Lexical categories Wandala has the
lexical categories of noun, verb, adjective, adverb, and predicator.
Morphology Reduplication is a major morphological process in Wandala, with different forms and functions that may be limited to one lexical category or shared across lexical categories. Partial reduplication gives the plural form of verbs and adjectives, while complete reduplication gives
aspectual and
modal forms of verbs, or derives adverbs from other lexical categories. Phrases can also be reduplicated. All lexical categories can have
suffixes. On verbs, suffixes have many functions, such as marking semantic and
grammatical relations, directionality and point of view. Suffixes on nouns mark plural number, genitive relation and pronominal possession. Nouns can be derived by adding suffixes to numerals and adjectives. Wandala also has limited
prefixes for nouns and one
infix. The vowel
a acts as an infix in the verbal system to encode verb plurality.
Syntax In the noun phrase, the head precedes modifiers, determiners and quantifiers. The grammatical relations
subject and
object are distinguished, with distinct pronouns. However, lexical properties of verbs determine how the grammatical roles of nominal arguments are coded, with some verbs taking the controller as the unmarked argument, and others the affected entity. A nominal object or nominal subject can occur after the verb, but cannot both occupy this position, so if they co-occur, one must be fronted. This encodes
information structure such as
topicalization,
focus or
switch-reference. ==References==