Miskito/Lesson 8
Miskitu Aisas! Miskito Language Course | |||
Lesson 7 | 8 | Anira auma ki? | |
> Next | |||
Contents | Where are you going? | ||
Go, come, know and want
[edit | edit source]Study |
What do they mean?
KARLA: Where are you going? MARIA: I am going to the village. KARLA: I am going there too. Are you coming with me to the shop? MARIA: Yes, I'm coming with you. KARLA: What do you want from the shop? Do you know? MARIA: I don't know... I want food. My mother is coming to the house today. Do you know my mother? KARLA: Yes, I know your mother well! |
KARLA: Anira auma ki? MARIA: Tawan ra auna. KARLA: Yang sin bahara auna. Yang wal sap ra aulma? MARIA: Au, man wal aulna. KARLA: Sap wina dia want sma? Nu sma ki? MARIA: Nu apia sna... Plun want sna. Naiwa yaptiki utla ra aula. Yaptiki ra nu sma ki? KARLA: Au, yaptikam ra pain nu sna! |
Practice | Fill in the blank using the correct form of the verb given: |
|
|
Answers
|
Present tense forms of the irregular verbs waia go and balaia come:
waia to go | balaia to come | ||
1 |
auna |
aulna | |
2 |
auma |
aulma | |
3, yawan |
auya |
aula |
A few common compound verbs have kaia to be as their second component, the first component being an English loan word. The present tense of three of these are shown here:
nu kaia to know | want kaia to want | laik kaia to like | |||
1 |
nu sna |
want sna |
laik sna | ||
2 |
nu sma |
want sma |
laik sma | ||
3, yawan |
nu sa |
want sa |
laik sa |
The negative
[edit | edit source]Study |
What do they mean?
KARLA: Is your father coming too? MARIA: No, he isn't coming. He is going to stay at home. KARLA: What are you going to buy in the shop? Do you want fish? MARIA: I'm not buying fish. My mother doesn't like fish. She doesn't eat fish. She only eats chicken. KARLA: Do you have any chickens at home? MARIA: No, I haven't got any chickens. |
KARLA: Aisikam sin aula ki? MARIA: Apia, witin balras sa. Witin utla ra takaskaisa. KARLA: Man sap ra dia atkaisma? Inska want sma ki? MARIA: Inska atkras sna. Yaptiki inska laik apia sa. Witin inska piras. Kalila wîna baman pisa. KARLA: Utla ra kalila kum kum brisma ki? MARIA: Apia, yang kalila kum sin briras. |
Practice | Make negative: |
|
|
Answers
|
As we saw earlier, the form of verbs in -ras is a negative participle. The various tenses and persons can be expressed in the negative by placing the corresponding form of kaia after -ras, so for example the negative present tense of daukaia to do (next to the affirmative for comparison) is:
AFFIRMATIVE | NEGATIVE | |
1 |
daukisna |
daukras sna |
2 |
daukisma |
daukras sma |
3, yawan |
daukisa |
daukras sa |
We can also use other tenses of kaia to form the corresponding negative tenses. However, the auxiliary kaia may be omitted leaving just the -ras-form; the intended person and tense must then be inferred from the context.
- Remember: kaia itself has no -ras-form; apia is placed in front of the affirmative forms to make them negative: apia sna/sma/sa. The same holds for compounds with kaia such as want kaia, nu kaia etc.: want apia sna and so on.
- The verbs piaia eat and briaia have belong to a special class: present pisna, brisna etc., negative priras, briras.
Past forms
[edit | edit source]Study |
What do they mean?
|
|
Practice | Put in the past tense, using the imperfect if possible: |
|
|
Answers
|
As for the past tense, for now we shall limit ourselves to the third person, which as we know ends in -an in most verbs: pulan, atkan, kaikan etc. This may be called the simple past. There is also a compound past tense, the imperfect, formed by placing the past tense of kaia (kan in the third person) after the i-participle: puli kan, atki kan, kaiki kan.
- The i-form of verbs is already familiar to you as the base of the present tense of regular verbs, so if you remove the ending -sa from the present pulisa what you are left with is the verb's i-form: puli.
The imperfect can often be translated by was playing, was buying etc. (or by the imperfect tense in Spanish, French etc., if you know a Romance language: thus puli kan is equivalent to jugaba, jouait and so on). The imperfect usually expresses an ongoing activity whereas the simple past expresses a specific act. The negative past is formed as you would now expect: the verb's -ras-form plus the past of kaia (kan in the third person): pulras kan. But once again, the auxiliary may be omitted: pulras.
- Compound kaia-verbs (want kaia, nu kaia etc.) form the past, as we would expect, using the past of kaia, e.g. want kan wanted, nu kan knew, want apia kan didn't want etc.
Vocabulary and review
[edit | edit source]
Vocabulary
| ||
v
have
n
fish
n
chicken
cpd n
chicken meat
|
cpd v
like
adv
today
cpd v
know
v
eat
|
v
stay
cpd v
want
|
Say in Miskito:
Review
I am not going to school today.
(Yang) naiwa skul ra waras (sna). Today I am staying at home with my mother.
Naiwa utla ra yaptiki wal takaskisna. The children went to school yesterday.
Tuktan nani skul ra nahwala wan. I am going to town.
Tawan ra auna. What do you want from the shop?
Sap wina dia want sma? My father knew your father.
Aisiki aisikam ra nu kan. Do you like chicken?
(Man) kalila wîna laik sma? Where are you going to cook the food?
Plun ba anira piakaisma ki? I don't know.
Nu apia sna. He didn't eat the fish.
Inska ba priras kan. |
Lesson 7 | |
> Next | |
Contents |