Appendix:Laz noun declension

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Stem[edit]

The stems of nouns are divided into two groups according to their last phoneme. Rules are not the same for two groups concerning the morphology of suffixes and the accent.

Consonant-final stem[edit]

In all dialects, accented and not accented vowels have the same quality. The accent in Laz is much less marked than in English, German, Italian or Russian. The naked consonant-final stem of noun has accent on the ultimate syllable of the stem. But some suffixes may change the place of accent.

Vowel-final stem[edit]

All vowel-final stems that end by -ი (-i) are monosyllabic. Following accentuation rules are observed concerning the naked vowel-final stem of noun. Some suffixes may change the place of accent. If the stem is monosyllabic, accent is on the unique syllable of the stem. If the stem is polysyllabic, accent is on the penultimate syllable of the stem.

How to recognize the stem?[edit]

The stem is observed easily before plural markers and most of derivational suffixes. Naked stem is also used as first constituent of compound words.

Before suffix[edit]

  • მცხულ-ეფე (mʒxul-epe, pears)
  • ბერ-ობა (ber-oba, childhood)

If the suffix is polysyllabic as in these examples, the place of accent moves to the penultimate syllable of the suffix.

As first constituent of compound word[edit]

  • მცხულ-ოწილაშე (mʒxul-oǯilaşe, instrument used for plucking off pears from high branches)
  • ოხორ-მანჯე (oxor-mance, landlord)

If the second constituent is a polysyllabic word as in these examples, the first constituent appears in form of naked stem. The accent is on the second constituent. If the second constituent is a monosyllabic word with vowel-final stem as shown below, the first constituent with consonant-final stem does not appear in form of naked stem but of absolutive case. Accent is on the ultimate syllable of the stem (penultimate syllable of the compound word).

  • მცხული-მჯა მცხული-ნჯა (mʒxuli-mca mʒxuli-nca, pear tree)
  • ნთხირი-მჯა ნთხირი-ნჯა (ntxiri-mca ntxiri-nca, hazelnut tree)

Cases[edit]

There is no accusative case in Laz as it is generally observed in ergative languages.

Basic cases[edit]

Absolutive case[edit]

The Laz dialects are divided into two groups according to the morphology of the absolutive case of nouns.

  • A group : the absolutive case may end with a consonant.
  • B group : the absolutive case ends always with a vowel.

A group dialects are distributed in various places forming large language islands (for example villages of Mek’alesk’irit, Ğvant, Xincip’ici, M3’anu etc in Vizha, villages of Napşit, Sidere, Pilarget etc. in Arkabi)

Morphology[edit]

If the stem is consonant-final, the formation of absolutive case varies according to the dialects.

  • A group: naked stem = absolutive or stem + -ი (-i) ~ -ე (-e) = absolutive
  • B group: stem + -ი (-i) ~ -ე (-e) = absolutive}

The absolutive suffixes -ი, -ე (-i, -e) do not change the place of accent. If the stem is vowel-final, stem = absolutive in all dialects.

Use[edit]

The subject of the verb of existence, the subject of the verb of presence, the subject of some intransitive verbs, the direct object of actional transitive verbs etc are in absolutive case. All Laz take spontaneously the absolutive case of noun without plural marker as its representative form.

Ergative case[edit]

  • In the dialects of Atina: absolutive + -ქ ~ -ქო ~ -ქუ (-k ~ -ko ~ -ku) = ergative
    • მჭაფუქ ~ მჭაფუქო ~ მჭაფუქუ (mç̌apuk ~ mç̌apuko ~ mç̌apuku, jackal)
    • მცხულიქ ~ მცხულიქო ~ მცხულიქუ (mʒxulik ~ mʒxuliko ~ mʒxuliku, pear)
  • In Vizha and Artasheni dialects: there is no suffix marking the ergative case.
  • In Vitse-Arkabi, Khopa-Batumi and Chkhala dialects: absolutive + -ქ (-k) = ergative
    • მკჲაფუქ (mǩyapuk, jackal)
    • მცხულიქ (mʒxulik, pear)

The ergative suffix does not change the place of accent.

