Nominal phrases In Paamese nominals can occur in four environments: • as verbal subjects with cross-reference on the verb for person and number • as verbal objects with cross-reference on the verb for properness • as prepositional objects • as heads of nominal phrases with associated adjuncts There are four major classes of nominals: • Pronouns • Indefinites • Possessives • Nouns
Pronouns Free pronouns in Paamese: The
paucal is generally used for numbers in the range of about three to six, and the plural is generally used for numbers greater than twelve. In the range of six to twelve, whether a speaker of Paamese uses paucal or plural is dependent on what the thing being spoken about is contrasted with. For example, one's patrilineage will be referred to paucally when it is contrasted with that of the whole village, but plurally when it is contrasted with just the nuclear family. The paucal is also sometimes used even when it is referring to a very large number if it is contrasted with an even bigger number; for example comparing the population of Paama with that of Vanuatu as a whole. However, using the paucal with numbers above twelve is rare.
Indefinites Unlike other nominals, indefinites can occur not only as nominal phrase heads, but also as adjuncts to other heads. There are two types of indefinites. The first are numerals. When Crowley was writing in 1982 he stated that the numeral system of Paamese was not used by anyone under the age of 30 and only rarely by those older than 30. It is unlikely, therefore, that many speakers use it today. The following is a list of the seven non-numeral indefinites in Paamese: • - another (sg) • - other (non-sg) • - any • , some • - some of it/them • - many/much • - many/much (archaic)
Possessives All nouns fall into one of two subclasses using different constructions for
possession. Categories can roughly be defined semantically into
alienable and inalienable possession. Inalienability, semantically can be described as the relationship held between an animate possessor and an aspect of this possessor which can't exist independently of that being. Body parts are the most common inalienable possession, but not all body parts are treated as inalienable; internal body parts are largely seen as alienable unless they are perceived to be central to emotions, individuality or maintenance of life itself. This can be explained through the experience of butchering or cooking of animals in which the internal organs are removed and thus alienated from the body. Extrusions that are expelled in normal bodily functions are regarded as inalienable while those that are periodically expelled or as a result of sickness are regarded as alienable. As such, bodily fluids such as urine, saliva, blood and excrement are treated as inalienable while sweat, blood clots and ear wax are alienable. An exception to this rule is vomit, however, which is treated as inalienable. Inalienability also extends to relations between people with blood relations being expressed in the alienable possessive construction. Inalienable and alienable possessions are marked using different possessive constructions. Inalienable possessions are marked with a possessive suffix attaching directly onto the noun. ; NOUN-SUFFIX {{interlinear|indent=2 While alienable possessions are marked with a possessive constituent to which the possessive suffix attaches. ; NOUN POSS-SUFFIX {{interlinear|indent=2 The possessive suffix in both subclasses, however, is the same. These classes are quite rigid and if an inalienable noun, semantically, can be alienated it would still have to be expressed using the inalienable construction. Alienable possessions can be split into further subclasses represented by the different possessive constituent that the noun takes. These also have a semantic correspondence indicating the relationship between the possessed noun and the possessor. • 'his/her/its (to eat); 'intended specially for him/her/it'; 'specially characteristic of him/her/it' • 'his/her/its (to drink, to wear, to use domestically)' • 'his/her (owned as something that one has planted, as an animal one has reared, or as something kept on one's own land)' • 'his/her/its (in all other kinds of possession)' These subclasses are not as rigid and a noun can be used with different possessive constituent according to its use. When the possessed noun isn't a pronoun, the third person singular possessive suffix is attached to the possessed noun, which is then followed by the possessor noun. {{interlinear|indent=2 If the possessed noun is inalienable, the third person singular suffix attaches directly to the noun with the possessor noun following. {{interlinear|indent=2 No morpheme of any kind can intervene between a possessive suffix and the possessed noun in this construction.
Nouns There are five subtypes of nouns in Paamese. The first are individual names of people or animals, that is of some particular person or animal. For example, Schnookims or Fido rather than cat or dog. Individual names are cross-referenced on the verb in object position with the same suffix used for pronouns (), rather than the suffix used for non-proper objects ().
