3. MORPHOLOGY
Case Noun + Marker
Masculine Feminine
Sg Pl Sg Pl
Direct laD,ka laD,ko laD,kI laD,ikyaaÐ
larka: larke larki: larkiyã:
Oblique laD,ko laD,kaoM laD,kI laD,ikyaaoM
larke larkõ larki: larkiyõ
Vocative Aao o/ ho he/ Aro are laD,ko larke Oh boy
Aao o/ ho he/ Aro are laD,kao larko Oh boys
e e/ ho he/ Aro are laD,kI larki: Oh girl
e e/ ho he/ Aro are laD,ikyaao larkiyo Oh girls
Case-suffixes followed by postpositions indicate various
relationships between the noun phrases and the verb phrases.
3.1.2. Postpositions
Postpositions have specific semantic functions. They express the
semantic dimensions of a noun such as benefaction, manner, or
location. The main postpositions are: nao ne ‘ergative marker’; kao ko
‘to’; ko ilae ke liye ‘for’; pr par ‘on’; maoM mẽ ‘in’; sao se ‘from’; sao se
‘with’; ka /ko /kI ka/ke/ki: ‘of’.’ The postpositions are written as
separate words with nouns (Aimat nao amit ne, ]maa kao uma: ko), but they
are tagged to pronouns (maOMnao m ́~ne ]sakao usko, iksaka kiska:).
3.1.2.1. The Postposition nao ne
The postposition nao ne is used with subject noun phrases usually with
the transitive verbs in the past tense. The verb agrees with the object.
- maOMnao p~ ilaKa.
m ́~ne patr likha:
I-erg letter wrote
I wrote a letter.
1a. maOMnao p~ ilaKa.
m ́~ patr likha: