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The
verb A verb () is a word ( part of speech) that in syntax generally conveys an action (''bring'', ''read'', ''walk'', ''run'', ''learn''), an occurrence (''happen'', ''become''), or a state of being (''be'', ''exist'', ''stand''). In the usual descr ...
is one of the most complex parts of Basque grammar. It is sometimes represented as a difficult challenge for learners of the language, and many Basque grammars devote most of their pages to lists or tables of verb paradigms. This article does not give a full list of verb forms; its purpose is to explain the nature and structure of the system.


Verb stems

One of the remarkable characteristics of the Basque verb is the fact that only a very few verbs can be conjugated synthetically (i.e. have morphological
finite Finite is the opposite of infinite. It may refer to: * Finite number (disambiguation) * Finite set, a set whose cardinality (number of elements) is some natural number * Finite verb, a verb form that has a subject, usually being inflected or marke ...
forms); the rest only have non-finite forms, which can enter into a wide variety of
compound Compound may refer to: Architecture and built environments * Compound (enclosure), a cluster of buildings having a shared purpose, usually inside a fence or wall ** Compound (fortification), a version of the above fortified with defensive struc ...
tense structures (consisting of a non-finite verb form combined with a finite
auxiliary Auxiliary may refer to: * A backup site or system In language * Auxiliary language (disambiguation) * Auxiliary verb In military and law enforcement * Auxiliary police * Auxiliaries, civilians or quasi-military personnel who provide support of ...
) and are conjugated in this way (
periphrastic In linguistics, periphrasis () is the use of one or more function words to express meaning that otherwise may be expressed by attaching an affix or clitic to a word. The resulting phrase includes two or more collocated words instead of one in ...
ally). For example, 'I come' is ''nator'' (a synthetic finite form), but 'I arrive' is (a periphrastic form, literally 'arriving I-am'). Synthetically conjugated verbs like 'come' can also be conjugated periphrastically (). In some such cases the synthetic/periphrastic contrast is semantic (e.g. and are not generally interchangeable); in others the contrast is more a matter of style or register, or else of
diachrony Synchrony and diachrony are two complementary viewpoints in linguistic analysis. A ''synchronic'' approach (from grc, συν- "together" and "time") considers a language at a moment in time without taking its history into account. Synchronic l ...
(some synthetic forms of conjugation are archaic or obsolete). A few synthetic forms occurring in twentieth-century Basque literature are even a posteriori extrapolations or back-formations of historically unattested forms, created for stylistic, poetic or puristic purposes. Traditionally Basque verbs are cited using a non-finite form conventionally referred to as the
participle In linguistics, a participle () (from Latin ' a "sharing, partaking") is a nonfinite verb form that has some of the characteristics and functions of both verbs and adjectives. More narrowly, ''participle'' has been defined as "a word derived from ...
(although not all its uses are really participial). Other non-finite forms can be derived from the participle, as will be seen in a later section. When the verb possesses synthetic finite forms, these are based on an ultimate stem (called the "basic stem" here) which is normally also present in the participle. For example, the verb 'come' has the basic stem ''-tor-'' from which are derived both the participle (with the non-finite prefix ''e-'' and the participle suffix ''-i'') and the finite present stem ''-ator-'' and non-present stem ''-etor-''. The participle is generally obtained from the basic stem by prefixing ''e-'' or ''i-'' (there is no rule; if the stem begins with a vowel, ''j-'' is prefixed instead), and suffixing ''-i'' (to stems ending in a consonant) or ''-n'' (to stems ending in a vowel). Occasionally there is no suffix. The verbal noun stem, another non-finite form, is obtained by replacing the suffixes ''-i'' and ''-n'' (and also ''-tu'' or ''-du'', see below) of the participle by either ''-tze'' or ''-te''. A third non-finite form which we shall call the "short stem" is obtained from the participle by omitting any of these suffixes except ''-n'', which is retained in the short stem in those verbs whose participle has it. A larger number of Basque verbs have no finite forms, but their non-finite forms follow the same pattern described above (they show an ''e-/i-/j-'' prefix, and the participle ends in ''-i'', ''-n'' or occasionally zero. There is also another large group of verbs which again have only non-finite forms, in which the non-finite stem is unanalysable (as a verb, at least), thus there is no ''e-/i-/j-'' prefix. In most cases the participle of such verbs has the suffix ''-tu'' (''-du'' if the stem ends in ''n'' or ''l''). Occasionally we find zero or ''-i'' instead. This is replaced by ''-tze'' or ''-te'' in the verbal noun, and by nothing in the short stem. The stems of these ''secondary'' verbs may be (1) a nominal or other non-verbal stem (e.g. ''poz-tu, garbi-tu...''), (2) a phrase (e.g. ''ohera-tu''), (3) a Latin or Romance verbal stem (e.g. ''barka-tu, kanta-tu...'') or (4) an unanalysable (primary) verb stem (e.g. ''har-tu'').


