Georgian grammar
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Georgian grammar has many distinctive and extremely complex features, such as split ergativity and a polypersonal verb agreement system. Georgian has its own alphabet. In this article, a transliteration with Latin letters will be used throughout.


Morphosyntactic alignment

Georgian syntax and verb agreement are largely those of a nominative–accusative language. That is, the subject of an intransitive verb and the subject of a transitive verb are treated alike when it comes to word order within the sentence, and agreement marks on verbs complex. Nominative–accusative alignment is one of the two major morphosyntactic alignments, along with ergative-absolutive. However, Georgian case morphology (that is, the declension of nouns using case marks) does not always coincide with verbal alignment. Georgian has often been said to exhibit split ergativity; morphologically speaking, it is said that it mostly behaves like an ergative–absolutive language in the Series II ("aorist")
screeve Screeve is a term of grammatical description in traditional Georgian grammars that roughly corresponds to tense–aspect–mood marking in the Western grammatical tradition. It derives from the Georgian word ''mts’k’rivi'' (მწკრივ ...
s. That means that the subject of an intransitive verb will take the same case markings as the direct object of a transitive verb. However, this is not a fully accurate representation. This is because Georgian has yet another level of split ergativity. In the aorist series, intransitive verbs behave differently. Second conjugation verbs behave as would normally be expected in an ergative language; the subject is declined in the least-marked case, the ''nominative'' case (terminologically equivalent in this instance to ''absolutive'' cases in other languages). Third conjugation verbs behave as if they belonged to an accusative system; the most-marked case (the ''ergative'') marks the subject. The division between second and third conjugations is a convenient way to remember the difference, but in fact they both contain intransitive verbs, and as a whole the behaviour of these verbs follows an active alignment. In an active language, intransitive verbs are subdivided into two classes. The division is usually based on semantic criteria regarding the nature of the subject and the verb; for example, if the subject identifies an agent (an active or intentional performer of the action of the verb), then it might be marked with one case (e.g. the ergative), while if the subject identifies an experiencer of the event or one who does not actively initiate it, then it might be marked with another case (e.g. the absolutive or nominative). What might be called the "most active" case, then, marks the subject of a transitive verb, while the "least active" or "most patientive" case is that used to mark a direct object. This is precisely what happens in Georgian, in the restricted environment of the second or third conjugation verbs in the aorist series. In Georgian, the classification of verbs according to the agentive or patientive nature of their subject has to do with performing an action, regardless of whether the subject is in control or not. (There are some exceptions to this; weather verbs and verbs of emission of light and sound are usually zero-place predicates, and thus have no agent at all.) The division between classes is conventional and rigid; each verb receives the class that typically corresponds to it. Where the subject is typically an active performer, it is marked as ergative, even if in some specific instances the action might be outside the control of the subject. Therefore, Georgian active alignment is said to be of the "split-S" type.


