Mam has two sets of agreement markers, known to Mayanists as
Set A and
Set B markers, which can appear on both nouns and verbs. Mam uses
Set A (
ergative) markers on nouns to mark possessor agreement and on verbs to cross-reference the transitive subject. Mam uses
Set B (
absolutive) markers on transitive verbs to cross-reference the object and on intransitive verbs to cross-reference the subject. Below is a table of
Set A (ergative) and
Set B (absolutive) prefixes from England. Phonologically conditioned allomorphs are as follows. • n- ~ w- • n- /__C • w- /__V • Ø ~ tz- ~ tzʼ- ~ k- • k- /potential • tzʼ- /__V initial root, non-potential • tz- /__
uul 'arrive here',
iky' 'pass by', non-potential • Ø- /__C, non-potential • -a ~ -ya • -ya /V__ ; In the first person in post-vowel environments, -
ya varies freely with -
kyʼa and -
y'. • -a /C__ Some paradigmatic examples from England (1983) are given below. Note that "Ø-" designates a
null prefix. Additionally,
ma is an aspectual word meaning 'recent past'.
Mam verb complex Verbs in Mam can include inflection for person, aspect and mode, as well as auxiliaries in the form of directionals. The verb complex has distinct forms for transitive and intransitive verb stems depending in part on whether the complex cross-references one or two arguments. The lexical status of the verb complex is ambiguous. The inflections with vowels are phonologically independent (indicated by spaces). Transitive verb complexes with directionals have a dependent suffix. Two of England's examples of intransitive and transitive verb complexes are shown below. Intransitive verb complex with directional {{interlinear|glossing=link|indent=5 Transitive verb complex with directional {{interlinear|glossing=link|indent=5 Mam extends the Set A (ergative) person markers in the context of focused adverbials and certain subordinate clauses. In these contexts, the Set A markers cross-reference the subject of intransitive verbs and both the subject and object of transitive verbs. The following examples show the extended ergative marker /t-/ in
bold. Intransitive verb complex with extended ergative marking {{interlinear|glossing=link|indent=5 Transitive verb complex with extended ergative marking {{interlinear|glossing=link|indent=5 REC:recent past POT:potential aspect ABS:absolutive agreement (Set B) ERG:ergative agreement (Set A) DEP:dependent suffix DIR:directional ENC:person enclitic REL:relational noun PAT:patient
Verb morphemes Transitive verbal affixes • -bʼaa 'transitivizer' (vowel length can also be used) • -laa 'applicative' • -wa 'applicative' • -bʼV 'causative' • -chV 'causative' (variants: -chaa, -chii, -chuu) • -kʼuu 'causative' • -lV 'causative' • -mV 'causative' • -nV 'causative' • -pV 'causative' • -qʼV 'causative' • -saa 'causative' • -tzii 'causative' • -tzʼV 'causative' • -txʼii 'causative' • -wV 'causative' • -najee' 'repetitive' • -'kJ 'processive' • -'tz 'processive imperative'
Intransitive verbal affixes • -n 'antipassive' • -Vn 'affect' • -ax 'versive' • -ee' 'versive' • -eet 'passive' • -j 'passive' • -njtz 'passive' • -bʼaj 'processive passive' • -bʼa 'intransitivizer' • -ch 'intransitivizer' • -chaj 'intransitivizer' • -paj 'intransitivizer' • -t 'intransitivizer' • -tzʼaj 'intransitivizer' • -tzʼaq 'intransitivizer' • -' ... -al 'specific termination'
Other verbal affixes • -l 'infinitive'
Aspects Mam verbs have 6 aspects that are prefixed to the verb root. • ma 'recent past' • o 'past' • ok 'potential' (not obligatory) • n- 'progressive' • x- 'recent past dependent' (used in subordinate clauses) • Ø- 'past dependent' (used in subordinate clauses)
Modes • Potential transitive: -a' • Potential intransitive: -l • Imperative: -m (-n before directionals)
Directionals Directionals are auxiliary elements in verb phrases. They are derived from intransitive verbs. • xi 'away from' • tzaj 'toward' • ul 'there to here' • pon 'here to there' • kubʼ 'down' • jaw 'up' • el 'out' • ok 'in' • kyaj 'remaining' • aj 'returning from here' • ikyʼ 'passing' • bʼaj 'complete'
Pronouns Mam has no independent pronouns. Rather, pronouns in Mam always exist as
bound morphemes.
Nouns The Mam language displays
inalienable possession. Certain Mam nouns cannot be possessed, such as ''kya'j'' 'sky' and ''che'w'' 'star'. On the other hand, some Mam nouns are always possessed, such as
t-lokʼ 'its root' and
t-bʼaqʼ 'its seed'. Noun phrase structure can be summarized into the following template. : The plural clitic is
qa.
Noun affixes • aj- 'agent' • aj- 'native' • -l 'agentive' • -eenj 'patient' • -bʼil 'instrumental' • -bʼeen 'resultant locative' • -bʼan 'reminder' • -al 'abstract noun' • -abʼiil 'abstract noun' • -leen 'abstract noun' • -le'n 'abstract noun' • -an 'ordinal' • -bʼji'bʼil 'nominalizer' • -bʼal 'nominalizer' • -bʼatz 'nominalizer' • -l 'nominalizer' • -tl 'nominalizer' • -tz 'nominalizer'
Relational noun affixes • -u'n 'agent, instrument, causative' • -ee 'dative, possessive, patient, benefactive' • -i'j 'patient, thematic' • -uukʼal 'instrument, comitative' • -iibʼaj 'reflexive'
Locative affixes • -bʼutxʼ 'at the corner' • -i'jla 'around' • -iibʼaj 'over' • -jaqʼ 'under' • -txa'n 'at the edge of' • -txlaj 'beside' • -tzii' 'at the entrance of' • -uj 'in' • -witz 'on top of' • -wi' 'on, at the tip of'
Classifiers • jal 'non-human' • nu'xh 'baby' • xhlaaqʼ 'child' • bʼixh 'person of the same status (intimate)' • qʼa 'young man' • txin 'young woman' • ma 'man' • xu'j 'woman' • swe'j 'old man' • xhyaa' 'old woman' • xnuq 'old man (respectful)' • xuj 'old man (respectful)'
Measure words Measure words quantify
mass nouns. • baas 'glassful' (< Spanish
vaso) • ma'l 'shot of liquor' • laq 'plateful' • pixh 'piece' • txut 'drop' • ba'uj 'a lot'
Numerals San Ildefonso Ixtahuacán Mam numbers are as follows. Numbers above twenty are rarely used in Ixtahuacán and are usually only known by elderly speakers. Although the number system would have originally been
vigesimal (i.e., base 20), the present-day number system of Ixtahuacán is now
decimal. ==Syntax==