The
grammar
In linguistics, grammar is the set of rules for how a natural language is structured, as demonstrated by its speakers or writers. Grammar rules may concern the use of clauses, phrases, and words. The term may also refer to the study of such rul ...
of the
Hittite language
Hittite (, or ), also known as Nesite (Nešite/Neshite, Nessite), is an extinct Indo-European language that was spoken by the Hittites, a people of Bronze Age Anatolia who created an empire centred on Hattusa, as well as parts of the northern ...
has a highly conservative verbal system and rich
nominal
Nominal may refer to:
Linguistics and grammar
* Nominal (linguistics), one of the parts of speech
* Nominal, the adjectival form of "noun", as in "nominal agreement" (= "noun agreement")
* Nominal sentence, a sentence without a finite verb
* Nou ...
declension
In linguistics, declension (verb: ''to decline'') is the changing of the form of a word, generally to express its syntactic function in the sentence by way of an inflection. Declension may apply to nouns, pronouns, adjectives, adverbs, and det ...
. The language is
attested in
cuneiform
Cuneiform is a Logogram, logo-Syllabary, syllabic writing system that was used to write several languages of the Ancient Near East. The script was in active use from the early Bronze Age until the beginning of the Common Era. Cuneiform script ...
, and is the earliest attested
Indo-European language
The Indo-European languages are a language family native to the northern Indian subcontinent, most of Europe, and the Iranian plateau with additional native branches found in regions such as Sri Lanka, the Maldives, parts of Central Asia ( ...
.
Noun and adjective declension
Gender system and cases
Hittite distinguishes between two genders, common (animate) and neuter (inanimate). The distinction between genders is fairly rudimentary since it is made only in the
nominative
In grammar, the nominative case ( abbreviated ), subjective case, straight case, or upright case is one of the grammatical cases of a noun or other part of speech, which generally marks the subject of a verb, or (in Latin and formal variants of E ...
and
accusative
In grammar, the accusative case (abbreviated ) of a noun is the grammatical case used to receive the direct object of a transitive verb.
In the English language, the only words that occur in the accusative case are pronouns: "me", "him", "her", " ...
case, and the same noun is sometimes attested in both genders. It is still debated whether or not this reflects a prehistoric merger of inherited
PIE
A pie is a baked dish which is usually made of a pastry dough casing that contains a filling of various sweet or savoury ingredients. Sweet pies may be filled with fruit (as in an apple pie), nuts ( pecan pie), fruit preserves ( jam tart ...
masculine and feminine into a single common/animate gender or an archaic system in which there was already a common gender. Nouns referred to living beings (humans, animals and Gods) are usually found in the common/animate gender, but some inanimate objects actually have the common/animate gender. For instance, nouns in a-stem and t-stem are common/animate and, given how productive was the formation of words in the a-stem and t-stem, many words in Hittite indicating inanimate objects are actually in the common/animate gender in the nominative and accusative. The other gender, the neuter/inanimate, is referred to objects, including parts of the body, and abstract concepts or collective nouns, e.g. "family, assembly, troops, humanity". Some common examples of neuter declension are the u-stem nouns and the nouns formed by the suffixes -ātar, -eššar and the suffix for collective nouns -a(i)-. Words derived by common/animate gender roots through neuter suffixes are neuter.
The only reference to a female gender, which however does not erase the two-gender system "common-neuter gender", is the infix ''-(š)šara-'', used to indicate female gender for humans and deities.
The nominal system consists of the following 9 cases: nominative, vocative, accusative, genitive, dative-locative, ablative, ergative, allative, and instrumental.
* The nominative marks the subject of a sentence or the predicate nominative (e.g., "I am a man").
* The genitive marks the possessor, the material of an object (e.g., "A sword
''of iron''"), the content of an object (e.g., "A vessel ''of wine''"), the object of an action (e.g., "The destruction ''of the city''") and a partitive construction (a part ''of a whole''); the last four usages are called "genitive of material", "genitive of contents", "objective genitive" and "partitive genitive". The genitive case is also used with pospositions in OH (in NH, a case shift happened from genitive to dative-locative except in the posposition ''iwar'', "in the manner of").