Case system

Georgian has seven
grammatical case A grammatical case is a category of nouns and noun modifiers ( determiners, adjectives, participles, and numerals), which corresponds to one or more potential grammatical functions for a nominal group in a wording. In various languages, nomin ...
s: nominative, ergative (also known in the Kartvelological literature as the narrative (''motxrobiti'') case, due to the rather inaccurate suggestion of regular ergativity, and that this case generally only occurs in the aorist series, which usually moves the narrative forward), dative, genitive,
instrumental An instrumental is a recording normally without any vocals, although it might include some inarticulate vocals, such as shouted backup vocals in a big band setting. Through semantic widening, a broader sense of the word song may refer to inst ...
,
adverbial In English grammar, an adverbial ( abbreviated ) is a word (an adverb) or a group of words (an adverbial clause or adverbial phrase) that modifies or more closely defines the sentence or the verb. (The word ''adverbial'' itself is also used as an ...
and
vocative In grammar, the vocative case (abbreviated ) is a grammatical case which is used for a noun that identifies a person (animal, object, etc.) being addressed, or occasionally for the noun modifiers (determiners, adjectives, participles, and numer ...
. The nominative, ergative and dative are core cases, and due to the complex
morphosyntactic alignment In linguistics, morphosyntactic alignment is the grammatical relationship between arguments—specifically, between the two arguments (in English, subject and object) of transitive verbs like ''the dog chased the cat'', and the single argument ...
of Georgian, each one has several different functions and also overlap with each other, in different contexts. They will be treated together with the verb system. The non-core cases are genitive, instrumental, adverbial and vocative. * The genitive case is the equivalent of the preposition ''of'' or the possessive clitic -s'' in English. In the phrase "the republic of Georgia", the word "Georgia" is in the genitive case: ''Sakartvelos resp'ublik'a''. * The instrumental case corresponds to the preposition ''with'' in English, as in "he is cutting ''with'' a knife", where the word "knife" is in the instrumental case. It also occurs with the objects of certain postpositions. * The adverbial case commonly marks adverbial phrases. It is also used in some other contexts, especially when using names of languages. For example, in the sentence "Can you translate this into Georgian?", ''Georgian'' is in the adverbial case. * The vocative case is used when addressing someone. For example, a mother calls her child with ''bat'ono?'' (meaning "sir?").


Nouns

The
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 some inflection. Declensions may apply to nouns, pronouns, adjectives, adverbs, and ...
of a noun depends on whether the
root In vascular plants, the roots are the organs of a plant that are modified to provide anchorage for the plant and take in water and nutrients into the plant body, which allows plants to grow taller and faster. They are most often below the su ...
of the noun ends with a vowel or a consonant. If the root of the noun ends with a vowel, the declension can be either truncating (roots ending with -''e'' or -''a'') or non-truncating (roots ending with -''o'' or -''u''). In the truncating declensions, the last vowel of the word stem is lost in the genitive and the instrumental cases. The table below lists the suffixes for each noun case, with an example next to it. (* truncation of the last vowel occurs) In the case of a word that ends in an -o, the -o may disappear completely or reduce to a -v and the consonant case endings are used; with the exception of the vocative case, which it itself becomes a -v. An example of this is the word ''teorbo'' (music), which becomes ''teorbo-v'' in the vocative case.


Pluralisation

The plural number is marked with the suffix ''-eb'', which appears after the root of the noun and before the case suffix. Some examples are: * The nominative case of ''men'' in Georgian is constructed as, ''k'ats''+''eb''+''i'', while the ergative case would be, ''k'ats''+''eb''+''ma''. * The nominative case of ''trees'' in Georgian (''xe'', root ending with truncating vowel -''e'') is, ''xe''+''eb''+''i'', while the dative case would be, ''xe''+''eb''+''s''. * The nominative case of ''girls'' in Georgian (''gogo'', root ending with non-truncating vowel -''o'') is, ''gogo''+''eb''+''i'', while the instrumental case would be, ''gogo''+''eb''+''it''. The plural suffix is ''not'' used when the noun is preceded by a quantifier of some kind, such as a
cardinal number In mathematics, cardinal numbers, or cardinals for short, are a generalization of the natural numbers used to measure the cardinality (size) of sets. The cardinality of a finite set is a natural number: the number of elements in the set. T ...
. Therefore, for example, "five men" in Georgian is expressed as, "''xuti (5) k'atsi''," not "''xuti k'atsebi.''" Additionally, in certain formal contexts, Georgian uses Old Georgian case endings distinct from those of modern Georgian: ''k'atsta saloni'' ("men's salon") lit. salon of men.


Pronouns

The following table lists the declension of all six personal pronouns. As can be seen from the table, all the cases of the third persons except the nominative case can be expressed in two different ways; with or without an "''i''" at the beginning of the pronoun. The extra letter "''i''" adds a ''directional'' meaning. The closest English equivalent could be the distinction between ''his, her'' and ''that''. An example can be "''her pencil''" versus "''that (girl)'s pencil''." In English "''that''" can never behave as a personal pronoun, but in Georgian, the additional letter "''i''" makes that possible.


