Pronouns Personal pronouns Personal pronouns are richly represented in Mixtec.
First and second person pronouns Many varieties (but not all) have distinct "formal" and "informal" pronouns for first person and second person (except in the first person plural inclusive). If addressing a person of his own age or older, the speaker uses the formal pronouns. If addressing a younger person, the speaker uses the informal pronouns. The first person exclusive pronouns may be interpreted as either singular or plural. The second person pronouns may also be interpreted as either singular or plural. It is common to find a first person inclusive form that is interpreted as meaning to include the hearer as well as the speaker. First and second person pronouns have both independent forms and dependent (enclitic) forms. The dependent forms are used when the pronoun follows a verb (as subject) and when it follows a noun (as possessor). The independent forms are used elsewhere (although there are some variations on this rule). • Personal pronoun as direct object {{interlinear|indent=4 • Personal pronoun in preverbal position {{interlinear|indent=4 • Personal pronoun in normal subject position {{interlinear|indent=4
Third person pronouns For the third person pronouns, Mixtec has several pronouns that indicate whether the referent is a man, a woman, an animal, a child or an inanimate object, a sacred or divine entity, or water. Some languages have respect forms for the man and woman pronouns. Some languages have other pronouns as well (such as for trees.) (These pronouns show some etymological affinity to nouns for 'man', 'woman', 'tree', etc., but they are distinct from those nouns.) These may be pluralized (in some varieties, if one wishes to be explicit) by using the common plural marker
de in front of them, or by using explicit plural forms that have evolved.
Interrogative pronouns Mixtec has two
interrogatives, which are
na vé ([²na ³ve] = "what/which"?) and
nasaa ([²na.²saa]= "how much/many?"). The tone of these does
not change according to the tense, person, or tone of the surrounding phrase.
Verbs Mixtec verb tenses Mixtec verbs have no
infinitive form. The basic form of the Mixtec verb is the
future tense, and many conjugated future verb forms are also used for the present tense. To obtain the present of an irregular verb, the tone is modified in accordance with set of complicated
prosodic rules. Another class of irregular verbs beginning with [k] mutate that sound to either [xe] or [xi] in the present tense. To form the
preterite (past) tense, the particle
ni- ([²ni]) is added. That particle causes a shift in the tone of the following verb and, while the particle itself may be omitted in informal speech, the tonal modification invariably takes place. Mixtec lacks an
imperfect,
pluperfect, and all the compound tenses found in other languages. In addition, Mixtec verb conjugations do not have indicators of person or number (resembling, in this, English more than Spanish). A selection of Mixtec sentences exemplifying the three verbal tenses appears below: • Future {{interlinear|indent=4 • Present {{interlinear|indent=4 • Preterite {{interlinear|indent=4 {{interlinear|indent=4
Verb classes ;Causative verbs
Causative verbs are verb forms modified by a
prefix indicating that the action is performed by the agent of the phrase. Mixtec causative verbs are indicated by the prefix
s-. Like other Mixtec particles, the causative prefix leads to a shift in the orthography and pronunciation of the related verb. When the verb to which the prefix is added begins with , that phoneme is transformed into a . Verbs beginning with shift to . There is no difference in future and present causative verbs, but the past tense is invariably indicated by adding the particle
ni-. ;Repetitive verbs The prefix
na- indicates that the action of the related verb is being performed for a second occasion. This means that there is a repetition of the action, made by the subject of the sentence or another unidentified agent. The pronunciation of some irregular verbs changes in the repetitive form. For example, certain verbs beginning with [k] take [ⁿd] o [n] the instead of
na- particle. In addition, there are some verbs that never appear without this prefix: in other words, it is part of their structure. ;Copulative verbs
Copulative verbs ("linking verbs") establish links between two nouns, a noun and an adjective, or a noun and a pronoun. Mixtec has four such verbs: •
kuu (to be) •
nduu (to be again; the repetitive form of
kuu) •
koo (to exist) •
káá (to appear; present and preterite only)
Káá is only used with adjectives that describe a thing's appearance. The other three can be used with practically any adjective, albeit with slight semantic shifts. ;Descriptive verbs Descriptive verbs are a special class that can be used as either verbs or adjectives. One of these verbs followed by a pronoun is all that is needed to form a complete sentence in Mixtec. Descriptives are not conjugated: they always appear in the present tense. To give the same idea in the past or future tenses, a copulative verb must be used. ;Modal verbs