* The dative-locative is used to mark the indirect object and the static position/location. It also mark a position/location with motion verbs (e.g., "I pour wine into the glass"). In Hittite, it is also used in some fixed temporal expression, e.g., "at night, in Winter".
* The accusative marks the direct object of a transitive verb (e.g., "I eat the apple"); in causative constructions (e.g., "He makes his ox cross the river"), a double accusative is found. Double accusative in Hittite is also used in the sentence "make ''something'' into ''something else''" (e.g., "I refuse to make him my husband") and, from this expression, double accusative was used in the later coined structure "Treat ''somebody/something'' like..." (e.g., "I treated them like mothers and fathers"). To conclude, accusative in Hittite marks the time extent/duration, e.g. "I had reigned for ten years".
* The vocative is used in invocations (exclamations containing a direct address to humans or deities during a prayer or ritual).
* The allative (also known as "directive" and "terminative") is used to indicate the motion to or toward/in direction of a place. Verbs are always directive (e.g., "I go/come/travel to Rome; I carry the merchandize to Rome") and never stative (e.g., "I am in Rome") and describe the act of walking/perambulating. By contrast, a verb like "pour" has a direction but it's not a perambulatory movement. Sometimes, the allative is substituted by the accusative, which is called "accusative of direction" in this context.
* By contrast, the ablative is used to mark motion from a place or a beginning point in time (e.g., from now on). It is also used to mark movement through a place or object (e.g., "I get inside the house ''through the window''"). This kind of ablative is called "perlative ablative". In NH, the ablative was then used to mark the agent of an action in passive constructions (e.g., "The city was destroyed ''by the king''") instead of the instrumental case.
* The instrumental marks the (concrete or abstract/intangible) tool through which an action is performed in OH; as in many other Indo-European languages (e.g., balto-slavic languages), it also has a sociative/comitative meaning, i.e., it marks the person an action is performed with. It also expresses the cause of an action and, in OH, it marks the agent of an action in passive constructions. In NH, the instrumental was substituted by the ablative, as in Latin
Latin ( or ) is a classical language belonging to the Italic languages, Italic branch of the Indo-European languages. Latin was originally spoken by the Latins (Italic tribe), Latins in Latium (now known as Lazio), the lower Tiber area aroun ...
.
Hittite declension system also distinguishes between two numbers (singular and plural
In many languages, a plural (sometimes list of glossing abbreviations, abbreviated as pl., pl, , or ), is one of the values of the grammatical number, grammatical category of number. The plural of a noun typically denotes a quantity greater than ...
) and shows indirect traces of a dual number
In algebra, the dual numbers are a hypercomplex number system first introduced in the 19th century. They are expressions of the form , where and are real numbers, and is a symbol taken to satisfy \varepsilon^2 = 0 with \varepsilon\neq 0.
D ...
; due to syncretism, the ending of ablative and instrumental in the plural coincide.
Hittite language is based on split ergativity
In linguistic typology, split ergativity is a feature of certain languages where some constructions use ergative syntax and morphology, but other constructions show another pattern, usually nominative–accusative. The conditions in which ergat ...
: when a common/animate noun is the subject of a transitive verb, e.g., "The child eats the apple", the subject is marked by the nominative case. By contrast, when a neuter noun is the subject of a transitive verb, e.g., "The spear kills the soldier", the subject of the sentence is marked by the ergative case; hence, only neuter nouns show the ergative case in their declension, which means that common/animate nouns show 8 cases, while neuter nouns show 9 cases. Inflected adjectives always have the ergative case in their declension, but this case is used only when an adjective is referred to a neuter noun in the ergative case, i.e., followed by a transitive verb; consequently, adjectival declension shows 9 cases. Personal pronouns as the subject are always in the nominative case; the subject of an intransitive verb always take the nominative ending as well.
a-stem declension in Old Hittite (OH)
The basic scheme of suffixation is given in the table below, which is valid for almost all nouns and adjectives. The sample word shown is ''antuḫšaš'', "man", a-stem noun (common/animate gender, thus a name without the ergative case). The letter "š" is always pronounced as /s/, while "z" is always pronounced /ts/ and derives from an ancient */ti/ or */tj/. For instance, in mi-verb declension, the 3rd person singular ending in the present tense ''-zi'' according to Hoffner and Melchert comes from an earlier ''*-ti''.
