Nouns Case functions Accusative and dative The accusative, just as in Latin, was used as the
direct object of
transitive verbs and with
prepositions. There is also evidence of the cognate accusative, a function in Latin in which accusative nouns were often the object of related verbs. In Umbrian, this appears in the sentence "." The dative was used in both Latin and Umbrian to refer to the
indirect object of
transitive verbs, although it could also be the direct object of
special verbs: the Umbrian verb "" ("to care for") is used with the dative in the sentence "" to express the meaning "to care for the divine thing," which in Latin would be expressed using the equivalent verb "" with the accusative. Certain compound verbs appear to have taken the dative, a linguistic peculiarity also present in Latin: In the sentence "," the
compound verb "" takes the dative. Dative forms could also function as the indirect object of nouns with verbal meanings: "," meaning "dedication for
Jupiter." Like Latin, the Umbrian dative could be paired with adjectives: "," meaning "It must be propitious ... for the people." The Umbrian dative could indicate the beneficiary or maleficiary of an action: this function, the dative of reference, appears in the sentence "" ("observe... divine omens for me, for the city of Iguvinum").
Genitive Like Latin, the
genitive case was utilized to communicate both partitive and objective relationships between nouns. The partitive genitive, in which the genitive communicates that the noun is a smaller component of the genitive noun, appears in Umbrian sentences such as "," meaning "greater part
of the [Arvales] brothers." However, unlike Latin, the partitive genitive in Umbrian may have also functioned as a
subject in certain circumstances, a grammatical property that appears in
Lithuanian,
Avestan, and—rarely—
Greek. This usage of the genitive is possibly attested in the sentence "," meaning "[whether] any
of them are to be accepted." The genitive of possession, in which the genitive term is marked as the possessor, possibly appears in Umbrian sentences such as , translating to "for the people
of the city of Iguvium." However, within this sentence, the genitive could either be functioning in its capacity as a partitive or possessive genitive. Likewise, the genitive of characteristic may appear in the sentence "," meaning "whoever is
of the city of Tadinatus," although in this sentence the genitive may either be functioning as a genitive of characteristic or as a partitive genitive. The objective genitive, in which the genitive functions to communicate the object of nouns with verbal connotations, appears in Umbrian sentences such as "," meaning "dedication
of the sacrificial animal," and "," meaning "confidence in the
holy one."
Ablative and locative In contrast to Latin, in which the
locative was reduced to rare and limited functions, the Umbrian locative retained much broader and more widespread use. The Umbrian locative was used to signify the place something occurred; thus, Umbrian terms locatives such as , meaning "at Acedonia," and "," meaning "at [city of] Iguvium." Locative forms such as and , both of which refer to the time frame in which a specific individual held a political office, attest to the existence of a locative of time, which would indicate the time something occurred. Ablative forms were also utilized to communicate locative meanings: Umbrian phrases such as "" ("sitting in the tent") utilize the ablative to indicate the location where something occurred. The ablative, typically when accompanied by a preposition such as "" (";" "out of," "from") or a postpositive marker such as "" or "," could also indicate movement from a location: the terms term "" ("from the field") and the sentence"" ("from this people") both demonstrate this function of the ablative. Furthermore, the ablative in Umbrian could indicate the route through which movement had occurred: the sentence, "" ("go by the augural way"), exemplifies this usage." Ablative forms could communicate the time something occurred, as demonstrated in the phrase "" ("in the middle of the prayer"). Both the ablative and locative appeared to be able to communicate the means by which in action occurred: the phrase "" ("to hold in the hand") utilizes the ablative form "" ("in the hand"), while the sentence "" ("to hold in the hand") utilizes the locative form to communicate a similar meaning. The ablative could also communicate the attendant circumstances surrounding an action, as demonstrated by sentences such as "" ("present to Jupiter with the same dedication"). More broadly, the Umbrian ablative could signify accompaniment; it could communicate that an action was occurring with or alongside something. Such a meaning appears in sentences such as "" ("stand with the assistants"), which utilize the preposition "" (";" "with"). This preposition was dropped in scenarios where the notion of accompaniment could be substituted for the ablative of means or manner: "" ("go about [perform the lustration] with the bulls and the fire"). The preposition "" or "," when used as a postpositive marker of an ablative term, communicated a locative meaning: "" ("at the altar") and "" ("at the boundary"). Another, more miscellaneous usage of the Umbrian ablative is the ablative of price, which marks the cost of something: "" ("shall receive a perquisite of one sesterce for each person"). There is also limited attestation of an
ablative absolute in Umbrian: "" ("when the birds have been observed"). The linguist Gary B. Holland suggests that it is possible this form merely constitutes a locative, as the locative plural is identical to the ablative plural in Umbrian.
