Nouns Nouns and adjectives distinguish
singular and plural forms. A
dual has not been found in Lycian. There are two
genders: animate (or 'common') and inanimate (or 'neuter'). Instead of the
genitive singular case normally a so-called
possessive (or "genitival adjective") is used, as is common practice in the
Luwic languages: a suffix -(e)h- is added to the root of a substantive, and thus an adjective is formed that is declined in turn. Nouns can be divided in five declension groups:
a-stems,
e-stems,
i-stems, consonant stems, and mixed stems; the differences between the groups are very minor. The declension of nouns goes as follows:
Pronouns Demonstrative pronoun The paradigm for the demonstrative pronoun
ebe, "this" is: A
suffix -s- (cognate with Greek, Latin -/sk/-), appended to the stem and attested with half a dozen verbs, is thought to make a verb
iterative: : stem
a(i)-, 'to do, to make',
s-stem
as-; (Preterite 3 Singular:)
ade, adẽ, 'he did, made',
astte, 'he always did, has made repeatedly'; : stem
tuwe-, 'to erect, place (upright)',
s-stem
tus-; (Present/future 3 Plural:)
tuwẽti, 'they erect',
tusñti , 'they will erect repeatedly'.
Syntax Emmanuel Laroche, who analysed the Lycian text of the Letoon trilingual, concluded that word order in Lycian is slightly more free than in the other Anatolian languages. Sentences in plain text mostly have the structure :
ipc (initial particle cluster) - V (Verb) - S (Subject) - O (direct Object). The verb immediately follows an "initial particle cluster", consisting of a more or less meaningless particle "
se-" or "
me-" (literally, 'and') followed by a series of up to three suffixes, often called emphatics. The function of some of these suffixes is mysterious, but others have been identified as pronomina like "he", "it", or "them". The subject, direct object, or indirect object of the sentence may thus proleptically be referred to in the initial particle cluster. As an example, the sentence "X built a house" might in Lycian be structured: "and-he-it / he-built / X / a-house". Other constituents of a sentence, like an indirect object, predicate, or complimentary adjuncts, can be placed anywhere after the verb. Contrary to this pattern, funeral inscriptions as a rule have a standard form with the object at the head of the sentence: "This tomb built X"; literally: "This tomb / it / he built / X" (order:
O - ipc - V - S). Laroche suspects the reason for this deviation to be that in this way emphasis fell on the funerary object: "This object, it was built by X". Example: :: In line 1
mẽti = m-ẽ-ti is the initial particle cluster, where
m- = me- is the neutral "steppingstone" to which two suffixes are affixed:
-ẽ- = "it", and the
relative pronoun -ti, "who, he who".
Subject-verb-object hypothesis Kim McCone proposed in the 1970s that Lycian's unmarked word order was instead
subject-verb-object. The apparent VSO and OVS orders come from various frontings and
dislocations of a basic SVO structure. Lycian's SVO is itself a shift from the typical Anatolian
subject-object-verb order, of which Lycian preverbal object pronouns like
ẽ "him/her/it" would be a relic. In spite of McCone's alternative analysis, the assumption that
verb-subject-object was Lycian's unmarked word order went unchallenged until the 2010s, when
Alwin Kloekhorst independently formulated and adopted the SVO hypothesis. This led to other linguists like Heiner Eichner and H. Craig Melchert to adopt the SVO hypothesis after him. The principal unmarked example cited by SVO supporters comes from the following sentence: Further examples of subject-initial unmarked clauses cited by Melchert include: ==Endonym==