Pig Latin/Lessons/3: Basic Verbs
Main Concept
[edit | edit source]NAPL-folk are a skittish people, yet they are blunt, direct, and hate unnecessary complexity. Because of this, a ruffle common in other languages like Spanish, French, et. al., irregulary conjugations are not present in NAPL. Conjugations of NAPL are very standard-- there is only one exception to the standard conjugation, in fact. That's the word "to be" (covered next lesson). To keep ambiguity to a minimum and time spent talking short, conjugations signify both time and actor. The when and the who-done-it, all you'd need to solve a closed-circuit murder-mystery.
The conjugations are as follows:
Actor | Past | Present | Future |
---|---|---|---|
Me | -āyu | -ayu | -iyu |
You | -āyā | -ayā | -iyā |
He/She/They | -āyi | -ayi | -iyi |
They | -āyī | -ayī | -iyī |
We | -āyo | -ayo | -iyo |
There are five more conjugations:
- Hypothetical (if they ran, etc.): -uyu
- Imperative (run away!,etc.): -ōyu
- Imperfect (he was/will finishing, etc.): -(past/future conjugation)i
- Infinitive (referring to an action): -ō
Examples
[edit | edit source]He runs: unrayi [unrō, minus infinitive (ō), plus tense (a), plus actor (i)]
She will run: unriyi [unrō, minus infinitive (ō), plus tense (i), plus actor (i)]
They (1) had run: unrāyi [unrō, minus infinitive (ō), plus tense (ā), plus actor (i)]
They (2+) was running/used to run: unrāyii [unrō, minus infinitive (ō), plus tense (ā), plus actor (i), plus imperfect (i)]
We ran: unrāyo [unrō, minus infinitive (ō), plus tense (ā), plus actor (o)]
Vocabulary
[edit | edit source]Here are some common verbs in the infinitive form:
- unrō: to run
- ētō: to eat
- ilkō: to kill
- ītfō: to fight
- ēdnō: to need
- āntōuō: to want
- uvlō: to love
- athō: to hate
- iklō: to like
- ōurītō: to write
- līfō: to fly
- ivlō: to live
- akmō: to make
- kukō: to cook
- akbō: to bake
- īndfō: to find
- itgō: to get
Now for some common nouns and prepositions:
- omhay: home
- erťāy: there
- ōurkay: work
- ātťay: that
Exercises
[edit | edit source]NAPL to English
[edit | edit source]Translate the following into English:
- Itgiyā ātťay.
- Īāy rendfay ustjāy ilkāyā rāndmutrgay.
- Ēōāy āmradkay akbiyi īnfāy!
- Ilkāyui āmrādokay.
- Ēdnijā īndfō ōurkay.
- Makayī ōurkay erťāy.
Don't scroll down any more until you try to answer the questions!
Answers I
[edit | edit source]- You will get that.
- My friend just killed grandmother.
- Your comrade will bake finely!
- I was killing comrade.
- You will need to find work.
- They make work there.
English to NAPL
[edit | edit source]Translate these into NAPL:
- I eat that.
- I had ran to work.
- There, I found you.
- I like you... Well, I love you.
- I need to fly there.
Don't scroll down any more until you try to answer the questions!
Answers II
[edit | edit source]- Ētayu ātťay.
- Unrāyu.
- Īndfāyu erťāy ēō.
- Īklayu ēō... Ōuelay, uvlayu ēō.
- Ēdnayu erťāy līfō .