Declension First Declension The Umbrian first declension retained the elongated stem in the nominative singular, whereas in Latin it shortened to . However, the vowel "ā' in Umbrian became a more
rounded vowel akin to the "a" in English "call." Umbrian also retained the elongated stem in the accusative singular, although the final is often dropped in writing, likely because the final sound was pronounced so faintly that it was somewhat negligible. The accusative plural form derives from Proto-Italic , which evolved into . The final was pronounced so weakly that it is often dropped often from inscriptions, although this is more common in the later Iguvine tablets written in the Latin script than the older Iguvine tablets written in the Old Italic script. For the dative singular, the Proto-Italic
diphthong was
monophthongized to . It was likely an
open vowel as it is never misspelt with , which occurs frequently in the related Oscan language for terms with or in the final syllables. Like Latin, Umbrian dropped the final at the end of words; thus, the ablative singular form in Umbrian evolved into from . Umbrian inherited the genitive singular ending from Proto-Italic, which also appears in
Old Latin and persisted into
Classical Latin through terms such as . The genitive plural ending, , likely retained the long as—in neither Oscan nor Umbrian—is vowel contraction observed prior to the final consonants , , , and . Although there is no attested first declension vocative plural, the vocative singular likely appears in certain names and was likely marked by the ending . Buck concludes that it was likely a short vowel as it is never misspelt as in inscriptions. The locative singular ending is identical with that of the dative singular and the locative plural is identical with that of the ablative plural. In Umbrian inscriptions, the locative ending was often suffixed by the
postpositive form , which was sometimes written separately from the word (for instance, "," meaning "to carry on a table") or merged with the term through
contraction (see , meaning "into the field"). In some circumstances, the form altered to through contraction; for example, the term , meaning "at Acedonia." There is also evidence of masculine proper names bearing the same stem of the first declension. Such names are occasionally borrowed from Greek, although they omit the final ; names such as from ("," "Archias"). Other names end in and appear to derive from Italic sources, such as or . Only one oblique form for masculine first declension forms is attested: the accusative singular form . Another form, that possibly was a genitive singular of a masculine first declension term, is attested: .
Second declension The Proto-Italic nominative singular ending lost the , leaving the Umbrian nominative singular ending , as represented by Umbrian terms such as ("quiet"). Umbrian preserved the Proto-Italic accusative plural ending , although it was represented in Umbrian by the
graphemes , , , and . The accusative singular form was merely the vowel , occasionally written orthographically as or , although it was more common for the final to be omitted. Thus, the Umbrian word for "people" can be written as or and as or , presumably because the final was pronounced so faintly that it was often ignored. The accusative plural form , or , deriving from Proto-Italic , was also written without the final , presumably because the sound was also pronounced so weakly that writers often opted to neglect it. During the transition from Proto-Italic, the dative singular form shortened to and then was monophthongized in Umbrian. Orthographically, it was written as , , , , and . Umbrian lost the final of the Proto-Italic ablative singular ending . The ablative singular was near unanimously transcribed as ; the example constitutes the only definitive evidence of an ablative singular denoted by and the term , although it has also been interpreted as a locative singular marked by , may be interpreted as an ablative singular form. The dative and ablative cases shared the same plural endings, which were orthographically represented by a multitude of forms:, , , , , , , , and . Of these endings, the most common is , with , appearing in over 100 inscriptions, although only appears in 7 inscriptions and appears in only 6. Unlike the other second declension forms, which derived from Proto-Italic o-stem nouns, the genitive singular inherited the from the Proto-Italic i-stem declension. It was typically represented in writing through the forms , , , although the endings and appear rarely. In contrast, the genitive plural ending was inherited from the equivalent Proto-Italic o-stem form and was typically represented in Umbrian , , or . The vocative singular form in Umbrian was and the locative singular was the long vowel , frequently—or perhaps always—compounded with the postpositive . Another subtype of the second declension appears in the second declension stem nouns, which derive from terms ending in or . The nominative and accusative singular in both masculine and neuter forms was marked by the phoneme , which could be written as or . However, these graphemes were relatively uncommon compared to the forms or , which appear in terms such as the nominative or accusative singular neuter form or the accusative singular masculine form , both of which may derive from . Other irregular forms may surface in the