Adjectives

The declension of adjectives is different from that of nouns, but like that of nouns depends on whether the root of the adjective ends with a consonant or a vowel: a vowel-final-stem adjective is identical in all cases, while a consonant-final-stem adjective changes from case to case. (Put another way, one might say that vowel-final-stem adjectives do not actually decline for case.) The following table presents declensions of the adjectives ''did-'' ("big") and ''ch'aghara-'' ("grey-haired") with the noun ''datv-'' ("bear"). While often used as modifiers, adjectives can also have stand-alone substantive force in Georgian: one could say ''mindoda lurji ts'igni'' ("I would like the blue book") or just ''mindoda lurji'' ("I would like the blue one").


Possessive adjectives

The possessive adjectives (equivalent to English ''my'', ''your'', etc.) are declined like other consonant-stem-final adjectives, except for a final ''-s'' in the dative, instrumental, and adverbial forms of the first- and second-person possessive adjectives. There are no second- and third-person vocative forms.


Adpositions

Georgian by and large has
postposition Prepositions and postpositions, together called adpositions (or broadly, in traditional grammar, simply prepositions), are a class of words used to express spatial or temporal relations (''in'', ''under'', ''towards'', ''before'') or mark various ...
s rather than prepositions. Most of these are cliticized to the ends of nouns. They might be written separately or together with the noun. Prepositions do exist, but they are very few in number, and tend to be
calque In linguistics, a calque () or loan translation is a word or phrase borrowed from another language by literal word-for-word or root-for-root translation. When used as a verb, "to calque" means to borrow a word or phrase from another language w ...
s from Russian that entered the language during the Soviet period. Each postposition governs (requires) a specific case of the noun, akin to the usage of prepositions in
German German(s) may refer to: * Germany (of or related to) ** Germania (historical use) * Germans, citizens of Germany, people of German ancestry, or native speakers of the German language ** For citizens of Germany, see also German nationality law **Ge ...
or
Latin Latin (, or , ) is a classical language belonging to the Italic branch of the Indo-European languages. Latin was originally a dialect spoken in the lower Tiber area (then known as Latium) around present-day Rome, but through the power of the ...
. Only one postposition governs the nominative case (''-vit'' "like"), and there are no postpositions that govern the ergative or the vocative cases. Here are some examples of postpositions: ¹ The postposition ''-vit'' could also take the dative case in its elongated form (with an insertion of ''-a-'' in between the case suffix and the postposition). ² In the usage of postposition ''-shi'' the dative case suffix ''-s'' is dropped. ³ In the usage of postposition ''-mde'' the adverbial case suffix ''-d'' is dropped. 4 In the usage of postposition ''-dan'' the instrumental case suffix ''-t'' is dropped.


Examples

The Georgian nominal has a series of morpheme slots that must be filled in a specific order: :''noun root + plural suffix + case suffix (+ postposition)''


Verbal system

The Georgian verbal system is extremely complex, especially when compared to those of most Indo-European languages. Rather than using the terms "tense", "aspect", "mood", etc. separately, linguists prefer to use the term "
screeve Screeve is a term of grammatical description in traditional Georgian grammars that roughly corresponds to tense–aspect–mood marking in the Western grammatical tradition. It derives from the Georgian word ''mts’k’rivi'' (მწკრივ ...
" to distinguish between different time frames and moods of the verbal system. A screeve is a set of six verb forms inflected for person and number. Verbs are traditionally divided into four classes:
transitive verb A transitive verb is a verb that accepts one or more objects, for example, 'cleaned' in ''Donald cleaned the window''. This contrasts with intransitive verbs, which do not have objects, for example, 'panicked' in ''Donald panicked''. Transiti ...
s,
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, verbs with no transitive counterparts (medial verbs) and indirect verbs. There are numerous
irregular verb A regular verb is any verb whose conjugation follows the typical pattern, or one of the typical patterns, of the language to which it belongs. A verb whose conjugation follows a different pattern is called an irregular verb. This is one instanc ...
s in Georgian, but they all belong to one of these classes. Each class uses different strategies to build the verb complex, with irregular verbs employing somewhat different formations.


