Case marking Like almost all other Mayan languages, Ch'ol has two sets of person markers:
ergative and
absolutive. The
Mayan tradition is to label the former as Set A and the latter as Set B. Chʼol is a
split ergative language: its morphosyntactic alignment varies according to aspect. With perfective aspect, ergative-absolutive alignment is used, whereas with imperfective aspect, we rather observe nominative-accusative. Set A markers are generally considered as suffixes; however, Martínez Cruz (2007) and Arcos López (2009) categorized them as
proclitics. These markers usually denote the agents of transitive verbs. Note that all markers have phonologically conditioned allomorphs: 1st singular marker changes from
k to
j when it precedes another
k, and 2nd singular and 3rd singular markers have glides inserted when they precede consonants. Set B markers are suffixes. These markers usually denote the patients of transitive verbs or the core arguments of intransitive verbs. There are three plural markers for plural case marking in Ch'ol – two clitics and one suffix. The two clitics can be attached either before the singular person markers or after the verbal roots. The
exclusive 1st plural marker has a shorter form
loñ and a longer form
lojoñ. Both are used interchangeably, except when it is attached before a singular marker, in which case only the shorter form is allowed. The plural suffix -ob is often realized as
-o' in speech.
Verbal predicates The basic word order is
VOS. However, word order varies and VOS is not always grammatical: factors including animacy, definiteness, topicalization and focus contribute to determining which word order is appropriate. A Ch'ol simple transitive phrase is comprised minimally of a single transitive verb in the form of [ASP Set A + Verb + Set B]. In the case of
non-agentive intransitive verbs, the cross-reference of the single argument is accomplished with either Set A or Set B depending on the
aspect of the verb. Verbal predicates can have the following aspects:
perfective,
imperfective,
progressive,
inceptive,
terminative, and
potential.
Transitive verbs Within Chʼol transitive verbs, there exist two primary categories: simple forms and derived forms. The former modifies the primary arguments within the verb by cross-referencing the transitive subject in Set A and the object in Set B. In the perfective aspect, this category incorporates a status suffix, which is a vowel in harmony with the root vowel. Conversely, the imperfective aspect does not take such status suffix. To form derived transitive verbs, the suffix
-V or
-Vñ is appended, based on the aspect. Unlike the simple forms, the suffix does not need to be in harmony with the root vowel. The direct arguments in this category are identified via Set A and Set B inflections.
Non-verbal predicates This construction does not take aspect markers, in contrast to verbal predicates. It can be headed by nouns, adjectives, positionals, etc. The core argument only takes Set B markers. == See also ==