hapax "" possibly was an stem noun that conveyed the short vowel through the ending , an orthographic choice that, although attested elsewhere in the language, remains uncommon. The term , possibly deriving from , may also have replaced the standard ending with . The remaining forms are identical with those of the standard second declension endings, although in the ablative and dative singular and plural forms contraction is possible. This feature, which is more common in Late Iguvine writings than Early Iguvine, can be overserved in the dative singular form , which can be alternatively written as or . In addition to the masculine second declensions, there is also a slightly distinct morphology for neuter second declension forms. The only known differences between the second declension masculine and neuter forms appear in the nominative and accusative singular and plural: the neuter nominative and accusative singular are identical with each other and the masculine accusative singular, while the neuter accusative plural—which are also identical with each other—were represented by the ending and were represented orthographically by , , or . There were other, rarer, endings utilize to mark the nominative or accusative neuter plural: the form is attested for the nominative plural and the forms or , which could also be written without the final , are attested as representations of the accusative plural. Buck suggests that this irregularity possibly originated in the accusative plural before spreading the nominative; he suggests it was likely that it was motivated by the existence of parallel forms in the standard masculine nominative and accusative plural.
Third declension The Umbrian third declension, like the Latin third declension, merged forms from the Proto-Italic consonant stem and i-stem declensions. In Proto-Italic, the nominative singular of these declensions was and respectively. During the transition to Umbrian, the /i/ vowel was syncopated, producing a nominative singular ending for all third declension forms. However, the nominative plural endings vary depending upon whether the term was inherited from the consonant or i-stem terms. I-stem terms likely inherited the ending , although the Oscan nominative plural formation "" Indicates that at least the Oscan language, and possibly the Osco-Umbrian languages at large, may have evolved the ending according to the model of the first and second declension forms and . Consonant stems syncopated the short vowel ending in Proto-Italic, resulting in a more unique evolution. The term , which is used in the nominative plural, presumably evolved from , which contracted to before arriving at . This term is also misspelt as in one inscription, which may provide evidence of
compensatory lengthening. In the accusative singular, Umbrian i-stem forms inherited the Proto-Italic ending , which was often represented by the graphemes or , although the spelling occurs rarely. For consonant stems, the Proto-Italic ending was replaced by , which was borrowed from the second declension forms. The accusative plural ending, in the i-stem, shifted the final in Proto-Italic to , resulting in the form . However, the was often omitted in writing and the could be rendered as , sometimes including ; thus, forms such as "," "," and "" appear for "." Consonant stems followed a more distinct evolution; although they contracted the in Proto-Italic to , they dropped the , leading to the form instead of the expected form . Such an evolution could theoretically have been explained through the syncopation of a short , however the contraction of to appears to have been accompanied by the lengthening of the preceding vowel. It is possible, although disputed, that the original Proto-Italic forms contained long vowels, allowing for an explanation of the unusual form through regular syncopation. Buck proposes that, in the absence of the aforementioned explanation, the form may have emerged due to the influence of the accusative plural forms of the other declensions, which were typically preceded by the same phonemes as the of the nominative plural. The i-stem forms developed the open vowel in the dative singular, which was represented by the graphemes , , and—occasionally—, although this form is of exceptional rarity. I-stem forms also adopted an ablative singular form , which was represented orthographically by either , , , and—rarely—. In consonant stems, the ablative singular ending was . Umbrian consonant stem ablative singular forms are near-universally rendered as "" or "," with the exception of the term "" or " "" ("foot"), which is exclusively marked by the ending . The linguist Reuben J. Pitts regards this as a "lexical aberration," which may have resulted from influence by the i-stem forms. Pitts suggests that the restricted orthographical representations of the consonant-stem ablative singular indicates that it likely was an