Use[edit]

The subject of some intransitive verbs, the subject of actional transitive verbs and the cause of action of causative verbs are in ergative case.

Dative case[edit]

Morphology[edit]
  • In the dialects of Atina: absolutive + -ს ~ -სო ~ -სუ (-s ~ -so ~ -su) = dative
    • მჭაფუს ~ მჭაფუსო ~ მჭაფუსუ (mç̌apus ~ mç̌apuso ~ mç̌apusu, jackal)
    • მცხულის ~ მცხულისო ~ მცხულისუ (mʒxulis ~ mʒxuliso ~ mʒxulisu, pear)
    • The variants -ს ~ -სო ~ -სუ (-s ~ -so ~ -su) are often replaced with -ჲ (-y) especially after vowel stem ending by -ა (-a). Example : ჩონას → ჩონაჲ (çonas → çonay, light, beloved)
  • In Vizha and Artasheni dialects: there is no suffix marking the dative case.
  • In Vitse-Arkabi, Khopa-Batumi and Chkhala dialects: absolutive + -ს ~ -ზ (-s ~ -z) = dative
    • მკჲაფუს ~ მკჲაფუზ (mǩyapus ~ mǩyapuz, jackal)
    • მცხულის ~ მხულიზ (mʒxulis ~ mxuliz, pear)
    • The form -სო (-so) is sometimes observed in poetry.

The dative suffix does not change the place of accent.

Use[edit]

The indirect object of transitive or bitransitive verbs, the subject of verbs in potential mood, the subject of verbs in experiential mood, the subject of evolutive state verbs etc are in dative case.

  • In the dialects of Vitse and west of Arkabi, the verb ულუნ (ulun) and all verbs deriving from it have the subject in the absolutive case in potential and experiential moods.
  • Dative and locative cases are homophonous in Laz. They are defined as the element of sentence (subject or complement) having the case suffix -ს/-ზ (-s/-z) is in the dative case if the verb agrees with it in person ; it is in the locative case if the verb does not agree with it.

Genitive case[edit]

In all dialects absolutive + -შ(ი) (-ş(i)) = genitive

  • მცხულიშ(ი) (mʒxuliş(i), of pear) 
  • ოხორიშ(ი) (oxoriş(i), of house)
  • ბადიშ(ი) (badiş(i), of old man)
  • ნანაშ(ი) (nanaş(i), mother's)
  • ნოღაშ(ი) (noğaş(i), of shopping street)

In the dialects of Chkhala, the genitive marker has also the variant -(ჲ)ი (-(y)i) after vowel other than /i/.

  • ნანა(ჲ)ი (nana(y)i, mother's)
  • ნოღა(ჲ)ი (noğa(y)i, of shopping street)

In genitive, accent moves to the syllable preceeding the case suffix (მცხულშ, მცხულში; ნანშ, ნანში; ნოღშ, ნოღში (mʒxuliş, mʒxulişi; nanaş, nanaşi; noğaş, noğaşi).

Directive case[edit]

For the dialects of Atina, Vizha and Artasheni see Ambidirective. In the rest of the dialects: absolutive + -შა (-şa) = directive

  • მცხულიშა (mʒxulişa, to the pear)
  • ოხორიშა (oxorişa, to the house)
  • ნოღაშა (noğaşa, to the shopping street)

The place of accent in directive noun is the same as in genitive მხცულშა, ოხორშა, ნოღშა, ნანშა (mxʒulişa, oxorişa, noğaşa, nanaşa).

Ablative case[edit]

For the dialects of Atina, Vizha and Artasheni see Ambidirective. In the rest of the dialects: absolutive + -შე(ნ) (-şe(n)) = ablative

  • მცხულიშე(ნ) (mʒxulişe(n), from the pear)
  • ოხორიშე(ნ) (oxorişe(n), from the house)
  • ნოღაშე(ნ) (noğaşe(n), from the shopping street)

The place of accent in ablative noun is the same as in genitive and directive; მხცულშე(ნ), ოხორშე(ნ), ნოღშე(ნ), ნანშე(ნ) (mxʒulişe(n), oxorişe(n), noğaşe(n), nanaşe(n)).

