Yiddish morphology

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Yiddish morphology is the morphology of the Yiddish language. It bears many similarities to that of German and has received some influence from Slavic languages.

Contents

[edit] Articles

The definite article agrees in gender, number, and case with the noun it is used with.

Masculine Neuter Feminine Plural
Nominative דער der דאָס dos די di די di
Accusative דעם dem דאָס dos די di די di
Dative דעם dem דעם dem דער der די di

The indefinite article is אַן an before a word beginning with a vowel and אַ a everywhere else.

[edit] Gender

Yiddish nouns are divided into three classes, or genders - masculine (zokher), feminine (nekeyve) and neuter (neytral). On the whole, gender is assigned to nouns arbitrarily, though there are some regularities. Nouns denoting specifically male humans and animals are usually masculine, and nouns denoting specifically female humans and animals are usually feminine; nouns ending in an unstressed schwa are usually feminine. Nouns built on most of the common abstract-noun suffixes, such as -ung and -hayt, are feminine; diminutive nouns with the suffix -l are neuter in the standard language. Loanwords are generally assigned masculine gender by default unless they end in a schwa, in which case they are usually feminine.

[edit] Nominals

Adjectives, but not most nouns, are inflected for case as well as gender and number. While attributive adjectives—that is, those that directly modify a noun—are inflected to agree with the noun in number, gender, and case, predicate adjectives remain uninflected. For example, one says der guter man 'the good man' with the adjective guter inflected for masculine singular nominative, but Der man iz gut 'The man is good,' with no suffix on gut. When an adjective is used absolutively—that is, to stand as the head of a noun phrase as if it were itself a noun—its ending changes as if it were followed by a noun: Der man iz a guter 'The man is a good [one].' Neuter singular attributive adjectives have no case ending unless their noun phrase is introduced by the definite article.

Masculine Neuter Feminine Plural
Definite Absolutive
Nominative גוטער guter גוטע gute גוטס guts גוטע gute גוטע gute
Accusative גוטן gutn גוטע gute גוטס guts גוטע gute גוטע gute
Dative גוטן gutn גוטן gutn גוטער guter גוטע gute

The -n ending becomes -en after a vowel, m, ng, or nk; and it becomes -em after n.

A class of pronominal adjectives, including eyn 'one', keyn 'none', and possessives such as mayn 'my, mine' and zayn 'his', display behavior opposite to that of ordinary adjectives: they are inflected for number, gender, and case when used predicatively but not when used attributively. (Absolutively, they behave the same as normal adjectives.)

[edit] Pronouns

First Person Second Person Third Person
Singular Plural Singular Plural Masculine Neuter Feminine Plural
Nominative איך ikh מיר mir דו du איר ir ער er עס es זי zi זײ zey
Accusative מיך mikh אונדז undz דיך dikh אײַך aykh אים im עס es זי zi זײ zey
Dative מיר mir אונדז undz דיר dir אײַך aykh אים im אים im איר ir זײ zey

Third person pronouns must agree in gender with the noun they refer to. Thus even inanimate objects are sometimes referred to as er or zi if they are masculine or feminine respectively. Neuter nouns receive es.

[edit] Verbs

Like most Germanic languages, Yiddish employs V2 word order: the second constituent of any clause must be the finite verb, regardless of whether the first constituent is the subject, an adverb, or some other topicalized element. However, Yiddish is unusual among Germanic languages in that it employs V2 syntax in both main clauses and subordinate clauses: apart from Icelandic, other Germanic languages only employ V2 syntax in main clauses.

[edit] Conjugation

Yiddish verbs are conjugated for person and number. The present tense of verbs is conjugated thus:

קױפֿן koyfn 'buy' פֿאַרלירן farlirn 'lose'
איך ikh קױף koyf פֿאַרליר farlir
דו du קױפֿסט koyfst פֿאַרלירסט farlirst
ער er/זי zi/עס es קױפֿט koyft פֿאַרלירט farlirt
מיר mir קױפֿן koyfn פֿאַרלירן farlirn
איר ir קױפֿט koyft פֿאַרלירט farlirt
זײ zey קױפֿן koyfn פֿאַרלירן farlirn

Like other varieties of High German, Yiddish has ceased to use the inflected past tense (preterite) entirely, and the perfect tense, constructed periphrastically with forms of האָבן hobn 'have' (or זײַן zayn 'be') and the past participle of the verb, has taken over its function. Certain verbs will take האָבן 'hobn', while others will take זײַן 'zayn'. There is no way to tell which verbs take which auxiliary. Verbs taking hobn are more common, however; as a rule of thumb, those taking zayn are often verbs of motion. Hobn and zayn are conjugated irregularly:

האָבן hobn זײַן zayn
איך ikh האָב hob בין bin
דו du האָסט host ביסט bist
ער er/זי zi/עס es האָט hot איז iz
מיר mir האָבן hobn זײַנען zaynen
איר ir האָט hot זײַט zayt
זײ zey האָבן hobn זײַנען zaynen

For example, the past tense of איך קױף ikh koyf 'I buy' is איך האָב געקױפֿט ikh hob gekoyft, and the past tense of איך קום ikh kum 'I come' is איך בין געקומען ikh bin gekumen 'I came'.

[edit] Past participle

The past participle is used extensively in Yiddish. The majority of verbs (weak verbs) form the past participle with the addition of -גע ge- and ט- -t to the stem, e. g. געקױפֿט gekoyft 'bought.' However, there are also a group of verbs, called strong verbs, which form the past participle with -גע and נ- -n, accompanied by a vowel change, e. g. געהאָלפֿן geholfn 'helped' from the stem -העלפֿ helf- 'help.' The vowel change is unpredictable and simply must be learned.

The prefix -גע is omitted in past participles of verbs whose first syllable does not bear primary stress. There are two classes of verbs for which this happens: verbs with one of several unstressed stem prefixes, such as -פֿאַר far- or -באַ ba-; and verbs built on the stressed suffix יר- -ir, usually used for loanwords. Thus the past participles of פֿאַרקױפֿן farkoyfn 'sell' and אַבאָנירן abonirn 'subscribe' are, respectively, merely פֿאַרקױפֿט farkoyft and אַבאָנירט abonirt.

There is no way to tell from the infinitive whether a verb is strong or weak.

[edit] References

In other languages