Article outline
- 3.1D-domain
- 3.1.1Personal pronouns
- 3.1.2Reflexive pronouns
- 3.1.3Possessive pronouns
- 3.1.4The “Saxon” genitive with family names
- 3.1.5Nominalized possessive pronouns
- 3.1.6Definite determiners
- 3.1.7Indefinite articles
- 3.1.8The (pronominal) forms kainer and ainer and the loss of nom-acc opposition
- 3.1.9Quantifiers
- 3.1.10Interrogative pronouns and the existential reading
- 3.2The NP domain
- 3.2.1Number
- 3.2.2Noun classes
- 3.2.3Diminutives
- 3.3The AP domain
- 3.3.1Predicative and attributive inflection
- 3.3.2Definite contexts
- 3.3.3Indefinite and possessive contexts
- 3.3.4The case of klain ‘small’
- 3.3.5Grades of comparison
- 3.3.6Adjective incorporation
- 3.3.7Material adjectives
- 3.3.8Adjective + Bodypart + ED
- 3.3.9The GE-prefix
- 3.3.10The participial ‑en suffix
- 3.4Adverbs
- 3.5Numerals
- 3.5.1Cardinals
- 3.5.2Ordinals
- 3.6Verbal morphology
- 3.6.1Two infinitives
- 3.6.2Personal endings
- 3.6.3Regular suffixal verbs (weak verbs)
- 3.6.4Strong verbs
- 3.6.5On the etymology of the apophonic past marker
- 3.6.6Some notes on HAVE and BE and other irregular verbs
- 3.6.7Apophonic sequences
- 3.6.8Table of tenses
- 3.6.9The imperative
- 3.7Prepositional morphology
- 3.7.1P + D contraction
- 3.7.2Prepositions, postpositions, and verbal particles
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Notes