Defective or anomalous verb stems


Izan ('be')

The verb 'to be', the most common verb in the language, is irregular and shows some stem allomorphy in its finite forms. Its participle is ''izan''.


Egon

Another verb, , is used in western dialects (and in writing) as a second verb 'to be' in a way similar to ''estar'' in Spanish.


Izan ('have')

The verb 'to have', also extremely common, also shows irregularities in its finite conjugation. In western and central dialects and in standard Basque, ''izan'' is used as its participle, i.e. the same participle as for 'to be'; the two meanings are disambiguated by the context. Given that Basque verbs are conventionally cited in their participle form, this presents a problem for metalinguistic terminology, because the verb ''izan'' is ambiguous.


Ukan/*Edun

Eastern dialects avoid this ambiguity by using ''ukan'' as the participle of 'to have', reserving ''izan'' for 'to be', and some grammarians employ ''izan'' and ''ukan'' in this way for convenience, but this could create confusion since most Basque speakers do not actually employ ''ukan'' (or even know it as a metalinguistic term). Other grammarians refer to 'to have' as *''edun'', which is a hypothetical, unattested form derived from the finite stem ''-du-''; again, the problem is that *''edun'' does not exist in real Basque usage. To avoid such problems, this article simply refers to "the verb 'to be'" and "the verb 'to have'".


*Edin, *Ezan

The two standard aorist auxiliaries (see below) lack any non-finite forms, and so also have no obvious citation forms. As with *''edun'', some grammars construct hypothetical participles based on the finite stems, referring to *''edin'' (the
intransitive In grammar, an intransitive verb is a verb whose context does not entail a direct object. That lack of transitivity distinguishes intransitive verbs from transitive verbs, which entail one or more objects. Additionally, intransitive verbs ar ...
aorist auxiliary) and *''ezan'' (the transitive aorist auxiliary).


Eduki

There is another verb which also means 'have', at least in western dialects, namely . As a lexical verb (rather than an auxiliary), many speakers and writers frequently use this verb. (This is somewhat reminiscent of, though not entirely parallel to, the Spanish distribution of ''haber'' and ''tener''.)


Esan

The verb ''esan'' ('to say') possesses finite forms which have a different stem, ''-io-'' (e.g. ''diot'' 'I say'). Some grammarians treat these as different
defective verb In linguistics, a defective verb is a verb that either lacks a conjugated form or entails incomplete conjugation, and thus cannot be conjugated for certain grammatical tenses, aspects, persons, genders, or moods that the majority of verbs or ...
s, while others consider them a single word with stem allomorphy.


