The morphology of Quechua is highly synthetic,
agglutinative and relatively regular and tends to
mark both dependents and heads. Dependents generally precede their heads.
Morphophonology A number of suffixes have two versions – one that occurs after consonants and one after vowels. Sometimes the difference is that the postconsonantal allomorph has the shape -CV(C), whereas the postvocalic one has only the initial consonant -C: e.g.
wasi-m 'house-affirmative', but
ñan-mi 'path-affirmative',
ñan-pa(q) 'path-genitive', but
wasi-p 'of the house'. Another possibility is that the postvocalic allomorph begins in two consonants, whereas the postconsonantal one has only the second one:
wasi-kta 'house-accusative', but
ñan-ta 'path-accusative'. In still other cases, the postconsonantal allomorph differs from the postvocalic one in that it is preceded by the 'euphonic element'
-ni- (or, in especially Cuzco-influenced texts, the more archaic
-ñi-): e.g.
wasi-y 'my house', but
ñan-niy 'my path',
ĉunka isqun-niyuq 'nineteen',
ĉunka suqta-yuq 'sixteen'. Most Standard Colonial Quechua outside of the Huarochirí manuscript has the variant
-i- after the consonants
-q,
-r and
-ŝ as well: e.g.
yawar-i-y 'my blood', where the Haurochirí manuscript has
yawar-ni-y.
Possessive pronominal markers The possessive pronominal markers are: For the occurrence of the element
-(ni)-, see the
Morphophonology section. Possession is marked both on the dependent and on the head: the noun phrase expressing the possessor is inflected in the genitive, whereas the possessed noun phrase receives a possessive pronominal suffix of the appropriate person (see the section
Pronouns below): e.g.
warmi-p wasi-n 'the woman's house'.
Number The plural is formed with the postposed marker
-kuna:
wamra-kuna 'children'. Its use is not obligatory and it is generally absent after numerals and the word
achka 'a lot'.
Case The following
case markers are added at the end of the noun phrase: The morpheme
ñiq expresses imprecise location: 'to, at, around, about'. On discourse particles, see the section
Particles.
Noun formation A notable suffix that forms nouns from other nouns is
-(ni)yuq (the
-ni- appears after a consonant), which means 'having X': e.g.
llama-yuq 'llama owner'. A nominal suffix denoting groups is
–(ni)ntin (meaning 'including', 'with ... and all'; cf.
hina-ntin 'all' from
hina 'so'.
Adjectives Adjectives are indeclinable. In a noun phrase, they precede the noun. Comparison is expressed periphrastically. The comparative degree is expressed with the adverb
aŝwan 'more' and the object of comparison in the ablative:
ñuqa qam-manta aŝwan amawta-m ka-ni 'I am wiser than you'. The superlative uses the adverb
ancha 'much' and the object of comparison is in the ablative or genitive:
ñuqa llapa runa-kuna-manta / runa-kuna-p ancha amawta-m ka-ni 'I am the wisest of all the people'.
Pronouns The personal pronouns are: As the table shows, the first person plural pronouns distinguish between an exclusive and an inclusive version with the same suffixes as the verbs. The other persons use the regular plural ending of nouns. The demonstrative pronouns exhibit a three-way distinction:
kay 'this (close to the speaker)',
chay 'that (close to the addressee)' and
chaqay 'that (far from both the speaker and the addressee)'. Demonstrative adverbs are
hina 'so, like this'. For the possessive pronominal postposed markers, see the section on
Nouns above. The interrogative pronouns and adverbs are
pi 'who',
ima 'what',
imana (optional contraction of
ima-hina) 'how',
may 'where',
Numerals The numeral system is decimal. The numerals from 1 to 10 are: The teens are formed by combining the word
ĉunka 'ten' and the numeral with the remaining units, suffixed with
-(ni)yuq 'having':
ĉunka huk-niyuq 'eleven',
ĉunka kimsa-yuq 'thirteen', etc. The tens are formed by combining the number of units and the word 'ten':
iŝkay chunka 'twenty', etc. Higher numbers are
pachak 'hundred',
waranqa 'thousand' and
hunu 'million'. After numerals, nouns normally do not stand in the plural.