Given that the nominal root ends with the thematic vowel -a and some suffixes starts in a vowel, the final -a in the root is elided (e.g., ''attaš'', "father" > dat-loc. ''atti'', not ''*attai''). Only in some rare instances that represent an innovation, a dat-loc. in ''-ai'' is found; some of these instances are foreign words and foreign names.
Neuter nouns in the accusative singular take ''-n'' only if the thematic vowel is ''-a-'', e.g., yukan (plough). All the other neuter nouns take ''-a'' (sometimes indicated as the "zero-ending" ''-∅''). As for the neuter accusative plural, names belonging to the common/animate gender take ''-uš'', while names belonging to the neuter gender take ''-a''. Only names in i-stem take the dative-locative in ''-ya''. Vocative and allative case have no plural counterpart neither in Old Hittite (OH), nor in Middle Hittite (ME) and New Hittite (NE). As already stated, due to syncretism, the ending of ablative and instrumental in the plural coincide. The instrumental case has two possible endings (''-it, -et'') and, according to Hoffner (2008), ''-it'' is the oldest ending; it developed from an earlier ending -t through anaptyxis
In phonology, epenthesis (; Greek ) means the addition of one or more sounds to a word, especially in the first syllable ('' prothesis''), the last syllable (''paragoge''), or between two syllabic sounds in a word. The opposite process in which ...
/ephentesis in environment of a preceding dental consonant. Some tracks of this presumed ending can be found in irregular instrumental endings, in names such as genu (knee) > ''genut'', šākuwa (eye) > ''šākuwat''.
In MH, two more plural suffixes were created for the nominative and accusative (nom. ''-eš,'' ''-uš, -aš''; acc. ''-uš,'' ''-eš, -aš''). Then, the allative and instrumental cases both merged with dative-locative ''-az(a)''. The use of old allative ''-a'' and old instrumental ''-it'' in NH are archaisms. In NH, all the three plural suffixes for nouns of common gender in the two strong cases (nominative and accusative) collapsed into ''-uš'', with only some exceptions. In OH, the original suffix of the genitive plural is ''-an''; then, a new suffix ''-aš'' was coined in Late OH and displaced ''-an'' in NH.
Adjectives in a-stem share the same endings of noun declension; their gender depends from the gender of the noun they refer to (common/animate or neuter).
Examples of noun declension (a-stem, OH)
* ''antuḫšaš'' (man)'', attaš'' (father)'', annaš'' (mother)'', išḫāš'' (lord)'', arunaš'' (sea), common/animate
* ''yukan'' (plough), ''pedan'' (place)'', ekan'' (ice)'','' neuter
In the following examples, all forms not directly attested are put between brackets.
An example of adjective declension (a-stem, OH)
The adjective chosen is ''araḫzenaš, araḫzenan'' ("external"), inflected for both genders.
Syntax
Hittite is a head-final
In linguistics, head directionality is a proposed Principles and parameters, parameter that classifies languages according to whether they are head-initial (the head (linguistics), head of a phrase precedes its Complement (linguistics), complement ...
language, with subject-object-verb word order
In linguistics, word order (also known as linear order) is the order of the syntactic constituents of a language. Word order typology studies it from a cross-linguistic perspective, and examines how languages employ different orders. Correlatio ...
.
Hittite syntax shows one noteworthy feature that is typical of Anatolian languages: commonly, the beginning of a sentence or clause is composed of either a sentence-connecting particle or otherwise a fronted or topicalized form, and a "chain" of fixed-order clitic
In morphology and syntax, a clitic ( , backformed from Greek "leaning" or "enclitic"Crystal, David. ''A First Dictionary of Linguistics and Phonetics''. Boulder, CO: Westview, 1980. Print.) is a morpheme that has syntactic characteristics of a ...
s is then appended.
Yes-no questions were marked using prosodic features such as rising intonation. In writing, they were partially left unmarked: Scribes in Assyria and Babylonia who wrote Akkadian in cuneiform script (and later Hittites as well) sometimes indicated the interrogative intonation by a plene spelling of the vowel in the final syllable of the central word in the interrogative clause. Nevertheless, the use of this device in Hittite was rare and probably not codified.