Synthetic conjugation


Tense structure and stem forms

Synthetic (single-word) conjugation involves the following finite "tenses": Finite verbs have a basic finite stem that is either an unanalysable lexical root (e.g. ''-bil-'' 'go about, move (intr.)') or such a root preceded by the causative/ intensive prefix ''-ra-'' (e.g. ''-rabil-'' 'cause to move, use'). From regular basic stems two tense stems are derived as follows: the present stem with prefix ''-a-'' and the non-present stem with prefix ''-e-'', e.g. ''-abil-'' and ''-ebil-'' are the regular present and non-present stems of ''-bil-'', and are the corresponding tense stems of ''-rabil-'', and so on. The present stem is used in the present tense, the present potential tense and the non-third-
person A person ( : people) is a being that has certain capacities or attributes such as reason, morality, consciousness or self-consciousness, and being a part of a culturally established form of social relations such as kinship, ownership of prope ...
imperative, e.g. present ''d-abil'' 'he/she/it goes about', present potential ''d-abil-ke'' 'he/she/it may go about', second-person imperative ''h-abil!'' 'go about!'. The non-present stem is used in the past and hypothetic tenses (non-potential and potential), and in third-person imperative forms, e.g. ''z-ebil-en'' 'he/she/it went about', ''ba-l-ebil'' 'if he/she/it went about', ''z-ebil-ke-en'' 'he/she/it might or would have gone about', ''l-ebil-ke'' 'he/she/it might or would go about', ''b-ebil!'' 'let him/her/it go about!' (not in common use). Non-present stems are further characterised by prefixes containing an ''n'' whenever the primary index (defined below) is non-third-person, e.g. ''z-ebil-en'' 'he went about' but ''n-enbil-en'' 'I went about', ''h-enbil-en'' 'you went about'; 'he would use it' but 'he would use me'. The suffix ''-(e)n'' is a marker of the past tenses, and ''-ke'' of the potential tenses (the past potential has both: ''-ke-en''). The hypothetic non-potential tense usually occurs with the subordinator prefix ''ba-'' 'if', which will therefore be shown in examples; use of ''ba-'' is not restricted to the hypothetic, however (e.g. ''ba-dabil'' 'if he goes about', etc.). Apart from the tense markers mentioned, third-person prefixes distinguish between present, past, hypothetic and imperative tenses, as will be seen below. Synopses of two verbs are given in the following table as illustrations. The verb 'to be' (''izan'') is irregular but in extremely frequent use, because it also serves as an important auxiliary. The verb ''ibili'' 'go about, move, etc.' (root ''-bil-'') is regularly conjugated, although not all its synthetic forms are in widespread use. This synoptic table shows third-person forms.


Primary person indices

All conjugating verb stems (unless defective) can take the following set of person-indexing prefixes: ''n-'' (first-person singular), ''h-'' (second-person singular informal), ''g-'' (first-person
plural The plural (sometimes abbreviated pl., pl, or ), in many languages, is one of the values of the grammatical category of number. The plural of a noun typically denotes a quantity greater than the default quantity represented by that noun. This de ...
), ''z-'' (second-person singular formal and second-person plural). With
intransitive verb In grammar, an intransitive verb is a verb whose context does not entail a direct object. That lack of transitivity distinguishes intransitive verbs from transitive verbs, which entail one or more objects. Additionally, intransitive verbs are ...
s, these prefixes index the subject; with transitives, they index the
direct object In linguistics, an object is any of several types of arguments. In subject-prominent, nominative-accusative languages such as English, a transitive verb typically distinguishes between its subject and any of its objects, which can include but ...
. For convenience, we shall refer to this as the set of 'primary person indices'. The following table shows some examples of how these prefixes combine with verb stems to produce a wide range of finite verb forms.


Third-person forms

Third-person verbs (here the 'person' again refers to the subject in intransitive verbs but the object in transitives) also take a prefix, which is invariable for
number A number is a mathematical object used to count, measure, and label. The original examples are the natural numbers 1, 2, 3, 4, and so forth. Numbers can be represented in language with number words. More universally, individual numbers c ...
(singular or plural) but varies for tense, as follows: ''d-'' is used in the present tense, ''z-'' in the past, ''l-'' in the hypothetic and ''b-'' in third-person imperative forms (generally archaic or literary). Some illustrative examples follow.


