In general terms, Kutenai is an
agglutinative language, with many grammatical functions being served by both
prefixes and
suffixes, primarily on the verb, though some affixes select nouns as well. As mentioned above, a distinctive feature of Kutenai is its use of an
obviation system as a way to track which entities and concepts are particularly central/salient to a story being told and as a grammatical way of clarifying the roles of each entity in sentences with two third-person arguments: "Pronouns, nouns, verbs, and adverbs all take obviative markers", The language has an overt
copula, .
Syntax Word order Word order in Kutenai can be flexible in response to
discourse and
pragmatic concerns. As is the case with many
head-marking languages, it is rare to have both an overt subject and an overt object in a sentence since the morphology of the verb makes it clear who is acting on whom. Morgan states that if it
is appropriate to express both arguments of a verb in a "neutral" context,
VOS word order is preferred; however, it also alternates with
VSO order. The pre-verbal position can be occupied by adverbs, as seen in these three examples: {{interlinear|number=1)|lang=kut One aspect of Kutenai that complicates word order somewhat is the fact that the verb is marked for first- or second-person subjects by "affixal or clitic pronouns" that precede the stem, for 'I' and for 'you'. It is common in the orthography to write the pronouns as separate words, making it seem as if the word order is Subject Pronoun + Verb (+ Object).
Inverse In many languages, conditions for inverse include situations in which the first or second person is in the "object" role, and the third person is the "subject" as in 'She saw you/me.' In Kutenai, however, the situations use specific "first-/second-person object" morphology, separate from the inverse. As a consequence, Kutenai's inverse system is most clearly observable in interactions between third persons. The following two examples (from Dryer 1991) show the direct and inverse, respectively:
Clause typing Kutenai
subordinate/dependent clauses are marked with a and a lack of indicative morphology on the verb, as are questions, nominalizations, and relative clauses. The can cliticize to the material that follows it, as can be seen in this example. ==See also==