Paresi is a
polysynthetic language, whose morpheme boundaries are clear-cut and easy to parse. Affixes are very productive in the language, with prefixes being attached mainly to verbs, and to some nouns to form stative predicates. Different sets of suffixes exist for nouns and verbs; nominal suffixes encode possession and plurals, and verbal suffixes encode aspect,
valency changes, and number. Personal and clausal clitics are quite numerous, with personal clitics marking possession and the subject, and clausal enclitics signalling future, past, or
irrealis. Adnominal (appearing before nouns) and adverbial demonstratives are also extensive, with a 4-way split in adnominal demonstratives: proximal, medial, distal, and non-visual, as well as a distinction in number.
Personal Pronouns The third person pronouns are identical to the proximal and medial demonstratives, and . Little syntactic distinction exists between the two save for the fact that may be cliticized to /ha-/ to reflect a third person singular reflexive, otherwise the third person personal pronouns are identical to demonstratives. {{interlinear|number=(1)|lang=pab
Pronominal Clitics Pronominal clitics reflect subject agreement on verbs, with Set A marking subject agreement on agentive verbs, and Set B marking subject agreement on non-agentive verbs and possession on nouns. The suffix /-nae/ is a generic plural that is used with the third person plural, with /-ha/ being specific. Because these clitics are mandatory, Paresi is a strongly
pro-drop language and subject pronouns are optional.
Valency Change Paresi has three forms of valency decreasing for verbs morphologically: • the inactive
inchoative /-oa/ • the
reflexive /-wi/ • the
reciprocal /-kakoa/ The suffix /-oa/ is used to express the
middle voice for some transitives, the reflexive for various verbs of changing the position of one’s body or taking care of one’s self, and the
passive for several verbs of harm or detriment. The suffix /-wi/ is a much more straightforward reflexive, and is exclusively used with verbs that would normally have two very distinct arguments, unlike those made reflexive by /-oa/. The reciprocal /-kakoa/ may be used with doubled plural morphology to indicated multiple reciprocal pairs, and may also attach to a noun in addition to a verb to indicate the reciprocal participants making it a “discontinuous reciprocal”. Valency is increased by attaching either the
causative prefix /a-/, or the causative suffix /-ki/, or both. Causatives may also be formed periphrastically with the verb /moka/.
Verbal Modality Paresi modality and expression of verbal reality is intertwined with the
evidentiality of said verbs. Paresi has three counterfactual modalities: •
frustrative (an action that was unfortunately not achieved, or did not go as expected) •
dubitative (an action may or may not be true) •
desiderative (the action is desired by the speaker) Of those three, the first two distinguish evidentiality and certainty. The frustrative marker /zaore~zakore/ is used to indicate that an action did not or could not be achieved or finished, and comes before the clause that expresses said action, or acts as a particle and indicates an undesirable outcome. The other frustrative marker /motya/ indicates that the verb contradicts one’s assumptions or expectations drawn from visual evidence. If one were to see that the sky was cloudy, and from that expected it to rain, but then it did not, they would utter the following: The two dubitative markers, /zamani/ and /kala/ are different in levels of certainty, the formers marks something that the speaker is quite uncertain of, while the latter indicates a non-absolute, but high degree of certainty, the speaker may have even witnessed the event personally. Finally, there is the desiderative marker /katsani/ indicating a first person wish. == Syntax ==