Verb classes


Transitive verbs (Class 1 verbs)

Class 1 verbs generally have a subject and a direct object. Some examples are "eat", "kill" and "receive". This class also includes causatives (the equivalent of "make someone do something") and the causative verbal form of adjectives (for example, "make someone deaf"). There are a few verbs in Class 3 that behave like transitive verbs of Class 1 in terms of their conjugations, such as ''sneeze'' and ''cough'' (see below).


Intransitive verbs (Class 2 verbs)

Intransitive verbs only have a subject and no direct object (though a few govern an indirect object marked simply with the dative case). Most verbs in this class have a subject that does not perform or control the action of the verb (for example, "die", "happen"). The passive voice of Class 1 transitive verbs belong in this class too, for example "be eaten", "be killed" and "be received". In addition, the verbal form of adjectives also have their intransitive counterparts: the intransitive verb for the adjective "deaf" is "to become deaf".


Medial verbs (Class 3 verbs)

Verbs in Class 3 are usually intransitive verbs, but unlike Class 2 verbs, they mark their subject using the ergative case. Most verbs of motion (such as "swim" and "roll") and verbs about weather (such as "rain" and "snow") belong to this class. Although these verbs are described as not having transitive counterparts (such as "cry"), some of them still have direct objects, such as "learn" and "study". Verbs that are derived from loan words also belong to this class. The intransitive verbs in Classes 2 and 3, when taken together, seem to be conjugated differently based on a form of ''active alignment'' (see the section on
morphosyntactic alignment In linguistics, morphosyntactic alignment is the grammatical relationship between arguments—specifically, between the two arguments (in English, subject and object) of transitive verbs like ''the dog chased the cat'', and the single argument ...
).


Indirect verbs (Class 4 verbs)

Verbs that convey the meaning of emotion and prolonged state belong to this class. The verbs "want" and "can" also belong to this class. Other common examples of Class 4 verbs are "sleep", "miss", "envy" and "believe". These verbs typically mark the subject with the dative and the object with the nominative.


Stative verbs

Stative verbs do not constitute a class ''per se'', but rather refer to a state, and their conjugations are very similar to those of indirect verbs. For example, when one says, "the picture is hanging on the wall", the equivalent of "hang" is a stative verb.


Irregular verbs

There are numerous irregular verbs in Georgian; most of them employ the conjugation system of Class 2 intransitive verbs. Irregular verbs use different stems in different screeves, and their conjugations deviate from the conjugations of regular intransitive verbs. Some irregular verbs are: "be", "come", "say", "tell" and "give".


Screeves

There are three series of ''
screeve Screeve is a term of grammatical description in traditional Georgian grammars that roughly corresponds to tense–aspect–mood marking in the Western grammatical tradition. It derives from the Georgian word ''mts’k’rivi'' (მწკრივ ...
s'' in Georgian: first, second and third series. The first series has two subseries, which are called the present and the future subseries. The second series is also called the aorist series, and the third series is called the
perfective The perfective aspect ( abbreviated ), sometimes called the aoristic aspect, is a grammatical aspect that describes an action viewed as a simple whole; i.e., a unit without interior composition. The perfective aspect is distinguished from the i ...
series. There are a total of eleven screeves. The present indicative is used to express an event at the time of speaking ("S/he is ''verb''ing"). It is also used to indicate an event that happens habitually ("S/he ''verb''s"). The imperfect screeve is used to express an incomplete or continuous action in the past ("S/he was ''verb''ing"). It is also used to indicate a habitual past action (i.e. "S/he (regularly/often/sometimes) ''verb''ed", "S/he would ''verb''", "S/he ''used to verb''"). The present subjunctive screeve is used to express an unlikely event in the present and is usually used as a relative clause ("That s/he ''be verb''ing"). The future screeve is used to express an event that will take place in the future ("S/he ''will verb''"). The conditional screeve is used together with ''if'' ("S/he ''would verb'' or "S/he ''would have verb''ed"). The future subjunctive screeve is used to express an unlikely event in the future and is usually used as a dependent clause. The aorist screeve is used to indicate an action that took place in the past ("S/he ''verb''ed"). It is also used in imperatives (''Verb''!). The optative screeve has many uses: *In negative imperatives ("Do not ''verb''!"). * In obligations ("S/he must ''verb''"). * In hypothetical conditions ("If s/he ''verb''ed (optative), X would happen (conditional)"). * In exhortations ("Let's ''verb''"). The present perfect screeve is used to indicate an action, which the speaker did not witness ("S/he has ''verb''ed"). The pluperfect screeve is used to indicate an action which happened before another event ("S/he had ''verb''ed"). The perfect subjunctive screeve is mostly for wishes ("May s/he ''verb''!").