Valency/voice marking The suffix
-ya- forms
inchoatives from nouns:
tuta-ya 'become night'. However, it may also have a factitive meaning:
chiri-ya- lit. 'make cold > 'freeze' > 'petrify'. A causative stem is produced by adding the suffix
-chi- 'to make, let (somebody do something)':
miku- 'eat' >
miku-chi 'cause to eat, feed'. Reciprocal meaning is expressed with the suffix
-naku-:
riku-naku 'to look at each other''. In other cases it is explained as doing something excessively.
Aspectual suffixes A few suffixes with more or less aspectual meaning are placed before the agreement morphemes. Progressive aspect is expressed by the suffix
-chka-:
upya-chka-n-ku 'they are drinking',
upya-chka-rqa-n-ku 'they were drinking'. A meaning of violent action is reported also for
-rqa-ya- and
-rqa-ri-, e.g.
lliki-rqa- 'tear into many pieces' . The suffix
-tamu- expresses an action performed in passing, occasionally. It is added to the root. The inceptive suffix
-ri- expresses a beginning, as in
rima-ri- 'begin to talk'. However, it may also express a benefactive relation to a participant other than the subject:
yaya-n-ta aswa-kta qu-mu-n 'he gives
chicha to his father'. On the other hand, if the dative object coincides with the subject, the reflexive suffix
-ku- is used instead:
aswa-kta apa-ku-n 'he takes the chica for himself'. The reflexive suffix is often used with verbs of emotion:
kuŝi-ku- 'rejoice' (always in the reflexive),
mancha-ku- 'be scared'. The suffix
-pu- has andative meaning:
kaĉa-pu-n 'he sends it away (from here)'. It, too, can have a benefactive meaning according to some colonial grammars. The suffix
-mpu is reported to express a return, as in
kuti-mpu-. The suffix
-rqu means 'out' (
apa-rqu 'carry outside'), and
-yku means 'in(wards)' (
apa-yku 'carry inside').
Tense suffixes The tense suffixes are placed between the object and the subject person agreement suffixes. The present tense is unmarked. Past tense is expressed by the suffix
-rqa: e.g.
riku-rqa-nku 'they saw it',
riku-ŝu-rqa-nki 'he saw you'. The 3rd person singular ending
-n can be absent after
-rqa The so-called future tense, which usually has the modal meaning of the speakers' desire or assessment of obligation, is expressed somewhat irregularly by a portmanteau suffix that simultaneously encodes person and even number. Its allomophy is presented in more detail in the section on
Agreement inflection below. On the non-finite form markers, subordinators, which are placed in the same slot as the tense markers, see the section on
Non-finite verb forms below.
Agreement suffixes The verbs
agree in person and number with the subject as well as the object, although not possible combinations of values for these grammatical categories are expressed unambiguously.
Object person marking The person of an object is marked on the verb. That object may be direct or indirect, depending on the valency of the verb; thus, in the case of the verb 'to say', the addressee can be marked as an object. Cf. the similarly wide use of the accusative-dative suffix
-kta. When the object is in the third person, this is not marked especially – the form coincides with the one used in the absence of an object and with intransitive verbs, or the third person object suffix could be said to be expressed by a zero morpheme -∅. However, for other persons as objects, there are two suffixes that are placed in a slot before the tense suffixes. Furthermore, since the use of these suffixes partly depends on the subject as well, it is necessary to take into account each possible combination of subject and a non-3rd person object. These combinations were known in early colonial grammars as 'transitions'. The suffix
-wa- indicates first person object, and
-ŝu- indicates a second person object, but only if acted upon by a third person subject. A second person object acted upon by a first person subject has a fused expression
-yki- (perhaps
-y- for 1st person subject and
-ki- for 2nd person object), but it is placed in the slot after the tense suffixes. It may also be observed that if the second person is involved, regardless of whether it is a subject or an object, the slot after the tense suffixes contains the suffix
-nki (or, if the 1st person acting on 2nd person:
-ki). Since object and subject agreement are partly intertwined in Quechua, a more complete picture of the verb paradigm emerges from the table in the summarising section on
Agreement inflection. In summary, the following object markers can be identified:
Subject person marking The subject suffixes are placed in the slot after the tense suffixes. They are sometimes influenced by the preceding tense suffixes and the following plural suffixes, leading to outright fusion in some cases, so a complete picture is impossible in isolation. Nonetheless, the following elements can be identified: The slot that is generally reserved for subject suffixes contains the 2nd person suffix regardless of whether the 2nd person is a subject or object. As already mentioned, the marker
y-ki signalling 1st person acting on 2nd person is placed here as well.
Marking of the plurality of participants There are two plural agreement suffixes:
-ku indicates that the participant triggering agreement is a plural group that excludes the addressee, and
-chik indicates that it is a plural group that includes the addressee. Nonetheless, their use is unnecessary if the plurality of the subject is already indicated in the nominal phrase. Generally, these suffixes are simply added to the corresponding forms for singular subjects, except that the 1st person singular, which is normally expressed by
-ni, is marked by
-y- before
-ku and by
-n- before
-chik, and the future tense suffix becomes
-ŝun- before them in forms other than the 1st person exclusive subject. The resulting paradigm is shown in the tables in the
Agreement inflection section below. The plural suffixes (as well as the future tense plural allomorph
-ŝun-) may express the plurality of either the subject or the object. Which of the two controls the number agreement depends on the exact configuration of persons. As a rule of thumb, number agreement is with the subject: • if there is no object; • if the object is in the 3rd person; • if the subject is in the 2nd person; • according to some authorities, optionally, if a 3rd person plural is acting on a 1st person singular, leading to forms like
-wa-...n-ku (in the present and past) and
-wa-∅-nqa-ku. In other cases, number agreement is with the object – i.e., in most cases where the object is not in the 3rd person. Since the agreement morphology generally does not express the number of the subject and the object at the same time, there is often some ambiguity between numbers: for example, in
-wa-...-ŝun-chik, the 3rd person subject acting upon the first person inclusive ('us') may be either 's/he' or 'they'.
Agreement inflection The present tense suffixes designating the person of the subject are as follows (the arrow expresses the relationship between a subject and an object). Note that while the object suffixes are shown here for clarity, the tense suffixes (including the present tense zero suffix -∅-) are placed between them and the others. Examples:
kuya-yki 'I/we love you (singular)',
kuya-wa-y-ku or
kuya-wa-n-ku, 'he loves us' (this corresponds to the difference between Potosí and Cuzco Quechua). In the future tense, the patterns signalling agreement are different and the tense and person agreement suffixes sometimes appear to be fused into one morpheme: As we can see, the form of future tense marker varies widely. It has the form
-ŝaq in the first person singular (with no separate person agreement suffix after it) and in the first plural exclusive (if agreeing with the subject). Another allomorph,
-ŝqa-, occurs before the ending
-yki for 1st person acting on 2nd person. A third allomorph,
-ŝun, is used in the first person plural inclusive (where it is optionally followed by
-chik), as well in the exclusive, but the latter only if it represents agreement in the object. In the third person, the suffix is
suppletive:
-nqa. Finally, in the second person and in cases where the third person is acting on second person, there is tense
syncretism: the present tense forms are used instead of the future ones.