Instrumental case[edit]

In all dialects: absolutive + -თე(ნ) (-te(n)) = instrumental

  • ხამითე(ნ) (xamite(n), with knife)
  • კუჩხეთე(ნ) (ǩuçxete(n), on foot)
  • დერდითე(ნ) (derdite(n), with worry)
  • მსქალათე(ნ) (mskalate(n), with ladder)
  • წიწილათე(ნ) (ǯiǯilate(n), with a snake)

The place of accent in instrumental noun is the same as in genitive, directive and ablative; ხამთე(ნ), ბერგთე(ნ), კუჩხთე(ნ), დერდთე(ნ), მსქალთე(ნ), წიწილთე(ნ) (xamite(n), bergite(n), ǩuçxete(n), derdite(n), mskalate(n), ǯiǯilate(n)).

Fused cases[edit]

Fused oblique case[edit]

In the dialects of Vizha and Artasheni, -ქ (-k), -ს (-s) and -ზ (-z) are lost at the final. In consequence there is no morphological difference among absolutive, ergative, dative and locative cases. They form altogether a fused oblique case.

  • consonant-final stem + -ი ~ -ე (-i ~ -e) = fused oblique case
  • vowel-final stem naked stem = fused oblique case

In A group dialects (which have absolutive case ending with a consonant), the dintinction between absolutive case and fused oblique case is regularly observed in nouns with consonant-final stem. In B group dialects (which have only absolutive case ending with a vowel), this distinction is lost in all nouns. But in all dialects of this region, the two cases of pronouns with consonant-final stem are clearly different. The loss of ergative and dative suffixes in these dialects does not mean that they lost ergative and dative constructions. The verbs indicate the case (absolutive, ergative or dative) of subject and complement by their personal affixes, even if there are some exceptions. The accent of nouns in fused oblique case is always on the penultimate syllable: the last syllable of consonant-final stem, and the penultimate of vowel-final stem.

Ambidirective case[edit]

In the dialects of Atina, Vizha and Artasheni, there is no morphological difference between directive and ablative cases. However the ambidirective case is not a cause of ambiguity because, in Laz language, a great number of preverbs indicate the direction of action.

  • In Atina-west: absolutive + -შე (-şe) = ambidirective
    • მცხულიშე (mʒxulişe, to the pear; from the pear)
  • In Atina-east, Vizha and Artasheni: absolutive + -შა (-şa) = ambidirective
    • მცხულიშა (mʒxulişa, to the pear; from the pear)

The accent of nouns in ambidirective case is the same as in genitive and instrumental cases.

Declension table[edit]

Consonant final stem[edit]

Atina-west Atina-east Vizha and Artasheni Artasheni-east Vitse Arkabi Khopa and Chkhala
stem მცხულ- (mʒxul-)
absolutive მცხულ ~ მცხული (mʒxul ~ mʒxuli)
ergative მცხულიქ (mʒxulik) fused oblique case

მცხული (mʒxuli)

მცხულიქ (mʒxulik)
dative მცხულის (mʒxulis) მცხულიზ ~ მცხულის (mʒxuliz ~ mʒxulis)
genitive მცხულიშ(ი) (mʒxuliş(i))
directive ambidirective case

მცხულიშე (mʒxulişe)

ambidirective case

მცხულიშა (mʒxulişa)

მცხულიშა (mʒxulişa) მცხულიშე (mʒxulişe) მცხულიშა (mʒxulişa)
ablative მცხულიშე (mʒxulişe) მცხულიშენ (mʒxulişen)
locative მცხულის (mʒxulis) მცხული (mʒxuli) მცხულიზ ~ მცხულის (mʒxuliz ~ mʒxulis)
instrumental მცხულითე (mʒxulite) მცხულითენ (mʒxuliten)

Vowel final stem[edit]

Atina-west Atina-east Vizha and Artasheni Artasheni-east Vitse Arkabi Khopa Chkhala
stem ნჯა- (nca-) ჯა- (ca-)
absolutive ნჯა (nca) absolutive case and fused oblique case

ნჯა (nca)