Verb components

Georgian is an agglutinating language. Agglutination means that affixes each express a single meaning, and they usually do not merge with each other or affect each other phonologically. Each verb screeve is formed by adding a number of prefixes and suffixes to the verb stem. Certain affix categories are limited to certain screeves. In a given screeve, not all possible markers are obligatory. The components of a Georgian verb form occur in the following order:


Preverb

Preverbs can add either directionality or an arbitrary meaning to the verb. To this extent they resemble the derivational prefixes of Slavic verbs. For example, while ''mi-vdivar'' means "I am going", ''mo-vdivar'' means "I am coming". Preverbs appear in the future, past and perfective screeves; they are generally absent in the present screeves. Preverbs indicating direction and orientation.


Verb personality

One, two or three
grammatical person In linguistics, grammatical person is the grammatical distinction between deictic references to participant(s) in an event; typically the distinction is between the speaker ( first person), the addressee ( second person), and others ( third pe ...
s can be indicated in the Georgian verb. The performer of an action is called the subject or the agent, and affected persons are patients or objects (indirect or direct). The category of number (singular or plural) is also indicated. To indicate subjects and objects the special markers are used, which are listed in the following tables. The S2 and O3 marker ''h-'' evolved from earlier ''x-,'' which was first attested in the 5th century. The ''h'' variant appears for the first time in the Tsqisi (წყისი) inscription (616–619 y.y.) and from the second half of the 8th century it becomes predominant. From the 9th century the ''h → s'' transformation is documented before the dental stops (''d, ṭ, t'') and affricates (''ʒ, ċ, c, ǯ, č', č''). In Modern Georgian before vowels the ''h-'' marker vanishes. In general, in Modern Georgian the S2 and O3 ''h-/s-'' prefixes have a tendency to fade away. The oldest S2 ''x-'' is preserved with three verbal stems: *''ar'' "to be" → ''xar'' "you are" *''ved/vid'' "to come/go" → ''mo-x-ved-i'' "you came", mo-x-vid-odi "you would come" *''val'' "to come/go" → ''mo-x-val'' "you will come" Here is presented subject markers' usage example: In the case of ''v-ts'er-t'', ''ts'ert'', and ''ts'er-en'', the -''t'' and -''en'' are the subject plurality markers. Here is presented object markers' usage example" In the case of ''g-i-nd-a-t'' and ''u-nd-a-t'', the -''t'' is the plural marker. Georgian's polypersonalism allows the involvement of as many as three action participants to be expressed unambiguously within a single word. For example, while it takes at least four words to say "I wrote them it" in English ("I" being the subject, "it" being the direct object, "them" being the indirect object), in Georgian this can be said in one word: ''davuts'ere''.


Version marker

Right after the nominal marker can come a "version" marker. Phonologically, version markers consist of any one of the vowels except for /o/. Version markers are semantically diverse. They can add either an unpredictable lexical meaning to the verb, or a functional meaning including causativity, passive voice, subjective version, objective version and locative version. For example, while ''v-ts'er'' means "I write it", ''v-u-ts'er'' means "I write it to him/her" (objective version), ''v-a-ts'er'' means "I write it on him/her" (locative version), and ''v-i-ts'er'' means "I write it (for myself)" (subjective version).