Imperative The
imperative forms, as shown in the table below, have unique person-mood portmanteau suffixes for the second and third person, namely
-y and
-chun, respectively, but the options for the preceding and following suffixes are mostly the same as in the indicative, except that the paradigm is somewhat defective. The second person imperative suffix is
-y: e.g.
hamu-y 'come!'. It is preceded by the object markers:
waqaycha-wa-y! 'protect me!' As usual, a third person object receives no overt suffix:
waqaycha-y! 'protect him/her/it!'. The plural suffixes are added to the imperative one to mark the plurality of the subject or the object as well:
waqaycha-y-chik! 'protect it (addressed to several people)!' An alternative recorded with the same meaning is
waqaycha-wa-y-ku!, which seems to reflect the plurality of the 1st person object only. There is also a third person imperative suffix
-chun:
hamu-chun 'let him come!' Plurality of the subject can be expressed with
-ku here, too:
hamu-chun-ku 'let them come!'. It can take the 1st person object prefix (
riku-wa-chun 'let him/them see me!'), but to express a 1st plural object, the future forms are used instead. The resulting paradigm can be summarised as follows:
Optative The
optative mood expresses a wish, a (dubious or improbable) possibility, a hypothetical condition or its result. It is generally formed by adding the suffix
-man to the present tense forms (before possible discourse particles): e.g.
hamu-nki-man 'you would come'. However, the 1st person singular suffix
-ni is replaced by
-y, and the 1st person plural inclusive
-n-chik fuses with
-man into
-chwan. The overall paradigm is, then: The hypothetical result of a non-realisable condition in the past (a 'preterite optative') can be expressed by adding the 3rd person singular past tense of the copula:
hamu-nki-man ka-rqa-n 'you would have come'.
Copula and possession The copula verb is
ka-, but it is omitted in the third person. This applies also in periphrastic 'compound tenses' formed with the copula. However, it also has the sense 'exist', in which case its third person form is used. It is also included in the way of expressing the notion 'to have':
(ñuqa-p) wasi-y ka-n '(of me) my house exists > I have a house.'
Non-finite verbal forms The suffixes of the non-finite verbal forms are as follows:
Infinitive The infinitive (verb noun) is formed with the suffix
-y:
riku-y 'seeing, sight, vision'. With negation and the suffix
-paq 'for' it expresses impossibility:
mana riku-y-paq 'not for see-ing' > 'invisible'. The use of
-na is wider: it can also be found in the accusative, e.g.
riku-na-yki-kta muna-ni 'I want you to see', lit. 'I want your potential seeing'. It can also be used to designate different participants in the action: instruments (
alla-ku-na 'means for digging'), places (
yayku-na, 'place for entering, i.e. entrance'), objects (
sita-na 'object for throwing'). It can also be used as an attribute or apposition to a noun:
yayku-na punku 'door for entering'.
Present participle A present participle or
agent noun is formed with the suffix
-q:
riku-q 'seeing, one who sees'. It may function like a noun or like an adjective. Again, it is compatible with an object marker:
riku-wa-q 'who sees me', but the object can also be expressed by a possessive pronominal suffix:
riku-q-ni-y. A more archaic allomorphic rule found in some texts replaces
q with
qi in front of possessive suffixes:
riku-qi-y,
riku-qi-n-chik, etc. This allomorph is found in more Cuzco-influenced texts as well as in those of the Third Council of Lima, but not in the Huarochirí Manuscript.
Past participle A past participle is formed with the suffix
-ŝqa:
riku-ŝqa 'seen'. As the example shows, its meaning is passive in transitive verbs, much as in English and Spanish. The past participle may have attributive function or occur alone. A possessive pronominal suffix can be used to express the agent:
riku-ŝqa-nchik 'what we have seen'. The past participle may be combined with the copula (which is absent in the third person) to form a compound perfect tense expressing resultative state, sometimes with a nuance of surprising discovery. In that case, the participle takes the object suffixes, but the copula takes the plurality suffixes:
ñi-wa-ŝqa ka-n-chik 'he said it to us'. In view of the passive meaning, the combination of past participle and copula is also the periphrasis that colonial grammars propose as a translation of the Latin passive. However, the past participle may also be used, similarly to the infinitive, as a noun denoting the action itself (
urma-mu-ŝqa-n-mi ... riku-ri-n 'its falling [i.e., the place it fell] ... is visible' ), and correspond to a clause in a construction akin to
accusativus cum infinitivo, although it is only the participle that stands in the accusative:
Macacalla yaĉa-n-chik ... urqu-pi ka-ŝqa-n-ta 'we know that Macacalla ... is on a hill', lit. 'Macacalla we know ... its being on a hill'.