Verb conjugation
When compared with other early-attested Indo-European languages, such as Ancient Greek
Ancient Greek (, ; ) includes the forms of the Greek language used in ancient Greece and the classical antiquity, ancient world from around 1500 BC to 300 BC. It is often roughly divided into the following periods: Mycenaean Greek (), Greek ...
and Sanskrit
Sanskrit (; stem form ; nominal singular , ,) is a classical language belonging to the Indo-Aryan languages, Indo-Aryan branch of the Indo-European languages. It arose in northwest South Asia after its predecessor languages had Trans-cultural ...
, the verb system is Hittite is morphologically relatively uncomplicated. There are two general verbal classes according to which verbs are inflected, the ''mi''-conjugation and the ''ḫi''-conjugation. The names are drawn by the ending of the first person singular in the present tense. Rose (2006) lists 132 ḫi-verbs and interprets the ḫi-mi oppositions as vestiges of a system of grammatical voice ("centripetal voice" vs. "centrifugal voice").
* mi-conjugation verbs are divided into vowel-stem verbs (verbs whose root ends in a vowel) and consonant-stem verbs; the latter category includes both verbs with bare roots and verbs ending with infixes and suffixes added to the root, e.g., ''-nin-'' and ''-ešš-''.
* ḫi-conjugation verbs often have a consonantal root; most roots ends either in a single consonant, either non-geminated or geminated. Some verbs have an a-stem or i-stem root. Part of the a-stem model of conjugation was then generalized to part of the i-stem conjugation; this new model of conjugation is called 'mixed inflection'.
There are two voices (active and medio-passive
The mediopassive voice is a grammatical voice that subsumes the meanings of both the middle voice and the passive voice.
Description
Languages of the Indo-European family (and many others) typically have two or three of the following voices: act ...
), two moods (indicative and imperative), two aspects (perfective and imperfective), and two tenses (present for the present and future time and preterite
The preterite or preterit ( ; abbreviated or ) is a grammatical tense or verb form serving to denote events that took place or were completed in the past; in some languages, such as Spanish, French, and English, it is equivalent to the simple p ...
for the past time); the difference between the present and the future can be disambiguated through an analytical construction. Additionally, the verbal system displays two infinitive forms, one verbal substantive, a supine and a participle.
Modality (e.g. "could, would, should, must") in conveyed in Hittite through modal particles and adverbs instead of modal verbs. Both verb class have some verbs that contain ablauting vowels according to fixed patterns.
The basic conjugational endings are as follows:
The ending ''-meni'' in the present tense is confined to nu-causative verbs; the ending ''-weni'' is identical in the present and imperative tense, thus the context helps disambiguating between the two tenses. In the preterite, ''-un'' is used with vocalic stem, i.e., a verbal root that ends in a vowel, which is then deleted. In the preterite, the ending ''-šta'' for 2nd person singular is used in a specific group of verbs, while the ending in ''-t'' is used in i-stem verbs; the ending ''-ta'' in the 3rd person singular is used in the i-stem verbs too.
In the imperative, the ending in ''-t'' is used in nu-causative verbs.
The infinitive ''-wanzi'' comes from a pre-Hittite locative in ''*-wenti'' or *''-wonti'' showing vowel mutations and *''-ti'' > ''-zi'' mutation; the supine ''-wan'' comes from a pre-Hittite locative without the final part of the ending, *''-wen'' or *''-won''.
The Set I endings are default; the Set II endings are taken primarily by monosyllabic ablauting ''mi-''verbs. Within Set I verbs, the Ib endings are taken by stems ending in ''-u''.
A simple example of conjugation in the present tense is ''ḫarzi'' ('to have, to hold'); the verb belongs to the mi-conjugation verb class and is non-ablauting:
Basic negative adverbs
The negation adverb is ''natta'' ("not"); ''nāwi'' translates "not yet", while ''lē'' translates "don't...!" in orders and prohibitions ("imperatival negative"); ''lē'' can be used with the imperative or, in NH, with the present with an imperatival negative meaning. Another use of ''lē'' is the "categorical negative", an emphatic negation in an obvious context which can be translated as "certainly not", e.g., "A blind man certainly doesn't see, a deaf man certainly doesn't hear, a lame man certainly doesn't run".