open-mid vowel, as the
close-mid vowel forms were often represented by the graphemes , , , , and . Moreover, Pitts argues that the ending was likely a
short vowel as an—according to Pitts—a long vowel likely would have been raised to a close-mid vowel in Umbrian. The dative-ablative plural form, in i-stems, evolved from the Proto-Italic from into , which became through syncopation. The ending is attested in one Oscan term, "," however all other Oscan and Umbrian forms showcases that the was assimilated, leading to the ending found in Umbrian terms such as "." However, it was alternatively written with the substituted for ; thus, Umbrian forms such as "." Consonant stems inherited their dative and ablative plural forms from the Proto-Italic u-stem nouns, resulting in forms such as "" and "." Both i-stem and consonant stem third declension forms inherited the Proto-Italic i-stem genitive singular form , which was orthographically represented by the forms and . The third-declension locative singular ending is attested in terms such as "" and "," both of which were marked graphically by the ending , although considers it likely that consonant-stem forms had inherited the Proto-Italic ending while i-stem forms had inherited the Proto-Italic ending . Therre are also attestations of neuter forms for the third declension. Terms such as "" suggest that the Umbrian neuter nominative and accusative singular for third declension i-stem terms, like Latin, was marked by the ending , although other terms such as "" indicate that, also like Latin, the final could be omitted. There are a few examples of consonant stem third declension neuter nouns, such as "," "", and "." Consonant stem neuter nouns inherited the ending from Proto-Italic for the nominative and accusative plural, while i-stem nouns evolved the ending from Proto-Italic. The final would change regularly according to the standard phonological and graphical rules in Umbrian governing the form of the final vowel.
Fourth and fifth declensions There is little attestation as the Umbrian fourth or fifth declension. The fourth declension accusative singular was seemingly represented orthographically by the form , which was often used to represent the ending in Umbrian writings. Nominative and accusative plural forms are attested for the fourth declension neuter. It is likely that the ending was , although it would have been represented orthographically in various ways according to the standard Umbrian writing conventions for final . Other forms attested to a genitive singular ending in , a dative singular in , an ablative singular form in , and a dative-ablative plural in . One locative form is attested: . The majority of attested Umbrian fourth declension terms appear feminine or neuter, however the Umbrian form appears masculine in contrast to the feminine Latin cognate . Few fifth declension forms are attested in Umbrian: the accusative plural "," the dative-ablative plural "," the dative singular "," the ablative singular "," and the form "," which serves as both a dative or ablative singular.
Adjectives and adverbs Umbrian adjectives are declined according to the first and second or third declensions. The majority of attested Umbrian adjectives align with the first and second declension paradigms, although the few attested third declension adjectives are typically i-stem forms (such as "," from ""). Umbrian adverbs often derived their endings from the Proto-Italic ablatives , , ; thus, Umbrian "" (";" "well"), "" (cognate with "", meaning "before," but the Umbrian term means "behind"), and (";" "above"). Other adverbs, particularly those concerning time, derived from the Proto-Italic neuter accusative ending : "" (";" "first"). Umbrian pronominal adverbs such as " (";" "when")," presumably from "," also likely derived from Proto-Italic accusative neuter forms. The Proto-Indo-European comparative suffixes and , which appear in Ancient Greek and
Sanskrit, lost their comparative connotations and instead were used to form pronominal adjectives and adjectives associated with time or place: "" ("another") and "" ("after").