Modal verbs are a small group that may be followed by another verb. Only the relative pronoun
jee̱ can occasionally appear between a modal and its associated verb, except in sentences involving
kuu (can, to be able). • Modal
kuu ("can") {{interlinear|indent=4 • Modal
kánuú ("must") {{interlinear|indent=4
Verb moods ;Indicative mood The
indicative mood describes actions in real life that have occurred, are occurring, or will occur. The verb forms of the indicative mood are described above, in the section on verb tenses. ;Imperative mood
Imperatives are formed by adding the particle
-ni to the future indicative form of the verb. In informal speech, the simple future indicative is frequently used, although the pronoun
ró may be appended. There are three irregular verbs with imperative forms different from their future indicative. Negative imperatives are formed by adding the word
má, the equivalent of "don't". ;Subjunctive mood In Mixtec, the
subjunctive mood serves as a mild command. It is formed by placing the particle
na before the future form of the verb. When used in the first person, it gives the impression that the speaker closely reflects on the action before performing it. ;Counter-factual mood The counter-factual
mood indicates that the action was not performed or remained incomplete. To form the past counter-factual,
ní is added and the tones of the verb change from preterite to present. A counter-factual statement not accompanied by a
subordinate clause acquires the meaning "If only..." The particle
núú can be added at the end of the main or subordinate clauses, should the speaker wish, with no change in meaning. Examples are shown below: • Use of counter-factual verbs, formed by changing the tone of the past indicative. {{interlinear|indent=4 • Use of a simple counter-factual sentence {{interlinear|indent=4 • Use of a simple counter-factual sentence, with
núú. {{interlinear|indent=4 {{interlinear|indent=4 • Use of a simple counter-factual sentence, with
núu (a conditional conjunction not to be confused with the mood particle described above) {{interlinear|indent=4 • Use of a simple counter-factual with modal, in future tense {{interlinear|indent=4
Nouns Nouns indicate persons, animals, inanimate objects or abstract ideas. Mixtec has few nouns for abstract ideas; when they do not exist, it uses verbal constructions instead. When a noun is followed by another in a sentence, the former serves as the nucleus of the phrase, with the latter acting as a modifier. In many such constructions, the modifier possesses the nucleus. • Nouns as modifiers: {{interlinear|indent=4 • Modifiers possessing the nucleus of the phrase: {{interlinear|indent=4 The base number of Mixtec nouns is singular. Pluralisation is effected by means of various grammatical and lexical tools. For example, a noun's number can be implicit if the phrase uses a plural pronoun (first person inclusive only) or if one of various verb affixes that modify the meaning are used:
-koo and
-ngoo (suffixes) and
ka- (prefix). A third way to indicate a plural is the (untranslatable) particle ''jijná'an'', which can be placed before or after verbs, pronouns, or nouns. • Pluralisation indicated by the presence of the first-person-inclusive pronoun {{interlinear|indent=4 • Pluralisation with affixes: prefix
ka- before the verb {{interlinear|indent=4 • Pluralisation with affixes: suffix
-koo after the verb {{interlinear|indent=4
Demonstratives Deictic adverbs are often used in a noun phrase as demonstrative adjectives. Some Mixtec languages distinguish two such demonstratives, others three (proximal, medial, distal), and some four (including one that indicates something out of sight). The details vary from variety to variety, as do the actual forms. In some varieties one of these demonstratives is also used anaphorically (to refer to previously mentioned nominals in the discourse), and in some varieties a special anaphoric demonstrative (with no spatial use) is found. These demonstratives generally occur at the end of the noun phrase (sometimes followed by a "limiter"). The demonstratives are also used (in some varieties) following a pronominal head as a kind of complex pronoun.
Conjunctions Conjunctions serve to join two words, two phrases, or two analogous sentences. Mixtec possesses twelve
coordinating conjunctions and ten
subordinating conjunctions. • Coordinating conjunctions: ::
te (and, but) ::
te o (but) ::
jíín (and) ::
chi (because, and) ::
chí (or) ::
á... chí (either... or) ::
ni... ni... (neither... nor) ::
sa/''sa su'va'' (but rather that) ::
yu̱kúan na (then, so) ::
yu̱kúan (so) ::
je̱e yu̱kúan (for) ::
suni (also) • Subordinating conjunctions: ::''náva̱'a'' (so that) ::
je̱e (that) ::
sɨkɨ je̱e (because) ::
nájnu̱n (how) ::
ve̱sú (although) ::
núu (if) ::
na/ níní na (when) ::
ná/ níní (while) ::
nde (until, since) ::
kue̱chi (no more)
Word order in the clause Mixtec is a
verb–subject–object language. Variations in this word order, particularly the use of the preverbal position, are employed to highlight information. == Mixtec influence on Spanish ==