Nouns Dakelh nouns are inflected for possession, including the
person and
number of the possessor.
Possession is marked by
prefixation as well, in some cases, as changes in the noun stem. Number is marked only on nouns denoting human beings and dogs, and these distinguish only singular and plural. Some dialects of Dakelh have no number distinctions in nouns at all. A noun has six basic personal possessive forms: Reading row-wise, these mean "my stick", "our stick", "your (1 person) stick", "your (two or more people) stick", "his/her/its stick", and "their stick". However, in some dialects, such as that of Stony Creek, there is a distinction between first person dual and first person plural possessors: In such dialects, while the 1d and 1p are distinct, the 1d is the same as the 2dp. There are five additional third person possessive forms: The areal form is used when the possessor is saliently areal, spatial, or an extent of time. The reflexive is used when the subject of the clause and the possessor are the same, whether singular or plural. The disjoint form is used when both subject and possessor are third person singular and are not the same. The plural disjoint form is used when the subject is third person plural, the possessor is third person singular, and the possessor is not one of the individuals in the subject group. The reciprocal form, meaning "each other's", was used into the early twentieth century but has since fallen out of use. The twelfth possessive form is almost always found on
inalienably possessed nouns. These are nouns that may not occur as words in their own right. In Dakelh, the great majority of such nouns are either body parts or kinship terms. For example, although we can abstract the stem from forms for "foot" such as ('my foot'), ('our feet'), and ('his foot'), by itself is not a word. It must either occur with a possessive prefix or as part of a compound, such as ('sock'). To refer to an inalienably possessed noun without specifying its owner, the indefinite possessive prefix is used. The approximate equivalent of "a foot" is therefore . To describe alienable possession of an inalienably possessed noun, the regular possessive forms are used with the indefinite form as a base rather than the bare stem. Thus, to say "my foot" if the foot is not your own foot but is, for example, a rabbit's foot, you would say . (The fact that the vowel is rather than is the result of a phonological rule that changes to immediately preceding in noun prefixes and in the disjunct zone of the verb.) Most Dakelh nouns do not have distinct singular and plural forms. How many items are under discussion may be inferred from context or may be specified by using a number or quantifier; otherwise, it remains ambiguous. With very limited exceptions, only nouns denoting human beings and dogs have distinct plural forms. The most common way of forming the plural is by adding the suffix . Thus, we have "man", "men", "Dakelh person", "Dakelh people". Nouns derived from verbs by adding the suffix form their plurals by replacing with . Thus we have "teacher", "teachers". A smaller but nonetheless considerable number of nouns take the plural suffix , e.g. "dog", "dogs". This is the usual way of making the plural of kinship terms, e.g. "our mother", "our mothers". The plural suffix is occasionally heard on kinship terms, but the suffix is more widely used and generally considered to be more correct. The plural of "dog" is invariably , never . In addition, there are a handful of nouns with irregular plurals: "wife" is also found with the more regular plural . is sometimes found with the double plural . "parent, ancestor" is also found with the undoubled plural . The exceptions to the statement that only nouns denoting human beings and dogs have distinct plurals are all nouns derived from verbs. The form of the underlying verb may vary with number in such a way as to create distinct number forms for the derived noun. Where the deverbal noun is derived by means of the agentive suffix the verb is almost invariably in the third person singular form, which is to say, not marked for number. Plurality in these forms is normally marked only by the use of the duo-plural agentive suffix in place of singular . Zero-derived agentive nouns may show plurality by means of subject markers. For example, "shaman" may be either , with an overt agentive suffix, but the zero-marked is more common. There are two plural forms: , with the duo-plural agentive suffix, and , in which the zero-marked form is based on the plural form of the verb. There are two other cases in which the underlying verb may lead to a number distinction in the derived nouns. One is when the verb is restricted in the number of its absolutive argument. For example, there are two verbs "to kill", one that takes a singular or dual object, another that takes a strictly plural object. Since the word "prey" is derived from "kill", there are a singular-dual form , based on the stem "kill one or two" and a plural form , based on the stem "kill three or more". The other case in which the underlying verb induces a number distinction in the derived noun is when the verb contains a prefix such as distributive . For example, "cross-road" has the duo-plural . Similarly, "rabbit trail" has the duo-plural . Such examples arise because the "noun" "road, trail" is really a verb and takes the distributive prefix. Even if a noun possesses a plural form, it is not necessary for it to take on the plural form in order to have a plural meaning. Indeed, there is a strong tendency to avoid overt marking of the plural if plurality is indicated in other ways, in particular, by an immediately following possessed noun. For example, the full form of "Dakelh language" is , literally "the words of the Dakelh people". Here consists of "Dakelh person with the plural suffix , and is the third person plural possessed form of "words". The plurality of the possessor is indicated by the use of the third person duo-plural possessive prefix instead of the third person singular . The form , in which is not overtly plural-marked, is much preferred.
Postpositions Most postpositions are inflected for their object in a manner closely resembling the marking of possession on nouns. The inflected forms are used when the object is not a full noun phrase. Here is the paradigm of "for": The postposition "by means of" is unusual in being uninflectable. At the other extreme, the postposition "together with" is always inflected, even when its object is an overt noun phrase. Whereas the reciprocal possessive form of nouns is obsolete, the reciprocal object of postpositions remains in common use. The form , for example, may be used in roughly the same contexts as the English phrase "for each other".
Verbs The Dakelh verb is extremely complex. A single verb may have hundreds of thousands of forms. Verbs are marked for the
person and number of the subject, object, and indirect object, tense, mood, numerous
aspectual categories, and
negation. The subjects of verbs, and in some dialects objects and indirect objects, distinguish singular, dual, and plural numbers. Verbs are also marked for numerous "derivational" categories. For example, a basic motion verb, such as "walk" has derivatives meaning "walk into water", "walk into a hole", "walk ashore", "walk around" and "walk erroneously" (that is, "get lost walking"). The basic paradigm of a verb consists of three persons in three numbers, with the tenses and modes Imperfective, Perfective, Future, and Optative, in both affirmative and negative forms. Notice how the stem of the verb changes with tense/aspect/mode and negation, e.g. in the Imperfective Affirmative but in the Imperfective Negative and in the Perfective Affirmative. In addition to the stem, the forms below contain the prefix "around, in a loop". Dakelh has multiple systems of
noun classification, several of which are realized on the verb. One of these, the system of absolutive or
gender classifiers, consists of the prefixes , , and , which indicate that the
absolutive argument (the subject of an intransitive verb or the object of a transitive verb) is round, stick-like, or areal/spatial, respectively. Some verbs can take any or none of these prefixes. Others can take only a subset or none at all. For example, the verb "to be white" has the forms: ==Syntax==