Plural marking

Plural number is marked in finite verbs in various ways, depending on the
arguments An argument is a statement or group of statements called premises intended to determine the degree of truth or acceptability of another statement called conclusion. Arguments can be studied from three main perspectives: the logical, the dialectic ...
whose plurality is being indexed. One set of plural forms are 'primary', that is, once again they refer to either the 'intransitive subject' or the 'transitive object' (the
absolutive case In grammar, the absolutive case (abbreviated ) is the case of nouns in ergative–absolutive languages that would generally be the subjects of intransitive verbs or the objects of transitive verbs in the translational equivalents of nominative� ...
agreement). The form of primary plural marking varies irregularly according to the verb stem, and may involve miscellaneous stem changes or the placement of a plural marker immediately adjacent to the singular stem (''-z'', ''-zki'', ''-tza'', ''it-'', ''-te''). Singular and plural forms of some finite verb stems are shown in the following table. Primary plural marking occurs whenever the indexed argument (subject or direct object) is plural. The second-person singular polite (pronoun ''zu'') is also treated as plural for this purpose (because originally it was a second-person plural), although syntactically and semantically singular. To index the second-person plural (pronoun ''zuek''), in addition to the markers corresponding to ''zu'' a further ('secondary') plural marker ''-te'' is suffixed. ''Note:'' The second ''-z-'' in ''zaituzte'' is not here a plural marker, but merely an
epenthetic In phonology, epenthesis (; Greek ) means the addition of one or more sounds to a word, especially in the beginning syllable ('' prothesis'') or in the ending syllable (''paragoge'') or in-between two syllabic sounds in a word. The word ''epent ...
sound inserted where the sequence ''tute'' would otherwise occur; this happens in other similar cases as well, such as for *.


Ergative person and number suffixes

The
ergative case In grammar, the ergative case ( abbreviated ) is the grammatical case that identifies the noun as the agent of a transitive verb in ergative–absolutive languages. Characteristics In such languages, the ergative case is typically marked (most ...
is the case of subjects of transitive verbs. Such arguments are indexed in a different way from 'primary' arguments. Person of the ergative marker may be indexed in one of two ways: using suffixes or prefixes. The ergative-index plural marker is always a suffix (''-te''). The ergative person suffixes are as follows; those for the first- and second-person singular end in ''-a'' whenever another suffix
morpheme A morpheme is the smallest meaningful constituent of a linguistic expression. The field of linguistic study dedicated to morphemes is called morphology. In English, morphemes are often but not necessarily words. Morphemes that stand alone are ...
follows them. The absence of an ergative suffix in transitive verbs (except those discussed in the next section) implies a third-person subject. A few sample paradigms follow.


Ergative person prefixes

Instead of the ergative suffixes, ergative prefixes are used to index first- or second-person ergative arguments if the tense is non-present and the direct object is third person (see the gaps in the previous table). The ergative prefixes are identical to the primary prefixes in the singular, but in the plural ''-en-'' is added to the primary prefix forms: The ergative plural suffix ''-te'' only occurs when required (a) to indicate the third person plural, or (b) to indicate the (real) second-person plural.


Dative argument indices

Finite verbs that have an argument in the dative case also index the dative argument using the following set of dative suffixes (which are identical in form to the ergative suffixes except in the third person): Both intransitive and transitive verbs may take dative indices, and the mechanism for incorporating these is the same in either case. Dative suffixes immediately follow the verb stem, preceding other suffixes such as the ergative suffixes (thus in ''d-i-da-zu'' 'you have it to me', ''-da-'' is the dative suffix and ''-zu'' is the ergative suffix) or the potential suffix ''-ke'' (as well as the past suffix ''-(e)n'', which is always word-final). Only the primary plural marker, if present, and the dative-argument marker precede the dative suffix. The dative-argument marker, whose regular form is ''-ki-'', is added to basic verb stems to indicate that these are taking a dative argument. With ''-ki-'', the primary plural marker always takes the form of ''-z-'' immediately preceding ''-ki-''. A few verb stems have an irregular dative-argument form. The most commonly used dative verb forms are those of the irregular verbs 'to be' and 'to have', which are in constant use as tense auxiliaries, when these verbs have no lexical meaning of their own. This is the reason why many of the glosses given below sound odd (e.g. ''dit'' 'he has it to me'); an example of a more natural-sounding use of this form as an auxiliary would be ''eman dit'' 'he has given it to me'. Nevertheless, the following table serves to clarify the morphological structure of dative-argument verb forms.


