Basic word order The basic constituent order for Sikaiana is
subject–verb–object word order. Although the order may vary, this pattern is always used for short, simple statements. Object subject verb and object verb subject are not used in any oceanic language, which means that it will not be used in Sikaiana (Lichtenberk, 2012). In the Sikaiana grammar system, sentences that start with a noun usually do not lead with a
preposition, but for noun phrases that follow a verb phrase, it may or may not lead with a preposition (Donner, 2012). As for nouns and noun phrases, there must always be a preceding article except if it is a noun of place, names, or free pronouns. The articles that usually precede a noun are either
te or
n. The use of these articles makes nouns easily distinguishable from other parts of speech (Donner, 2012).
Morphology Sikaiana uses extensive
morphology to transform words to better express more complex sentences. Like many other Polynesian languages, Sikaiana has two types of nominal possession markers. There is an alienable marker which is
a, and an inalienable marker,
o. Pronominal possessive markers differ slightly. The alienable marker for a pronoun is
ana and the inalienable possession marker is
ona. Pronouns in Sikaiana include singular, first person inclusive, first person exclusive, second person, and third person. In order to nominalize verbs in Sikaiana, the suffix
ana is added to a verb to nominalize it. There are also length distinction morphemes used. For example,
taku means ‘my’, and
takuu means ‘axe’. ==Vocabulary==