
Exclusive |
Interrogative |
Indefinite |
| what |
keth |
katha |
kal |
kav |
kul |
pakul |
| who |
keth |
katha |
kalel |
kavel |
kel |
pakel |
| when |
ku |
kua |
kalku |
kuva |
ku |
paku |
| where |
kai |
kaiya |
kalkai |
kaiva |
kai |
pakai |
| why |
|
kulaiya |
|
kulaiva |
kulai |
pakulai |
How (by what means) = what in the ablative case How (in what matter) = what with adverbial endings
|