Verb root

The length of the verb root typically ranges from one to seven phonemes, with the longest root consisting of 15. Some consist of consonants only. The common root of the verbs meaning 'open', 'receive', 'take', and 'take a picture' is ''-gh-''. "Lexical derivation" (or "word formation") is accomplished through the use of preverbs, version markers, and thematic suffixes. Some derivations of ''-gh-'' are seen in the sentences ''mi-v-i-gh-e ts'erili'', 'I received the letter' and ''ga-a-gh-eb k'ars'', 'you will open the door' (derivational affixes are bolded).


Passive marker

In Georgian, two morphological means of converting a transitive verb to an intransitive verb (or to passive voice) are to add -''d''- to the end of the verb root or to add the version marker -''i''- (see the discussion of version markers elsewhere in this article). Respective examples: ''ga-a-ts'itl-e'', 'you made him blush' ( -''ts'itl''- is the root of ''ts'iteli'', 'red') > ''ga-ts'itl-d-i'', 'you blushed'; class 2 verb ''da-v-bad-eb'', 'I will give birth to him/her', > ''da-v-i-bad-eb-i'', 'I will be born' (the -''i''- at the end of the verb is the suffixal nominal marker obligatory with intransitive verbs (see below)).


Thematic suffix

The language has eight kinds of thematic suffixes (also sometimes known as present-future stem formants or PFSF). The suffixes are ''-eb-, -ev-'', ''-av-'', ''-am-'', ''-i-'', ''-ob-'', ''-op-'', and ''-Ø-.'' When the suffixal passive marker is absent, one of these suffixes can be placed right after the root of the verb. With these suffixes the verbs gain arbitrary meanings. Thematic suffixes are present in the present and future screeves, but are absent in the past and mostly absent in the perfective screeves. For example, the root of the verb "build" is -''shen''-. In order to say "I am building", we have to add the thematic suffix -''eb''- to the end of the root: ''v-a-shen-eb'' (''v''- meaning that the doer is the first person (''v''- set nominal marker), ''a'' is the versioner, ''shen'' is the root, and ''eb'' is the thematic suffix). To say "he/she is building", we simply add the suffixal nominal marker -''s'' after the thematic suffix: ''a-shen-eb-s''.


Causative marker

In English, causativity is predominantly expressed syntactically, by the phrase, 'make someone ''verb, whereas in Georgian it is expressed morphologically. The causative marker obligatorily coöccurs with the version marker ''-a-''. There is no single causative marker in Georgian. To ditransitivize an already transitive verb, one uses ''in-eb'' or rarely ''ev'': ch'am, 'you eat' > ''a-ch'Øm-ev'', 'you make him eat / You are feeding him', with the syncope of the root.


Imperfective marker

This marker (-''d''- for class 1 verbs, ''-od''- for class 2 verbs) are used to build the imperfective, present and future subjunctive and conditional screeves: ''v-a-shen-eb'', 'I am building' > ''v-a-shen-eb-d-i'', 'I was building" (the additional -''i''- at the end of the verb is the suffixal nominal marker); ''v-ts'er'', 'I am writing' > ''v-ts'er-d-i'', 'I was writing' (as the verb "write" does not have a thematic suffix, the imperfective marker is added right after the verb root).


Suffixal nominal marker

The transitive verbs (which employ the ''v''- set) use the suffixal nominal marker -''s''- (as in ''a-shen-eb-s'', ''ts'er-s'') for the third person singular in present and future screeves. Intransitive verbs, the past and perfective screeves of the transitive and medial verbs, and indirect verbs, employ sets of vowels: in the indicative, ''i'' (strong) or ''e'' (weak) for the first/second person, ''o'' or ''a'' for the third person; in the subjunctive, the suffixal nominal marker is the same for all persons, generally ''e'' or ''o'' or, less frequently, ''a''.  The aorist intransitive form ''avashene'', 'I built', has the structure, ''a-v-a-shen-Ø-e'', characterized by preverb ''-a-'' and weak suffixal nominal marker ''-e-''.


