Basic word order Djinang is classified as a suffixing language and, therefore, has a flexible typology, in other words it does not rely on word order to convey meaning. In regards to nouns Djinang depends on case (Nominative, Genitive, Ablative etc.) to show its function. When speaking of verbs Djinang relies heavily on suffixes to imply tense, mood, and aspect. With that being said, Djinang and, indeed most Australian languages, have a tendency to follow a subject, object, verb (S.O.V.) typology
Verbs In Djinang verbs are extremely important in conveying the bulk of an utterance. Verbs are so prominent that pronouns and certain nouns would only be implied; ex: There are three major sets of verbs: classes I, II, III; within each class there are smaller groups separated by stem ending e.g. -i, -rr, -ji. Each verb is sorted by the
suffix it uses to signal tenses specific to Djinang: • non-past • future • yesterday-past • imperative • today-past • today-past-irrealis • today-past-continuous Additionally many verb stems contain a noun related to the definition of a verb; for example: – 'work' n. and – 'work', v. Customarily, is added to the noun, which creates the verb stem – in this case, ; the suffix places the verb in either the non-past or future tense.
Nouns Nouns follow a similar process to verbs, but while verbs state when or how an action was done, nouns denote subject, object, and possession.
Noun cases mark a noun as either the subject or object. They also mark implied prepositions like: 'to', 'for', 'from', etc. An example of an implied preposition is the Djinang word 'camp' –
allative '(to) camp'. Furthermore in an Australian language there are three very important grammatical associations that nouns can take: Transitive subject (ergative), intransitive subject (nominative), and the object (accusative). Because word order is variable, these cases are important in building an intelligible utterance. The chart below lists the different noun cases with their functions and common endings.
Deictics and interrogatives An interesting aspect of Djinang is the nominal class of words (deictics and interrogative).
Deictics use the same cases as nouns. They also often convey number (singular/plural) and relative distance like 'this', 'here' or 'that', 'there'. An example of suffix compounding in the deictic word class: • 'that one' (accusative) • 'that one's' (genitive) • 'that one's' (genitive) (emphatic possessive) Interrogative particles are quite simply the words that signify an utterance as a question, e.g. 'who', 'when'. In Djinang interrogative particles are found at the beginning of an utterance in exactly the same manner as the English language. ==Vocabulary==