ნჯა (nca) ჯა (ca)
ergative ნჯაქ (ncak) ნჯაქ (ncak) ჯაქ (cak)
dative ნჯას (ncas) ნჯაზ ~ ნჯას (ncaz ~ ncas) ჯას (cas)
genitive ნჯაშ(ი) (ncaş(i)) ჯაში/ ჯაჲი (caşi/ cayi)
directive ambidirective case

ნჯაშე (ncaşe)

ambidirective case

ნჯაშა (ncaşa)

ნჯაშა (ncaşa) ნჯაშე (ncaşe) ნჯაშა (ncaşa) ჯაშა (caşa)
ablative ნჯაშე (ncaşe) ნჯაშენ (ncaşen) ჯაშენ (caşen)
locative ნჯას (ncas) ნჯა (nca) ნჯაზ ~ ნჯას (ncaz ~ ncas) ჯას (cas)
instrumental ნჯათე (ncate) ნჯათენ (ncaten) ჯათენ (caten)

Number[edit]

Unmarked plural[edit]

Nouns without number marker can be singular or plural in Laz. If the plural is marked, it indicates generally a group of humans, animals or things that do not require to be counted. In consequence, marked plural is rarely used after numeral adjectives.

Marked plural[edit]

After consonant-final stem[edit]

Plural suffix after consonant-final stem is -ეფე (-epe) in all dialects.

  • მცხულეფე (mʒxulepe, pears)
  • ოხორეფე (oxorepe, houses)
  • ბადეფე (badepe, old men)
  • ბერეფე (berepe, children)

Accent is on the penultimate syllable of the word, i.e. on the first syllable of the plural suffix

After vowel-final stem[edit]

There are two kinds of plural suffixes after vowel-final stem: -ფე (-pe) and -ლეფე (-lepe).

-ფე (-pe)[edit]
  • ბუტკაფე (buťǩape, leaves)
  • ხეფე (xepe, hands)
  • თიფე (tipe, heads)
  • ბოზოფე (bozope, girls)
  • მჭაფუფე (mç̌apupe, jackals)
  • მკჲაფუფე (mǩyapupe, jackals)

Accent is on the penultimate syllable of the word, i.e. on the last syllable of the stem.

-ლეფე (-lepe)[edit]

A part of vowel-final stems ending with -ა (-a) take the other suffix.

  • ჯუმალეფე (cumalepe, brothers)
  • ქვალეფე (kvalepe, stones)
  • ნჯალეფე (ncalepe, trees)
  • ნდღალეფე (ndğalepe, days)

Accent is on the penultimate syllable of the word, i.e. on the first syllable of the plural suffix.

Declension table of marked plural noun[edit]

Case markers are suffixed after plural marker. Marked plural nouns have only one kind of declension in a dialect.

Atina-west Atina-east Vizha and Artasheni Artasheni-east Vitse Arkabi Khopa and Chkhala
stem მცხულ- (mʒxul-)
absolutive მცხულეფე (mʒxulepe)
ergative მცხულეფექ (mʒxulepek) fused oblique case

მცხულეფე (mʒxulepe)

მცხულეფექ (mʒxulepek)
dative მცხულეფეს (mʒxulepes) მცხულეფეზ ~ მცხულეფეს (mʒxulepez ~ mʒxulepes)
genitive მცხულეფეშ(ი) (mʒxulepeş(i))
directive ambidirective case

მცხულეფეშე (mʒxulepeşe)

ambidirective case

მცხულეფეშა (mʒxulepeşa)

მცხულეფეშა (mʒxulepeşa) მცხულეფეშე (mʒxulepeşe) მცხულეფეშა (mʒxulepeşa)
ablative მცხულეფეშე (mʒxulepeşe) მცხულეფეშენ (mʒxulepeşen)
locative მცხულეფეს (mʒxulepes) მცხულეფე (mʒxulepe) მცხულეფეზ ~ მცხულეფეს (mʒxulepez ~ mʒxulepes)
instrumental მცხულეფეთე (mʒxulepete) მცხულეფეთენ (mʒxulepeten)

In genitive, directive, ablative and instrumental cases, accent is on the syllable preceeding the case suffix.