The vowel system is made up of an 8-member set, containing the normal
Semitic i-u-a, along with tense and lax vowels, and a central vowel. The vowel set is:
i, e, Ó, Í, a, Ã, o, u. The difference between the long and short vowels is not always just phonological. Noun unique
Modern South Arabian grammar markers. Nouns have an either masculine or feminine gender. Feminine markers use the endings of
–(V)t or
–h, as in Arabic. Unlike Arabic, the dual number marker is not used in nouns, and is instead replaced by a suffix of the numeral 2 itself. Dual pronouns are no longer used by the youth, replaced by plural pronouns. Simple verb conjugations have two separate classes, with differing conjugations for perfect, imperfect, and subjunctive cases. Verbal clauses always take the order of VSO (
Verb–subject–object) or SVO (
Subject–verb–object). If the subject is an independent pronoun, it is placed before the verb.
Guttural verbs have their own pattern. Verb classifications are intensive-conative, causative, reflexive (with infixed
-t-), and causative-reflexive. In future verbs, a preverb
ha-/h- precedes the subjunctive. The numbers 1 and 2 act as adjectives. Between 3 and 10, masculine numbers enumerate feminine nouns, and feminine numbers enumerate masculine nouns. There is gender agreement between the number and nouns from 11 to 19. Beyond that, the structure is tens, “and”, and the unit. This is similar to Arabic counting. Livestock counting presents a special case that deviates from Arabic, instead using an ancient
Bedouin system. Beyond 13, the noun used is either plural or singular. ==Notes==