Natchez has two basic word classes: nouns and verbs, and a number of minor categories such as deictics, particles and interjections. Adverbial and adjectival modifiers belong to the nominal word class. It has two classes of verbs, dependent and independent. Independent verbs have an invariant root and are inflected by means of prefixes and suffixes, whereas dependent verbs are not morphologically inflected but require auxiliary verbs for inflection. Most dependent verbs have four different root shapes depending on number of subject and object and number of times the action is repeated. Natchez has
active-stative alignment. In active verbs the actor is indicated by an agreement prefix, whereas in stative verbs the actor is indicated by the same set of prefixes that indicate direct or indirect objects in active verbs.
Verbal inflection The Natchez verb is highly complex and has the following morphological structure: :preverbs-subject-diminutive subject-aspect-dual subject-patient-patient type-plural subject-
ROOT-dative object-dative-new topic-modal suffixes-postverbs
Preverbs The morphological class of preverbs express temporal distinctions (future, past, pluperfect), as well as abilitative, directional and locative information, and also incorporates nouns. For example, the following verb form has two preverbs before the verb root,
nok "can", and
kin "something": :
nokkinhanta:wã: :nok-kin-han-ta-w-a:-~ :-make- :"I can work"
Subject prefixes One set of prefixes simultaneously encode person of intransitive subject and temporal, modal and epistemic information. The prefixes occur in two forms with either the vowel
a or the vowel
e, and some verbs take a-forms and others e-forms. Table 3. gives the subject prefixes for the indefinite forms and for the present tense. Other sets are the past, optative, participial and hearsay forms. This gives the following kind of inflection of intransitive verbs. : '''' "to drink" : '''' "I drink" : '''' "you drink" :'''' "he/she/it drinks" The past and optative forms are formed by using their respective sets of subject prefixes (past first person
ya-/ye-, second person
pu-/pi-, third person
ʔi-; optative: first
ʔa-/ʔe-, second
paː-/peː-, third
ʔaː-/ʔeː-). : '''' "I drank" : '''' "you drank" :'''' "he/she/it drank" The dual is formed by adding the prefix
tani-/teni- and the plural with the prefix
pi-: : '''' "we two drink" : '''' "we drink" Participial forms take the prefixes
ʔi-: :'''' "drinking, drunk"
Aspect affixes There are three aspect prefixes, -
n-
imperfect (only recorded with the hearsay prefix), and
-- pluperfect, and
-- "ought" (
deontative). The pluperfect prefix requires the preverb -
ka-. The "deontative" affix requires the use of the preverb
yaː- and the present tense form of the verb. An example of the use of aspect affixes is: :
:stick.on- :"and he was sticking them on himself (they say)"
Objects Direct and indirect objects are marked on the verb with a series of affixes that immediately precede the root. The object affixes are first person
-n-/-ni-; second person
-p-/-pi- and for the third person either Ø or ī. The affixes only mark for person, not for number of the object. In independent verbs plural object is marked with the affix -''
-, in dependent verbs a plural object is marked by a change in the root shape. An affix -li''- indicates a diminutive object. This is an example of the use of the object prefix (object affix in bold): :
ni-l-k : kill- :"let her kill me and..." Dative objects are marked with a suffix that immediately follows the verb root, and which is itself always followed by a dative suffix -
ʃi. As the other object affixes they mark only person not number. The dative object suffixes are: first person: -
(i)t-; second person -
p(i)-; third person -Ø-. Combined with the dative suffix they take the following form: first:
--/-=, second: -
-/--, third -''''-. A text example with the dative suffixes in bold is: :'''''''''' :
it--u-~ :-leave. :"You will leave it here for us" Here the plural dative object is implied by the plural form of the verb root.
Modal suffixes There are about 20 different suffixes with verbal modificational meanings (including information about tense and aspect) such as interrogative, diminutive, focus, negative, completive, habitual, "but", "when", "and" (connective), future, "still", "keep on", "might". etc.
Dependent verbs Dependent verbs are formed by prefixing the dependent verb root to one of about 40 different auxiliary elements. Each auxiliary element has a vague meaning but some have meanings such as "transitive" '
, "reciprocal" ', "intransitive" '
, "involuntary action" '. {{interlinear|indent=3 Dependent verbs inflect only for pluralization, but do so in complex ways. The stem may reduplicate to mark a singular subject and plural object or repeated action by singular subject, it may add the suffix -- to mark a plural subject and a singular object or action by plural subject, and -- to mark a plural subject with a plural object. {{interlinear|indent=3 {{interlinear|indent=3
Nominal morphology Noun morphology is entirely suffixing, and the nominal complex has the following structure: ROOT-diminutive-augmentive-possessive-verbal diminutive-modifier-ergative-article-case
Diminutives The diminutive is formed by adding the suffix -
ːnuh-/-
iːnuh-. :
naːʃt͡seh "Natchez person" :
naːʃt͡senuh "Natchez child"
Possession Possession is marked with a suffix that agrees with the possessor. The singular possessive suffixes are: First person -'
"my"; Second person -' "your"; and third person '''' "his/her/its". :
kitah "friend" : '''' "my friend" : '''' "your friend" : '''' "his/her friend" Plural and dual possessors are formed by using a restrictive relative clause with the verb
haːʃiʔiʃ "to exist for someone (to have)". :'''' (Lit. "the friend who exists for the two of us") "Our (dual) friend" :'''' (Lit. "the friend who exists for them") "their (pl.) friend".
Ergative/Absolutive The ergative/instrumental case, used to mark the agents of transitive verbs (as well as instruments and some locatives), is marked by a suffix with the form -'
/-'. :'''' : :opossum- :"opossum skinned him and..."
Modifiers There are a number of noun modifying suffixes such as the decessive (used to refer to deceased persons, or persons who have changed into something else), the comparative and the "exclusive". The following example shows the use of the decessive modifier with the morpheme in bold face. :'''' :woman- :"the former woman" (about a woman who has been magically transformed into a man)
Syntax The most common constituent orders are "Subject-Verb" (for intransitive verbs) and "Agent-Verb" (for transitive verbs), "Direct.Object-Verb" and "Agent-Direct.Object-Verb. But the order "Direct.Object-Agent-Verb" does also occur in constructions with object focus. Agent-Verb-Direct.Object, a construction with focus on the verb, also occurs, albeit very infrequently.
Stative verbs Stative verbs are verbs that do not imply willful control of the action by its subject. They tend to be intransitive and the subject tends to be marked by the absolutive case. One group of stative verbs, called "direct impersonal verbs" by Haas, use the object prefixes to mark the subject, and another group, "indirect impersonal verbs", use the prefixes that are otherwise used to refer to indirect objects or benefactives. There are a few transitive stative verbs such as the dependent verb "to be tired of something".
Discourse styles Cannibal speech Natchez oral literature has been documented by
John R. Swanton and
Mary Haas, both of whom worked with Watt Sam in 1907 and the mid 1930s, respectively. Traditionally the Natchez had certain stories that could only be told during the winter time, and many of these stories revolved around the theme of
cannibalism. Protagonists in such stories would encounter cannibals, trick cannibals, marry the daughters of cannibals, kill cannibals, and be eaten by cannibals. In these stories Natchez storytellers would employ a special speech
register when impersonating the cannibal characters. This register was distinct from ordinary Natchez by substituting several morphemes and words for others. In this example the standard optative prefix
-- is exchanged for the cannibal register optative prefix
-ka- :'''' :'''' :-eat- :"Let us [cannibals] eat him!" Table 4. shows some of the lexical substitutions charactering Natchez cannibal speech. ==Notes==