Auxiliary verb

The auxiliary verb is only used in the present indicative and perfective screeves of indirect verbs and in the perfective screeve of transitive verbs when the direct object is first or second person(s) (these are situations, where the ''m''- set is used for the subject of the verb, and, therefore, ''v''- set is used to indicate the direct object). The auxiliary verb is the same verb as ''to be'' in present screeve. The verb ''to be'' for the singular persons are: ''Me var'' ("''I am''"), ''Shen xar'' ("''You are''") and ''Is aris/ars (as an auxiliary verb shortened version a is used)'' ("he/she/it is"). For example, ''miq'vars'' means "I love him/her" (the ''s'' at the end of the verb indicating that it is the third person whom the speaker loves). In order to say "I love you", the ''s'' at the end has to be replaced with ''xar'' (as, now, the direct object is the second person): ''miq'var-xar'' ("I love you"), ''mq'varebi-a'' ("I have loved him/her").


Plural marker

Depending on which set of nominal markers is employed, the appropriate plural suffix is added. It can refer to either subject or object. An example of referring to objects would be ''miq'var-xar-t'' ("I love you (plural)") and miq'var-a-n' ("I love them").


Auxiliary verbs

In addition to the possible auxiliary verb in the verb complex, there are also separate ones. Just as in English, Georgian language has the auxiliary verbs, such as ''want'', ''must (have to)'' and ''can''. * The verb ''ndoma'' ("to want") is conjugated just like any other class 4 verbs. In order to say, "to want ''to do something''", one can use either the infinitive form of the verb (''masdari'') or the optative screeve. * The verb ''unda'' ("must") is not conjugated. However, just like the verb ''want'', it uses the optative screeve in "must ''do something''." In order to say "had to," one, again, uses the same word ''unda'', but with the pluperfect screeve. * The verb ''shedzleba'' ("can") is a class 4 verb, and thus conjugated accordingly. Just like the verb ''want'', it uses either the optative screeve or the infinitive form of the verb. In order to say "will be able to" and "could," the future and the aorist screeves are used respectively. The negation of "can" in Georgian is established with a special negation particle ''ver'' which, when used, contains the meaning "cannot," and, thus, the verb ''shedzleba'' is not used with it (see the negation section of Syntax for more details).


Syntax


Word order

Word order in Georgian is not very strict. One common sentence structure features the sequence ''subject – indirect object – direct object – verb''. For example, the sentence "I am writing a letter to my mother" can be expressed as follows (the glosses use the abbreviations NOM = nominative case, DAT = dative case, PRES = present screeve): This sentence could also occur with the constituent order ''subject – verb – direct object – indirect object''. Since the verb encodes information about all these arguments, any of them can always be dropped (see
pro-drop A pro-drop language (from "pronoun-dropping") is a language where certain classes of pronouns may be omitted when they can be pragmatically or grammatically inferable. The precise conditions vary from language to language, and can be quite int ...
,
null subject In linguistic typology, a null-subject language is a language whose grammar permits an independent clause to lack an explicit subject (grammar), subject; such a clause is then said to have a null subject. In the principles and parameters framew ...
). It is not uncommon for pronoun arguments to be dropped.


Questions


Yes/No questions

The only way in which an utterance is marked as a yes/no question is by altering the intonation of a statement sentence: the pitch rises towards the end of the sentence. For example: :''Chemtan ertad moxval'', 'you will come with me' :''Chemtan ertad moxval?'', 'will you come with me?'