Gerunds There are two gerunds, marked for
switch-reference. A gerund expressing a concomitant action of the subject of the finite verb is formed with the ending
-ŝpa: e.g.
riku-ŝpa '(while) seeing',
ñi-ŝpa '(while) saying', the latter form often following quoted speech. This contrasts with the gerund ending in
-pti, which is used when the logical subject of the verb does not coincide with that of the finite verb in the clause. It is followed by the pronominal possessive suffixes to express the logical subject: e.g.
upya-pti-n 'while he is/was drinking',
upya-pti-nchik 'while we (inclusive) are/were drinking'. Combined with expressions of the meaning 'already' (
ña) and 'not yet' (
mana-raq), the gerunds may acquire the meanings 'after doing' and 'before doing' (lit. 'not yet having done') something.
Compound tenses As already mentioned, there are at least two periphrastic constructions that may be described as compound tenses, which are formed by combining participles with the copula: a perfect using the past participle and a habitual using the present participle. In that case, a split in affixes may be observed where the object suffix is attached to the non-finite main verb, but the suffix – to the finite auxiliary:
riku-wa-ŝqa ka-n-chik 'he saw us (inclusive)',
ñi-ŝu-q ka-n-ki 'he told you (sing.). See the sections on the relevant participles for more information.
Particles Some of the most important particles are the following: Focused topics are marked with the enclitic particle
-qa or with
-taq, which expresses a stronger contrast, similar to English 'but, whereas, although'. The topic particle is mutually exclusive with the enclitic particles encoding evidentiality, one of which is typically added to the first available unit of each clause. There are three of these:
-m(i) for personally witnessed facts,
-ŝ(i) for hearsay and
-ĉá for conjecture/doubt. Thus,
allin-mi can be translated as 'I know for certain that it is good',
allin-ŝi as 'They say it's good', and
allin-ĉá as 'it might be good'. The non-syllabic allomorphs
-m,
-ĉ and
-ŝ are used after vowels, and the syllabic ones
-mi,
-ĉ(á) and
-ŝ(i) are used after consonants: e.g.
wasi-m 'house-affirmative', but
yawar-mi 'blood-affirmative'. The same particle is also encliticised to the last word of a negated verb phrase, in addition to the preceding negative adverb
mana, whereas the latter receives the evidential particles: thus,
warmi-qa mana-m hamu-n-chu 'the woman isn't coming'. In a prohibitative construction, the same particle is used, whereas the preceding adverb is
ama:
ama hamu-y-chu! 'don't come!' The adverb
ama is used in the future tense, too:
ama-taq kuti-ŝaq-chu 'but I will not return' Another common negative adverb is
paqta(ĉ) 'be careful (so that X does not happen)', which is combined with the optative mood. The function conjunction is fulfilled by enclitic particles such as
-paŝ 'and':
wasi-paŝ 'and a house', as well as some of the discourse particles already mentioned. There is also an enclitic particle
-lla meaning 'only':
huk llamalla 'only a llama'., A similar meaning is attested for the enclitic
-puni 'definitely'.
Syntax The word order is mostly
SOV. In noun phrases, modifiers (such as adjectives) precede nouns: e.g.
allin wamra 'a/the good child'. A past participle may also follow the noun, in which case both receive the relevant case suffix:
kuya-ŝqa wasi-kta 'beloved house (acc.)', but
wasi-kta kuya-ŝqa-kta (ditto). == Sample text ==