Familiar forms and allocutive indices (''hika'')

In colloquial Basque, an informal relationship and social solidarity between the speaker and a single interlocutor may be expressed by employing a special mode of speech often referred to in Basque as either or (both derived from , the informal second-person pronoun; in other places the same phenomenon is named and for female and male interlocutors respectively). The obligatory grammatical characteristics of this mode are: * The
personal pronoun Personal pronouns are pronouns that are associated primarily with a particular grammatical person – first person (as ''I''), second person (as ''you''), or third person (as ''he'', ''she'', ''it'', ''they''). Personal pronouns may also take dif ...
is used (rather than the polite second-person singular pronoun ). * All finite verb forms that index a second-person argument take (as one would expect) the corresponding forms, e.g. "you are" (rather than '), or "you have it" (rather than ''duzu''), etc.: * Obligatorily in independent declarative clauses with finite verb forms not indexing a true second-person argument, an additional second-person index is incorporated. This is known as the allocutive construction, and we may refer to these second-person indices that do not refer to a syntactic argument of the verb as "allocutive indices". The allocutive suffixes are identical in form to the ergative and dative suffixes. Allocutive suffixes follow the dative suffixes, the potential ''-ke-'' and ergative third-person plural ''-te-'', and precedes other ergative suffixes (except for the synthetic forms of the verb ''esan'' with plural object). Depending on the verb in question, there may also be some other changes: :The allocutive forms of the verb "to be" (''izan'') without a dative argument use the root -(it)u-. They are identical to the forms of the verb "to have", except for third-person in non-present tenses: :In the allocutive forms of the verb "to have" (''izan'') without a dative argument the -u- in the root changes to -i- (so the root becomes -(it)i). Some form are identical to the forms of the verb "to have" with dative argument :In all other verb forms, the procedure is as follows, sometimes (there is considerable dialectal variation on this point), the third-person present-tense primary prefix d- changes to z- and/or the present-tense stem formant -a- changes to -ia- or -e- in the allocutive forms. : In standard Basque, d- changes to z- in transitive aorist auxiliaries (''*ezan'') and all non-auxiliary verbs. The present-tense format may or may not change to -e-. If the allocutive suffix immediately follows the verb stem ending in a consonant, a vowel is inserted (-a- after -z- pluralizer, -e- otherwise). : In the synthetic forms of the verb ''esan'' with plural object, the allocutive suffix is placed after the pluralizer -z- (which, as an exception, is placed after an ergative suffix). In the singular forms of this verb the allocutive suffix is placed as usual (i.e. before ergative suffix). Eastern Basque dialects extend the allocutive system to the more polite form of address, (known as ' or '), or the affectionate variant . The rules are similar.
Such dialects have three levels of address: :allocutive (with a female/male distinction) is the most intimate :allocutive or is polite but friendly :the absence of allocutive constructions is the most neutral or formal But most dialects lack the middle level. The use of forms is diminishing being perceived as more direct and close, but also rural and impolite. Even among who use them, the masculine forms are more frequently used than the feminine ones, sometimes even using masculine forms for women. An explanation is that, in the
rural exodus Rural flight (or rural exodus) is the migratory pattern of peoples from rural areas into urban areas. It is urbanization seen from the rural perspective. In industrializing economies like Britain in the eighteenth century or East Asia in the ...
of Basque peasants, men would end up working in a factory with people of their same town, while women became maids, shop clerks or waitresses where informal Basque would be felt improper.