Location nouns There are two kinds of location nouns: relative and absolute. The relative nouns are a closed class of ten words with meanings such as above or nearby. The absolute nouns are an open class and refer to some specific location. Location nouns generally occur in the spatial case. Unlike all other nouns, in this case they take a zero marking rather than the preposition . Relative location nouns are distinguished grammatically from the absolute location nouns on the basis that they can freely enter into prepositionally linked complex nominal phrases while the absolute nouns cannot.
Time nouns Time nouns are distinguished from other nouns grammatically on the basis that they can only be in the oblique or relative case. Like location nouns, they come in two types. The first can only receive a zero marking in the oblique case, while the second can be marked with either a zero marking or with the prepositions or .
Descriptive nouns Descriptive nouns are marginal members of the noun category. Semantically, they describe some property or quality attributed to something, and grammatically they usually behave like adjectives, that is they occur as adjuncts in a copular verb phrase. However unlike adjectives they do occasionally appear in distinctly nominal slots such as in the subject or object position to a verb. Further, unlike an adjective, they cannot simply follow a head noun as an adjunct.
Common nouns Common nouns include nouns that do not fit into any of the above noun categories. They are characterized grammatically as not having any of the special grammatical restrictions that apply to the other nouns, and also by the verb taking the non-proper suffix () when a common noun is in the object position. Semantically, they include anything that can be considered alienable or inalienable.
Verb phrases Paamese demonstrates extensive
inflectional morphology on verbs, distinguishing between a number of different
modal categories that are expressed as prefixes. Verb phrases in Paamese are distinguishable as they have as their head as member of the class of verbs followed by its associated verbal adjuncts and modifiers.
Verb roots The verb root form is bounded on the left by subject-mood prefixes and on the right by inflectional suffixes. The root itself differs in form according to the nature of the environment it occurs in. Verb roots fall into one of six different classes according to the ways that the initial segment inflects. This inflection is demonstrated in the following table. Each of the four root forms denotes a specific set of morpho-syntactic environments: • A • as the second part of a compound noun • B • in all affirmative
irrealis moods of the verb • when there is some preceding derivational morpheme • when there is no preceding morpheme and the verb carries the nominalizer • C • as an adjunct to a verb phrase head • D • in the
realis mood of the verb • in the negative form of the verb A verb is entered into the lexicon in its A-form. Transitive verbs can be further subdivided into classes according to the variation of the final segment of the root: • X • word finally • before the common object cross reference suffix • before a reduplicated part of a word • Y • before bound object pronouns • before the common object cross-reference suffix • Z • before the partitive suffix • before the nominalizing suffix
Inflectional prefixes Inflectional prefixes attach onto the verb phrase head in the following order: • Subject marker + mood marker + negative marker + stem The syntactic position of the verb phrase head can be defined by the fact that is the only obligatorily filled slot in the phrase. The subject and mood prefixes are normally clearly distinguishable morphologically, however there is morphological fusion in some conjunctions of categories producing portmanteau morphemes that mark both subject and mood.
Subject prefixes The subject constituent cross-references for the person and number of the subject and also expresses the mood.
Mood prefixes • Realis: ∅ • Immediate: • Distant: portmanteau • Potential: • Prohibitive: potential +partitive suffix • Imperative: portmanteau Imperative portmanteau subject-mood prefixes are as follows: • Sg: ∅- • Dl: • Pcl: • Pl:
Negation Negation in Paamese is marked by the
prefix , which is added between subject markers and the root form of the
verb, affirmative constructions are marked by the absence of a
morpheme in this position. Semantically, the negative construction can be used with both
realis and
irrealis verbs; the former is used to express that the speaker denies the fact that an event is real and the latter expresses that the speaker does not expect the event to become real. Because of this, the negative in Paamese is incompatible with
imperative, prohibitive and potential moods. This is due to the fact that these moods, despite being irrealis, do not express any form of expectation that the event will become real from the speaker. There are two distinct constructions of negation: the
partitive and the non-partitive. These constructions differ in that the partitive takes the partitive suffix obligatorily, while non-partitive constructions only take this suffix optionally.
Partitive negative The partitive negative is the most common form of negation in everyday speech. It is used as the negative forms of: ; Transitive verbs with non-generic objects {{interlinear|indent=2 The use of the partitive in these examples expresses that a non-generic object is entirely unaffected by an event, rather than being only partially unaffected (the example above describes the breadfruit being entirely uneaten, as opposed to only some remaining uneaten). ; Any intransitive verb {{interlinear|indent=2 Using the partitive to express intransitive verbs acts to express that the state or event is completely unachieved rather than being partially achieved.
