Sylheti grammar is the study of the
morphology and
syntax of Sylheti.
Nouns Case When a
definite article such as
-gu/ṭa (singular) or
-guin/ṭin (plural) is added, equivalent to using the
measure word for the noun as an
infix, nouns are also inflected for
number. However, in Sylheti, this marked nominative is only exhibited by nouns, and not by pronouns.
Measure words When counted, nouns must also be accompanied by the appropriate
measure word. The noun's measure word (
MW) must be used in between the numeral and the noun. Most nouns take the generic measure word
gu/ṭa/xán, although there are many more specific measure words, such as
zon, which is only used to count humans. Measuring nouns in Sylheti without their corresponding measure words (e.g.
aṭ mekur instead of
aṭ-gu mekur 'eight cats') would typically be considered ungrammatical. However, omitting the noun and preserving the measure word is grammatical and not uncommon to hear. For example,
Xáli êx-zon táxbo. (lit. 'Only one-
MW will remain.') would be understood to mean 'Only one
person will remain.', since
zon can only be used to count humans.
Pronouns Personal pronouns Sylheti personal pronouns are somewhat similar to English pronouns, having different words for first, second, and third person, and also for singular and plural (unlike for verbs, below). Sylheti pronouns, like their English counterparts, do differentiate for gender. Sylheti has different third-person pronouns for proximity. The first are used for someone who is nearby, and the second are for those who are a little further away. The third are usually for those who are not present. In addition, each of the second- and third-person pronouns have different forms for the familiar and polite forms; the second person also has a "very familiar" form (sometimes called "despective"). It may be noted that the "very familiar" form is used when addressing particularly close friends or family as well as for addressing subordinates, or in abusive language. In the following tables, the abbreviations used are as follows:
VF=very familiar,
F=familiar, and
P=polite (honor);
H=here,
T=there,
E=elsewhere (proximity), and
I=inanimate. The
nominative case is used for pronouns that are the subject of the sentence, such as "
I already did that" or "Will
you please stop making that noise?" } (
ita, it/this) The
objective case is used for pronouns serving as the direct or indirect objects, such as "I told
him to wash the dishes" or "The teacher gave
me the homework assignment". The inanimate pronouns remain the same in the objective case. The
possessive case is used to show possession, such as "Where is
your coat?" or "Let's go to
our house". In addition, sentences such as "
I have a book" () or "
I need money" () also use the possessive (the literal translation of the Bengali versions of these sentences would be "There is
my book" and "There is
my need for money" respectively).
Indefinite and negative pronouns Bengali has no negative pronouns (such as
no one, nothing, none). These are typically represented by adding the negative particle (
nae) to
indefinite pronouns, which are themselves derived from their corresponding question words. Common indefinite pronouns are listed below.
Relative pronouns The relative pronoun (
ze) and its different variants, as shown below, are commonly employed in complex sentences. The relative pronouns for animate objects change for number and honour, but those for inanimate objects stay the same.
Adjectives Adjectives do not inflect for case, gender, or number in Sylheti and are placed before the noun they modify. Some adjectives form their opposites by prefixing
be-, or sometimes
ni-; for example, the opposite of (
ruzgar, 'earning') is (
beruzgar, 'not earning, idle, mendicant'), the opposite of (
xama, 'of use') is (
nixama, 'useless, of no use'). Demonstrative adjectives – 'this' and 'that' – correspond to
i, o/ou and
hi, ho/hou, with the definite article attached to the following noun. Thus, 'this book' would translate to
i boi-xan, while 'those books' would translate to
hi boi-gisin/boi-gun/boi-ain.
Comparatives and superlatives Sylheti adjectives form their comparative forms with (
aro, 'more'), and their superlative forms with (
shob táki, 'than all'). Comparisons are formed by using genitive form of the object of comparison, followed by the postposition (
táki/tóni, 'than') or the postposition (
laxan, 'like') and then by (
aro, 'more') or (
xom, 'less'). The word for 'more' is optional, but the word for 'less' is required, so in its absence 'more' is inferred. Adjectives can be additionally modified by using (
bolon/bakka/bout, 'much') or (
bout, 'much'), which are especially useful for comparing quantities.
Verbs Sylheti verbs are highly
inflected and are regular with only few exceptions. They consist of a stem and an ending; they are traditionally listed in Sylheti dictionaries in their "verbal noun" form, which is usually formed by adding
-a, - ni, -na to the stem: for instance, (
xani, to eat) is formed from the stem and similarly (
xora/ xorna, to do) is formed from the stem . The stem can end in either a vowel or a consonant. Verbs are conjugated for
tense and
person by changing the endings, which are largely the same for all verbs. However, the stem vowel can often change as part of the phenomenon known as
vowel harmony, whereby one vowel can be influenced by other vowels in the word to sound more harmonious. An example would be the verb
to write, with stem
lex-: (
lexo, 'you all write') but also (
lekí, 'we write'). If verbs are classified by stem vowel and if the stem ends in a consonant or vowel, there are nine basic classes in which most verbs can be placed; all verbs in a class will follow the same pattern. A prototype verb from each of these classes will be used to demonstrate conjugation for that class;
bold will be used to indicate mutation of the stem vowel. Additionally, there are irregular verbs, such as (
zani, to go) that change the first consonant in their stem in certain conjugations. Like many other
Indo-Aryan languages (such as
Standard Bengali or
Assamese), nouns can be turned into verbs by combining them with select auxiliary verbs. In Sylheti, the most common such auxiliary verb is (
xora, 'to do'); thus, verbs such as
joke are formed by combining the noun form of
joke () with
to do () to create . When conjugating such verbs the noun part of such a verb is left untouched, so in the previous example, only would be inflected or conjugated (e.g.:
I will make a joke becomes ; see more on tenses below). Other auxiliary verbs include and , but the verb enjoys significant usage because it can be combined with foreign verbs to form a native version of the verb, even if a direct translation exists. Most often this is done with English verbs: for example,
to vote is often referred to as (, where is the transliteration of
vote).
Copula Sylheti is considered a
zero copula language in some aspects. • In the simple present tense there is no verb connecting the subject to the predicative (the "zero verb" copula). There is one notable exception, however, which is when the predicative takes on the existential, locative, or possessive aspects; for such purposes, the incomplete verb (
as) is used, which is conjugated according to the rules given below. • In the past tense, the incomplete verb is always used as the copula, regardless of the nature of the predicative. • For the future tense and non-finite structures, the copula is supplied by the verb (
ówa), with the only exception being the possessive predicative for which the verb (
táxa, 'to remain') is utilised. The following table demonstrates the rules above with some examples.
Negation There are three sentence negators employed in Sylheti: • The zero verb copula is negated using the incomplete negator , which is conjugated as (1), (2), (3). • Existential sentences that use the verb are negated with (
nai), which does not need to be conjugated. • All other verbs (with the exceptions of the ones listed above) are negated using the universal negative particle (
nae). is typically placed after the finite verb (see examples below), but can also be placed at the end of the sentence, which negates the whole sentence. can be used in all tenses except two: the present perfect and the past perfect. • Verbs in the present perfect and the past perfect tenses are negated using the suffix (
na) which can also refer to "no" in yes–no questions.
Person Verbs are inflected for person and
honour, but not for number. There are five forms: first person, second person (very familiar), second person (familiar), third person (familiar), and second/third person (polite). The same sample subject pronouns will be used for all the example conjugation paradigms: (), (), (), (), (), () and (). These have the following plurals respectively: (), (), (), ()/ (), ()/ () and (). ==Comparison==