Periphrastic conjugation


Compound tense stem forms

Compound tense forms consist of a non-finite verb form (the compound tense stem) and a finite auxiliary form. We shall begin by looking at the non-finite stems. Each verb has four: the perfect, future, imperfect and short stems. The perfect stem is identical to the participle (see above). The future stem is obtained from the participle by adding ''-ko'' (''-go'' after ''n''). The imperfect stem is the verbal noun (see above) plus the suffix ''-n''. The form of the short stem was discussed above. Some examples follow.


Compound tense auxiliaries

By combining the four compound tense stems with various auxiliaries, one obtains four groups of compound tense, sometimes referred to in Basque grammar as " aspects", which we shall call Imperfect, Perfect, Future and Aorist (= "aspect"-less) respectively. The choice of auxiliary depends on the "aspect" and also on whether the verb is intransitive or transitive. Except in the aorist, the auxiliary for intransitives is the verb 'to be', while that for transitives is the verb 'to have'. In the Aorist a different pair of auxiliaries is used, one for intransitives and another for transitives. Since neither of the latter is used other than as an auxiliary, and neither has a participle (or other non-finite form) to provide a convenient citation form, we shall simply refer to them as the (intransitive and transitive) aorist auxiliaries. The auxiliaries adopt all the argument indices (for subject, direct object and/or indirect object as the case may be, as well as the allocutive where applicable) that correspond to the verb within its clause. The above diagram illustrates the patterns with auxiliaries in the present tense. However, the same auxiliaries may be used in a wide variety of tenses, not only in the present. The following two tables lay out synoptically the possible auxiliary/tense combinations for intransitive and transitive auxiliaries respectively.


Simple and compound tenses

The following are the most usual Basque tenses. By considering both simple and compound tenses as part of a single list, one can better see how the whole system fits together and compare the tenses with each other.


More periphrastic constructions

Some other constructions that commonly express a range of aspectual or modal notions show a greater degree of periphrasis than those considered so far. A brief selection of some of the most important of these are shown in the following table:


Non-finite verb forms

Basque verbs have a fairly wide range of non-finite forms. Morphologically these can all be derived via suffixation from the three non-finite forms presented at the beginning of this article: the participle, the verbal noun and the short stem. Apart from the short stem (which has a rather limited set of functions), all other forms are built on either the participle or the verbal noun.


The participle and derived forms

The participle and some other non-finite forms derived therefrom are as follows. To avoid repetition, mention will not be made of the use of the participle as a perfect stem in the formation of periphrastic tenses (see above).


The verbal noun and derived forms

The verbal noun and some other non-finite forms derived therefrom are as follows. Again, to avoid repetition, mention will not be made of the use of the form as an imperfect stem in the formation of periphrastic tenses (see above).


Compound verbs

Basque has a fairly large number of compound verbs of a type also known as
light verb In linguistics, a light verb is a verb that has little semantic content of its own and forms a predicate with some additional expression, which is usually a noun. Common verbs in English that can function as light verbs are ''do'', ''give'', ''have ...
constructions, consisting of two parts. The first component is a lexical element which is often (but not always) an undeclined noun. The second is a common verb which contributes less semantic content to the construction but is the part that is conjugated, thus lending to the whole its verbal character. Details of conjugation depend on the light verb used, which may be one that has synthetic finite forms (e.g. ''izan''), or a verb without synthetic finite forms (e.g. ''egin'' or ''hartu''). In synthetically conjugated light-verb constructions such as 'I live' or 'I love', care must be taken not to confuse the light verb () with tense auxiliaries; and are simple present forms, for example. The modal verbs and are also of this kind. In the periphrastic tenses of compound verbs with , some contractions occur, e.g. in the future of 'live', where we would expect for 'I will live', is more common, with ''-ko'' attached directly onto the lexical component as if this were a verb. Compound verbs, especially those with the light verb , offer an alternative way (besides direct derivation with ''-tu'', as seen above) for incorporating new verbs into the language, either through the incorporation of onomatopoeic words ( 'bite', ''oka'' 'vomit', 'sip' or 'slurp', 'click' ... ) or of
loanword A loanword (also loan word or loan-word) is a word at least partly assimilated from one language (the donor language) into another language. This is in contrast to cognates, which are words in two or more languages that are similar because t ...
s ( 'dance', ''salto'' 'jump' etc.) as lexical components.