Non-partitive negative The non-partitive negative is used to as a negator of transitive verbs with generic objects such as: {{interlinear|indent=2 {{interlinear|indent=2 The above examples are also able to be expressed using the partitive negative construction as seen in the below example: {{interlinear|indent=2 However, this construction has no apparent change in meaning to non-partitive constructions.
Inflectional suffixes There are three sets of inflectional suffixes: those expressing bound pronominal objects, those expressing the common-proper marking of a free form object, and that which marks the verb as being partitive.
Bound pronominal objects A singular pronominal object can be expressed as a suffix. There are two sets of bound object markers. The first set is used with the greatest number of verbs, the second set is used only with roots ending in –e and those belonging to Class IV (see above). Class I verbs cannot take the first person singular bound object, although they can take the second and third person objects.
Common-proper objects When a transitive verb is followed by a free form object, this is cross-referenced on the verb according to whether it is common or proper with certain phonological categories of verb stems. When the object is a name or a pronoun, this is marked on certain verbs by the suffix . When the verb has a common object, this is cross-referenced with the suffix .
Reduplication Reduplication has a fairly wide range of semantic functions in Paamese and can in some cases even change the class which a form belongs. When a verb is reduplicated, the new verb can differ semantically from its corresponding un-reduplicated form in that it describes an event that is not seen as having a spatial or temporal setting or a single specific patient. When a numeral verb is reduplicated, the meaning is that of distribution. Reduplication can occur in a number of ways: it can reduplicate just the initial syllable, the initial two syllables, or the final two syllables with no consistent semantic difference between these three types.
Adjuncts A verb phrase can contain one or more adjuncts that always follow the head of the verb phrase. All of the inflectional suffixes above attach onto the last filler of the adjunct slot and, if there is no adjunct, onto the verb phrase head. There are two different types of adjuncts: tightly bound and loosely bound. A tightly bound adjunct must always be followed by the inflectional suffixes, as no constituent can intervene between it, and the verb phrase head. Tightly bound adjuncts include prepositional and verbal adjuncts and adjectival adjuncts to a non-copula verb phrase head. A loosely bound adjunct can have inflectional suffixes attached to either the final adjunct or the verb phrase head. All adjuncts to the copula verb, nominal adjuncts in the 'cognate object' construction, and modifiers are loosely bound. The 'cognate object' construction is one in which there is an intransitive verb in the position of the head and a loosely bound nominal phrase adjunct following the head. The transitivity of the final adjunct determines the transitivity of the entire verb phrase.
Serial verb construction By far the most common adjunct is a verb stem itself; this construction is called a
serial verb construction. In this construction, prefixes attach to the head and suffixes to the final constituent of the adjunct slot, thus marking this a tightly bound adjunct. It is not often possible to predict the meanings of serial verbs in Paamese and there are a large number of verbal adjuncts which do not occur as heads themselves.
Clauses Declarative clauses There are three types of morphosyntactic relationship between phrase-level constituents: •
(NP)(VP) A clause may contain one or more NP. The NPs may be subjects, objects, prepositional objects, or a bound complement. •
(NP)(NP) NPs may relate to each other as part of a prepositional construction or the bond complement construction. • There is also a third type that holds between modifiers and other constituents.
Yes/no questions There are four types of yes/no questions.
Intonation questions This takes the syntactic form of a declarative. However, while a declarative typically ends in falling intonation, a rise-fall turns the clause into a question.
Opposite polarity questions This takes the form of a semantically negative declarative clause. This is used as a polite way of asking permission for something.
Tag questions This takes the form of a declarative clause with the tag "aa" placed at the end. This takes a sharply rising intonation.
Opposite polarity tag questions There are two different types of opposite polarity tag, "vuoli" and "mukavee". There is no appreciable difference in meaning between these two forms.
Content questions These take the form of a declarative clause, but insert one of the following words into the syntactic slot that information is being requested about: • when asking about nouns with non-human reference • when asking about nouns with human reference • when asking about location nouns, or which of a number on non-human nouns • when asking about time nouns == Demonstratives and spatial deictics ==