Friulian is quite different from Italian in its morphology; it is, in many respects, closer to
French.
Nouns In Friulian as in other
Romance languages,
nouns are either
masculine or feminine (for example, "
il mûr" ("the wall", masculine), "
la cjadree" ("the chair", feminine).
Feminine Most feminine nouns end in
-e, which is pronounced, unlike in Standard French: •
cjase = house (from Latin "casa, -ae" hut) •
lune = moon (from Latin "luna, -ae") •
scuele = school (from Latin "schola, -ae") Some feminine nouns, however, end in a consonant, including those ending in
-zion, which are from
Latin. •
man = hand (from Latin "manŭs, -ūs" f) •
lezion = lesson (from Latin "lectio, -nis" f) Note that in some Friulian dialects the -e feminine ending is actually an -a or an -o, which characterize the dialect area of the language and are referred to as
a/o-ending dialects (e.g. is spelled as or the latter being the oldest form of the feminine ending).
Masculine Most masculine nouns end either in a consonant or in
-i. •
cjan = dog •
gjat = cat •
fradi = brother •
libri = book A few masculine nouns end in
-e, including
sisteme (system) and
probleme (problem). They are usually words coming from
Ancient Greek. However, because most masculine nouns end in a consonant, it is common to find the forms
sistem and
problem instead, more often in print than in speech. There are also a number of masculine nouns borrowed intact from
Italian, with a final
-o, like
treno (train). Many of the words have been fully absorbed into the language and even form their plurals with the regular Friulian
-s rather than the Italian
desinence changing. Still, there are some purists, including those influential in Friulian publishing, who frown on such words and insist that the "proper" Friulian terms should be without the final
-o. Despite the fact that one almost always hears
treno, it is almost always written
tren.
Articles The Friulian
definite article (which corresponds to "the" in English) is derived from the Latin
ille and takes the following forms: Before a vowel, both
il and
la can be abbreviated to l' in the standard forms - for example
il + arbul (the tree) becomes ''l'arbul.
Yet, as far as the article la
is concerned, modern grammar recommends that its non elided form should be preferred over the elided one: la acuile (the eagle)
although in speech the two a'' sounds are pronounced as a single one. In the spoken language, various other articles are used. The indefinite article in Friulian (which corresponds to
a and
an in English) derives from the Latin
unus and varies according to gender: A partitive article also exists:
des for feminine and
dai for masculine: –
some cows and
dai libris -
some books Adjectives A Friulian
adjective must agree in gender and number with the noun it qualifies. Most adjectives have four forms for singular (masculine and feminine) and plural (masculine and feminine): (Like for nouns, for a/o-ending dialects the plural is simply obtained by adding an
s - e.g.
brute corresponds to
bruta/bruto and its plural form
brutis is
brutas/brutos). The feminine is formed in several ways from the masculine: • in most cases, all that is needed is -e (short:
curt,
curte) • if the final letter is a -c, the feminine can end with -cje, -gje, -che, -ghe (little: pôc, pôcje) • if the final letter is a -f, the feminine can end with -ve (new:
gnûf, gnove) • if the final letter is a -p, the feminine can end with -be (sour:
garp, garbe) • if the final letter is a -t, the feminine can end with -de (green:
vert, verde)
Plurals To form the plural of masculine and feminine nouns ending in -e, the -e is changed to -is (whilst a/o-ending dialects simply add an s) • , = table, tables • , = house, houses • , = moon, moons • , = school, schools • , = system, systems • , = glove, gloves • , = niece, nieces The plural of almost all other nouns is just -s. It is always pronounced as voiceless [s], as in
English cats, never as voiced [z], as in
dogs. • , = hand, hands • , = lesson, lessons • , = dog, dogs • , = cat, cats • , = brother, brothers • , = book, books • , = train, trains • , = arm, arms (from Latin "bracchium") • , = glove, gloves (compare English "gauntlet") In some Friulian dialects, there are many words whose final consonant becomes silent when the -s is added. The words include just about all those whose singular form ends in -t. The plural of , for example, is written as but is pronounced in much of Friuli as if it were . The plural of 'dish', though written as , is often pronounced as . Other words in this category include
clâf (key) and
clap (stone), whose plural forms, clâfs and claps, are often pronounced with no f or p, respectively (clâs, clas) so the longer a in the former is all that distinguishes it from the latter. A final -ç, which is pronounced either as the
English "-ch" (in central Friulian) or as "-s", is pluralized in writing as -çs, regardless of whether the pluralized pronunciation is "-s" or "-ts" (it varies according to dialect): messaç / messaçs (message).
Exceptions Masculine nouns ending in -l or -li form their plurals by palatalising final -l or -li to -i. • , = horse, horses (from Latin "caballus") • , = string, strings (from Latin "filum") • , = hat, hats • , = hair, hairs • , = eye, eyes • , = knee, knees (from Latin "genuculus") Notice how these very often correspond to French nouns that form an irregular plural in -
x:
cheval-chevaux, chapeau-chapeaux, cheveu-cheveux, oeil-yeux, genou-genoux. Feminine nouns ending in -l have regular plurals. •
piel,
piels = skin, skins •
val,
vals (in northern Friulian also "tal", "tals") = valley, valleys Masculine nouns ending in -st form their plurals by palatalising the final -t to -cj •
cavalarist,
cavalariscj = military horseman, military horsemen •
test,
tescj = text, texts Some masculine nouns ending in -t form their plurals by palatalising the final -t to -cj: • , = tooth, teeth (from Latin "dens, -tis") • , = all (of one thing), all (of several things) (from Latin "totus") Nouns ending in "s" do not change spelling in the plural, but some speakers may pronounce the plural -s differently from the singular -s. •
vues = bone, bones •
pes = fish (singular or plural) (from Latin "piscis") •
mês = month, months (from Latin "mensis") The plural of
an (year) has several forms depending on dialect, including
ain,
ains,
agn and
agns. Regardless of pronunciation, the written form is
agns. The same happens for the adjective
bon (good), as its plural is .
Clitic subject pronouns A feature of Friulian are the clitic
subject pronouns. Known in Friulian as
pleonastics, they are never stressed; they are used together with the verb to express the subject and can be found before the
verb in
declarative sentences or immediately after it in case of
interrogative or vocative (
optative) sentences. An example:
jo o lavori means "I work";
lavorio? means "Do I work?", while
lavorassio means "I wish I worked".
Verbs • Friulian verbal
infinitives have one of four endings, -â, -ê, -i, -î; removing the ending gives the root, used to form the other forms (
fevelâ, to speak; root
fevel-), but in the case of irregular verbs, the root changes. They are common (
jessi, to be;
vê, to have;
podê, to be able to). Verbs are frequently used in combination with adverbs to restrict the meaning.
Adverbs An adjective can be made into an
adverb by adding -mentri to the ending of the feminine singular form of the adjective (
lente becomes
lentementri, slowly), but it can sometimes lose the -e of the adjective (
facile becomes
facilmentri, easily). It is more common in the written language; in the spoken language people frequently use other forms or locutions (
a planc for slowly). == Vocabulary ==