Verbal particles

A small set of modal
particle In the physical sciences, a particle (or corpuscule in older texts) is a small localized object which can be described by several physical or chemical properties, such as volume, density, or mass. They vary greatly in size or quantity, from ...
s, including ''al'', ''ote'' and ''omen'' only occur immediately preceding finite forms (i.e. in front of a synthetic finite form or the synthetic part of an
auxiliary verb An auxiliary verb ( abbreviated ) is a verb that adds functional or grammatical meaning to the clause in which it occurs, so as to express tense, aspect, modality, voice, emphasis, etc. Auxiliary verbs usually accompany an infinitive verb or a ...
). The only exception is that ''ote'' and ''omen'' are sometimes used in isolation where the ellipsis of a verb is understood. E.g. ''Egia ote?'' 'I wonder if it's true' is easily recognised by speakers to be an ellipsis of ''Egia ote da?'' Or if someone says ''Badator'' 'She's coming.' and someone else responds ''Omen!'' 'Supposedly!', this is as much as to say that the first utterance should incorporate ''omen'', i.e. ''Ba omen dator'' 'Supposedly she is coming.' Another set of preverbal particles consists of the affirmative particle ''ba-'' (by modern convention joined to a following finite verb form) and the negator ''ez''. These are compatible with the modal particles, which they precede (e.g. ''ba omen dator'' in the preceding paragraph; ''ez al dakizu?'' 'don't you know?', etc.); apart from this, they too immediately precede the finite verb form.


Subordinator affixes

The forms of verbs cited throughout the general presentation of the finite verb system are normally those that occur in main clauses. (However, certain forms, such as the non-potential hypothetic, e.g. ''-litz'', or the subjunctive, e.g. , never occur in such main-clause forms and these are therefore cited in
subordinate A hierarchy (from Greek: , from , 'president of sacred rites') is an arrangement of items (objects, names, values, categories, etc.) that are represented as being "above", "below", or "at the same level as" one another. Hierarchy is an important ...
forms such as , etc.) In subordinate clauses, the finite verb takes a subordinator affix, i.e. a suffix or prefix which establishes (to some extent) the kind of subordination. Basically there are four such affixes, two suffixes and two prefixes, and one (and only one) of these is found in every subordinate form. Both of the suffixes, however, may take further suffixes (mostly nominal declension suffixes) which serve to further specify the type of subordination. The following table provides a brief overview of some of the main uses and forms.


Bibliography

(see also the bibliography in Basque grammar) * Allières, Jacques (1983). De la formalisation du système verbal basque. Article in ''Pierres Lafitte-ri omenaldia'', pp. 37–39, Bilbo: Euskaltzaindia

in French) * Bonaparte, L-L. (1869). ''Le verbe basque en tableaux.'' London. (in French) * Euskara Institutua, Euskal Herriko Unibertsitatea (UPV/EHU) (2013),
Euskal Adizkitegi Automatikoa
(Automatic Basque Verbal Forms Generator) * Euskaltzaindia (1973). ''Aditz laguntzaile batua.'' (in Basque) * Euskaltzaindia (1987). ''Euskal gramatika: lehen urratsak'' (volume 2). Bilbao: Euskaltzaindia. (in Basque) * Euskaltzaindia (1994). ''Adizki alokutiboak (hikako moldea)'' (in Basque)


References


External links

{{wiktionarycat, type=Basque verbs, category=Basque verbs Verbs by language
Verb A verb () is a word ( part of speech) that in syntax generally conveys an action (''bring'', ''read'', ''walk'', ''run'', ''learn''), an occurrence (''happen'', ''become''), or a state of being (''be'', ''exist'', ''stand''). In the usual descr ...