Negative adverbs are usually put right before the verb, in pre-verbal position; in rhethorical questions and emphatic questions, ''natta'' put at the beginning of a sentence, before the subject (if expressed).
Copula
The verb "to be" in OH
The verb is conjugated in the present tense and belong to the mi-conjugation verbal class. In the first person plural, no ''*asweni'' or ''*esweni'' form is attested yet. The verb "to be" can be omitted in the present tense in sentences containing a predicate nominative (e.g., "I am a man"), thus creating a nominal sentence. Consequently, adjectives referred to the proedicate nominative take the nominative case as well.
Pronouns
Personal pronouns
Personal pronouns are inflected according to their case. They have an enclitic version as well, which can be used as a direct or indirect object (acc-dat). The third person has only the enclitical version and distinguishes between common/animate gender and neuter gender. The following table contains the nominative cases of all pronouns and the enclitic form (acc-dat).
Possessive pronouns
Possessive pronouns have an earlier enclitic version and a later full/analytical version placed before the noun. Possessive pronouns are inflected according to cases and take the gender of the noun they refer to. The following table shows the nominative form:
Demonstrative pronouns
Demonstrative pronouns are put before the noun; they are inflected according to the case and the gender of the noun they refer to. Hittite has a three-way system to indicate position: near to the speaker, near to the listener and far from both ("here-there-yonder").
The pronouns "this, that" in the nominative singular are ''kāš'' and ''apāš''; their plural is ''kē'' (later ''kūš'') and ''apē'' (later ''apūš''). Their neuter counterparts are ''kī'' and ''apāt'', plural ''kē'' and ''apē''. Adverbs "here, there" (''kā, apiya'') are derived from demonstrative pronouns as well as ''kinun'' and ''apiya'' ("now, then/in the past").
Numbers
Both ordinal and cardinal numbers in Hittite were often written with ciphers instead of syllables, which makes both the reconstruction of their pronunciation and their translation in context difficult. Hence, most number are indicated by the Arabic cipher and their ending, e.g. "one" in the nominative common/animate gender is known as "1-aš". Number "one" was reconstructed by Goedegebuure (2006) as *šia-. Numbers from one to four are declined in Hittite.
Literature
Dictionaries
*Goetze, Albrecht (1954). Review of: Johannes Friedrich, ''Hethitisches Wörterbuch'' (Heidelberg: Winter). ''Language'' 30.401–40
*Sturtevant, Edgar H. (1931). ''Hittite glossary: words of known or conjectured meaning, with Sumerian ideograms and Accadian words common in Hittite texts''. ''Language'', Vol. 7, No. 2, pp. 3–82., ''Language Monograph'' No. 9.
*Puhvel, Jaan (1984–). ''Hittite Etymological Dictionary''. Berlin: Mouton.
Grammar
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*Sturtevant, Edgar H. A. (1933, 1951). ''Comparative Grammar of the Hittite Language''. Rev. ed. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1951. First edition: 1933.
*Sturtevant, Edgar H. A. (1940). ''The Indo-Hittite laryngeals''. Baltimore: Linguistic Society of America.
*
*Yakubovich, Ilya (2010). ''Sociolinguistics of the Luwian Language''. Leiden: Brill.
Text editions
*Goetze, Albrecht & Edgar H. Sturtevant (1938). ''The Hittite Ritual of Tunnawi''. New Haven: American Oriental Society.
*Sturtevant, Edgar H. A., & George Bechtel (1935). ''A Hittite Chrestomathy''. Baltimore: Linguistic Society of America.
*
Journal articles
*
*
http://www.nou-la.org/ling/1973d-SHE2.pdf]
References
External links
Hittite in the wiki ''Glossing Ancient Languages''
(recommendations for the Interlinear gloss, Interlinear Morphemic Glossing of Hittite texts)
*
{{language grammars
grammar
In linguistics, grammar is the set of rules for how a natural language is structured, as demonstrated by its speakers or writers. Grammar rules may concern the use of clauses, phrases, and words. The term may also refer to the study of such rul ...
Indo-European grammars