Tamasheq's two main morphological processes are
ablaut and
affixation, with the former permeating the language. Many processes also undergo a combination of the two.
Derivational morphology Most of Tamasheq
nouns are underived, although some are
derived by "some combination of ablaut and prefixation." For example, the noun
t-æ-s-ȁnan-t, which means 'oxpecker,' is prefixally derived from the causative verb
æ̀ss-onæn 'tame, break in animal' with its
-s- prefix. In Tamasheq, nearly all "modifying adjectives" are participles of inflected intransitive verbs. For example, the verb 'to ripe' is
əŋŋá, and it is inflected into participles such as
i-ŋŋá-n (MaSg) or
t-əŋŋá-t (FeSg). These resultative participles are used with "adjectival" sense, adjectivalized into the word 'ripened'.
Nominal morphology Gender and number Gender and number are mainly marked using affixation, though in many cases they use ablaut or a combination of both. Most nouns, regardless of gender, have vocalic
prefixes, varying between -
æ-/-ə, -a-, or -e- for the singular, and invariable
i- in the plural. Some nouns entirely lack a vocalic prefix, e.g.
deké ('basket'). Feminine nouns are additionally marked by the Fe[minine] prefix
t-. For feminine singular nouns, suffix
-t is required to denote singularity, thus we see a
circumfix t-...-t. In cases where the stem ends in a vowel, however, an additional inner Fe suffix
-t- is added before the outer suffix, thus the affix frame becomes
t-...-t-t. In addition to the plural vocalic prefix
-i-, pluralization of nouns requires gender-based suffixation: for feminine plural nouns, suffix
-en or
-ten is added, while for masculine nouns Ma[sculine] suffix
-æn or
-tæn is added. In some cases, a noun pluralizes by stem ablaut without suffixation; one example of unsuffixed plural ablaut is
æ̀-ɣata ('crocodile'), which is pluralized to
ì-ɣata. The table below illustrates the idealized morphological rules of gender and number marking explained so far: }
Compounding Tamasheq makes use of
compounding to form nouns. Most noun-noun compounds necessitate a possessor
preposition ə̀n in between the two morphemes, which can be analytically structured as [X [ə̀n Y 'X of Y.' Depending on the nouns, ə̀n may become unaccented, as shown in the first example below.
Verbal morphology Ablaut distinguishes the three basic inflectable verb stems in Tamasheq: •
perfective • short
imperfective • long imperfective Ablaut can change a perfect present stem to a
resultative stem. For example, the perfect present stem of the verb 'to run' is
òšæl, and its resultative stem is
òšál. Note the vowel change from /æ/ to /á/. Ablaut also creates perfective negative stems; for example, the perfect negative stem of
əhlæk, the perfect present stem of 'destroy,' is
ə̀hlek. Affixation is also a morphological tool for Tamasheq verbs. One category of verbal affixation is pronominal subject affixes. For example, pronominal subject marking in positive imperatives uses
suffixation. The table demonstrates second person subject affixes in imperatives with the example of the verb
ə̀jjəš ('enter'). Suffixation is responsible for
hortative stems. The hortative suffix
-et can be added to short imperfective stems. For example: {{interlinear|indent=3|lang=jig
Particles Particles exist in Tamasheq. One type of particle is preposition-like, and these particles precede noun phrases or independent pronouns. For example: {{interlinear|indent=3|abbreviations=DISTANCE:Distance; ANAPH:Anaphora Many categories of discourse-functional particles exist as well. For example,
ɣás is an "extremely common" phrase-final particle that means 'only': {{interlinear|indent=3|abbreviations=RES:Resultative Another example, though less common, is a clause-final particle
yá, which emphasizes on the truth of a statement: {{interlinear|indent=3
Clitics In terms of structure,
clitics are "normally realized at the end of the first word" in the clause. There are many types of clitics, including directionals, object and dative
pronominals, pronominal prepositional phrases, etc. Below, clitics are indicated by the symbol "-\".
Directional clitics There are two directional clitics – "centripetal" clitics and "centrifugal" clitics—and they cannot co-occur. The directional clitics are attached to the pronominal clitics hosted by the same word, and are usually accented. The centripetal clitic's rudimentary form is -\
ə̀dd. Its allomorphic variation depends on postvocalic versus postconsonantal position (e.g. -\
ə̀d if, -\
dd after a, and -\
hə̀dd after high V). This clitic can be best understood as 'here,' as it specifies a direction toward "the deictic center." If the verb is non-motion, then the clitic suggests that the action was directed toward 'here' or was carried out in 'this direction'. {{interlinear|indent=3 {{interlinear|indent=3 On the other hand, the centrifugal clitic (-\
ín) indicates direction away from the deictic center, and is best translated to 'away' or 'there' in English. {{interlinear|indent=3|abbreviations=CENTRIFUGAL:Centrifugal
Pronominal clitics Object clitics Pronominal object clitics are attached at the end of a simple
transitive verb, or a preverbal particle if relevant. Pronominal clitics show wide
allomorphic variation mainly depending on point of view and plurality. Allomorphs differ both syntactically and phonologically. The table below shows first person object clitics found in Kal Ansar dialects (T-ka). As seen in the table, the T-ka first-person singular object clitic attached to a preverbal particle is
-\hi. The phrase 'he makes me weep' translates to
i-s-álha-\hi, with the clitic attached at the end of the verb 'to make weep' (álha). The table below shows second and third person object clitics for T-ka dialects. The column designated for post-a variants also occasionally applies for post-i variants.
Dative clitics Tamasheq also makes use of pronominal
dative clitics. The basic dative morpheme is -\
ha-, and it gets reduced to -\
a\ or -\
hə in certain contexts. 1Sg and 1Pl object and dative clitics are identical. {{interlinear|indent=3 This example shows the first-person dative clitic -\
a-hi, which follows the verb 'hit' (
wæt).
Ordering of clitics The basic ordering of clitics is as follows: • host word • cliticized preposition • objective and/or dative • directional • pronominal prepositional phrase For example: {{interlinear|indent=3 == Syntax ==