Tag questions

Those tag questions which expect an affirmative answer may employ the particle ''xom'' in second position within the sentence. Comparing statement, yes/no question, and tag question expecting an affirmative answer: :''Dghes k'argi amindia'', 'The weather is good today' :''Dghes k'argi amindia?'', 'is the weather good today?' :''Dghes xom k'argi amindia?'', 'the weather is good today, isn't it?' These sentences contain an ''-a'' suffixed to the word ''amindi'' 'weather'. It is a reduced form of the verb ''aris'', 'is'. The tag question in Georgian does not include any of the three recognized negative particles (see subsection, "Negation"); the particle ''xom'' by itself conveys the meaning. However, if the answer expected is negative, then a negative particle and the full form ''aris'' are added right after ''xom'': :''Dghes xom ar aris k'argi amindi?'', 'the weather is not good today, is it?' There is a particle, ''tu'', which can be used to make a question more polite. The particle ''tu'' has many meanings in Georgian; in this context it cannot be exactly translated to English. Compare: :''Chai ginda?'', 'do you want some tea?' :''Chai tu ginda?'', 'would you like some tea?'


Interrogatives

Interrogative adjectives and interrogative pronouns are declined differently. An example of an interrogative adjective in English is ''which'', as in "''which'' city do you like the most?", while an example of an interrogative pronoun ''which'' is in the sentence "''which'' (one) will you take?". Interrogative pronouns in questions have a strict word order: they appear immediately pre-verbally. For example: :''sad ts'avida nino?'' :where went Nino :'Where did Nino go?' Some interrogative pronouns in Georgian are:


Negation

There are three kinds of negation particles in Georgian: ''ar'', 'not', ''ver'', 'cannot', and ''nu'', 'do not!. ''Ar'' is the chief one. ''Ver'' is only used to indicate that the grammatical subject of the sentence is not able to carry out an action. ''Nu'' is only used when giving negative commands. Examples: :''Tsasvla ar minda'', 'I do not want to go' :''Ver movedi'', 'I could not come' :''Nu nerviulob!'', 'don't worry!' These three particles can be modified with the suffix ''-ghar'', to create particles meaning 'no longer, no more': :''ar'', 'not' → ''aghar'', 'no longer, not anymore' :''ver'', 'cannot' → ''veghar'', 'can no longer, cannot anymore' :''nu'', 'do not' → ''nughar'', 'do no longer, do not anymore' Examples of the use of these derived negative words: :''Pexburts aghar vtamashob'', 'I do not play football anymore' :''Veghar vch'am'', 'I cannot eat anymore' :''Nughar iparav!'', 'do not steal anymore!'


See also

* Georgian language *
Georgian verb paradigm For non-native speakers, verb conjugation in Georgian remains a difficult subject even for those who have been studying the language for a while. This is because verbs in Georgian do not tend to conform to a "universal" conjugation system like in ...
*
Polypersonal agreement In linguistics, polypersonal agreement or polypersonalism is the agreement of a verb with more than one of its arguments (usually up to four). Polypersonalism is a morphological feature of a language, and languages that display it are called p ...
*
Agglutinative language An agglutinative language is a type of synthetic language with morphology that primarily uses agglutination. Words may contain different morphemes to determine their meanings, but all of these morphemes (including stems and affixes) tend to r ...
* Active–stative language


References

* Aronson, Howard I. 1990. ''Georgian : a reading grammar''. Corrected edition. Columbus, Ohio: Slavica Publishers. * Harris, Alice C. & Smeets, Rieks (eds.) 1996. ''The languages of the Caucasus : indigenous languages and their speakers''. Edinburgh University Press. * * * * * Kurtsikidze, Shorena. 2006. ''Essentials of Georgian Grammar With Conjugation Tables of 250 Most Commonly Used Verbs''. Lincom Europa. * Tschenkéli, Kita. 1958. ''Einführung in die georgische Sprache''. 2 vols. Zürich: Amirani Verlag. * Tschenkéli, Kita. 1965–1974. ''Georgisch-Deutsch Wörterbuch'', 3 vols. Zürich: Amirani Verlag. *


External links


Georgian Verb ConjugatorReference grammar of Georgian
written by Howard Aronson (SEELRC, Duke University)
Online Georgian Grammar by P. J. Hillery
(mirror copy) {{Language grammars