About: Ashouctian   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : owl:Thing, within Data Space : dbkwik.org associated with source dataset(s)

Ashouctian is a fusional nominative-accusative mostly head-intial language. Word order is strictly SVO. It is mostly head-initial in that adjectives follow the nouns they modify, adverbs follow the verbs they modify, but the language has prepositions and genitive phrases preceed the head noun. Despite it's fusional nature, the language makes heavy use of infixing, and soforth makes extensive use of consonant modification when infixing.

AttributesValues
rdfs:label
  • Ashouctian
rdfs:comment
  • Ashouctian is a fusional nominative-accusative mostly head-intial language. Word order is strictly SVO. It is mostly head-initial in that adjectives follow the nouns they modify, adverbs follow the verbs they modify, but the language has prepositions and genitive phrases preceed the head noun. Despite it's fusional nature, the language makes heavy use of infixing, and soforth makes extensive use of consonant modification when infixing.
Head
  • Initial
Alignment
  • Nominative-Accusative
dcterms:subject
dbkwik:conlang/pro...iPageUsesTemplate
nativeName
  • Aiseucoáta
Declined
  • yes
Name
  • Ashouctian
Type
  • Fusional
Phonology
  • 100(xsd:integer)
NounDefiniteness
  • yes
Tonal
  • no
NounGender
  • no
VerbNumber
  • yes
NounNumber
  • yes
Conjugated
  • yes
VerbVoice
  • yes
NounCase
  • yes
VerbTense
  • yes
VerbMood
  • yes
VerbAspect
  • yes
Genders
  • no
VerbPerson
  • yes
abstract
  • Ashouctian is a fusional nominative-accusative mostly head-intial language. Word order is strictly SVO. It is mostly head-initial in that adjectives follow the nouns they modify, adverbs follow the verbs they modify, but the language has prepositions and genitive phrases preceed the head noun. Despite it's fusional nature, the language makes heavy use of infixing, and soforth makes extensive use of consonant modification when infixing. Nouns decline for four cases: nominative, oblique, genetive, and adverbial, as well as to indicate plurality. Verbs conjugate for person, number, tense (past, present, and future), aspect (imperfect, perfect, and progressive), mood (indicative, interrogative, imperative, and conditional), and voice (active and passive). Some of these are expressed periphrastically, however. Adjectives agree with the noun they modify in case and number, and adverbs simply follow the verb they modify.
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