Verbs Awara
verbs can be split into two subcategories, ones that take inflectional affixes and ones that do not. Most verbs do take inflectional affixes. The only verbs that do not take the inflectional affixes are the existential verbs
käyä 'exist' and
wenä 'not exist'. Wa sade miting-u käyä this Sunday meeting-TOP exist 'This Sunday there is a meeting.' Normally existential verbs stand alone as the
predicate but ti 'be' can be used with them to support tense or switch-reference. Moyo yiwit-na, nax-u wenä ti-wik withoutStay-1P.DSfood=Top not.exist be-3s.FUT 'If we do nothing (lit. If we stay without doing anything) there will not be food.'
Derivational Verb Stem Morphology "Awara has three means for deriving verb stems: lexical compounding, benefactive compounding, and forming verbs from nouns via the addition of derivational suffix -la 'become'." Lexical compounding uses the two types of compounds in Awara: noun-verb and verb-verb compounds. Noun-verb compounds refer to what is used to perform the action or what happens to the object. Verb-verb compounds describe two actions that occur. The latter type commonly includes the verb
ä 'take' followed by a motion verb such as
apu 'come'.
Noun-Verb compound A=lut-de-ke nä-ka-ying=unin. PRFOC=nail-detach-ss.PF eat-p.DIFF-23P.PRES=INDIV 'They picked them with the fingernails and eat them (breadfruit).
Verb-Verb compound Yanggä kalux=u t-äjapu na-m-Ø. water new=TOP S.O-take-come 1S.O-give-2S.IMM 'Bring some cold (fresh) water and give it to me. Benefactive compounding uses the verb
mi 'give', which usually follows another verb. This verb can also change to
gatäp which means 'help' making it function as a benefactive.
Benefactive compound hängä ngäkge-kän gata-ni-mi-ngga-k. thing much-only help-1P.O-give-s.DiPF-3s.PRES '... he helps us with many things' Other verbs use
la 'become' as a suffix, as which it is pronounced in four different ways:
la, ta, da, and ka. These different forms are used in specific instances: "la is used after a vowel, ka is used after underlying velars, ta is used after an underlying /t/ or /n/, and da is used after consonants." A-xupi-ta-ngga-k. PRFOC-angry-become-s.DIPF-3s.PRES 'He is angry.' == Syntax ==