Verbal system Conjugation The Umbrian first conjugation is distinguished by the
thematic vowel in the
present conjugation, although it typically appeared throughout the various inflected forms for each conjugation rather than exclusively the present. However, rare
perfect and perfect passive forms without the
morpheme are attested, such as the terms , , and . This irregularity also appears in a select few first conjugation Latin verbs, such as the perfect form from . The inflected forms of the first conjugation were formed via the addition of the various
suffixes that mark for
person and
number to the initial , a transformation likely accompanied either by the
contraction of the stem, leaving either or before the suffix. In Latin, second, third, or fourth conjugation verbs compounded with a preposition can transform into first conjugation verbs, consider the derivation of ("to dedicate") from ("to say"). Likewise, the equivalent Umbrian verb derives from the verb . The Umbrian second conjugation, like the Latin second conjugation, is identified by the presence of the long
vowel in the present stem, although—like Latin—it is often absent from the perfect stem. In Latin, attested verbs such as from provide direct proof of the occasional, albeit rare, formation of perfect stem and passive participle with ; however, the existing Umbrian corpus provides no evidence of such irregularities. Another second conjugation verb, (equivalent of Latin "," "[it] is suitable for"), suggests that the thematic vowel of second conjugation Umbrian verbs could have alternated to . It is also possible that was a rare marker for the Umbrian second conjugation: it appears in one verb, , although this term may have been a fourth conjugation verb. The Umbrian third conjugation is marked by the short vowel just as in Latin, although Umbrian lacks third conjugation verbs, which appear in Latin in verbs such , from ). These verbs, throughout all Italic languages, derive from the variant verbs in Proto-Italic, each of which—likely through vowel
syncopation—evolved into a largely regularly-conjugated third or fourth conjugation verb in Umbrian whereas in Latin they constitute their own unique class between the third and fourth conjugations. Examples of Umbrian verbs with
reduplicated stems, akin to Latin verbs such as , appear Umbrian third conjugation verbs such as , the exact equivalent of Latin . However, other Umbrian verbs potentially showcase the loss of reduplication; for instance, the verb , possibly from . Fourth conjugation Umbrian verbs, like Latin, are marked by the
phoneme in the present stem. Furthermore, like Latin, perfect forms may lack : Umbrian is a form of the fourth conjugation Umbrian verb . Present active
infinitive forms in Umbrian took the ending , which likely derived from a Proto-Italic accusative formation. However, perfect passive infinitive forms were created through the present infinitive of the Umbrian verb for "to be" with a perfect passive
participle. For instance, the Umbrian perfect passive infinitives "" (in Latin, "") and "" (in Latin, ""), meaning "to be cared for" and "to be sent from" respectively. There is limited evidence confirming the existence of
supine forms in Umbrian akin to Latin: the only definitive example of a supine formation in Umbrian appears in the phrase , equivalent to Latin "," meaning "[who] shall go to observe."
Perfect formation Perfect stem Like other Italic languages, the Umbrian language merged the aorist and perfect tense found in
Proto-Italic and
Proto-Indo-European, although the Sabellic languages, a language family of which Umbrian is a member, preserved the forms of the Proto-Indo-European athematic second aorist while Latin preserved the perfect forms of Proto-Indo-European. These etymological differences created numerous morphological discrepancies between the Sabellic languages and the
Latino-Faliscan languages, the subgroup of Italic languages containing Latin. In Umbrian, the perfect subjunctive was marked by the addition of the vowel to the ending while in Latin, it was marked by the vowel . Umbrian perfect stems likely could be formed by 5 distinct types of modification applied to the present stem of the verb: reduplication, the simple perfect, k-perfect, f-perfect, and—a form exclusive to Umbrian—the nky-perfect. Reduplication was the most common method of forming the perfect in the original Proto-Indo-European language and it typically involved the addition of the vowel following the reduplicated syllable. Remnants of this technique appear in Umbrian verbs such as , in which the initial consonant of is reduplicated with an vowel added between the two letters. However, perfect forms that are—in origin—reduplicated perfects may not follow this pattern. This category, referred to as the "simple perfects," comprise verbs such as , which likely derives from , the perfect stem of the Proto-Italic verb . Although the original form was reduplicated according to the aforementioned pattern, the changed to during the transition from Proto-Italic to Umbrian. Umbrian perfect forms such as demonstrate the f-perfect, a type of modification that forms perfect stems through the addition of the consonant . The origin of this type of augment is unclear, although it may have derived from the
univerbation of older terms. For instance, in the case of , the term may have originated from the , although this etymology specifically is disputed. In Umbrian, perfect stems possibly could be marked through the addition of the consonant , a modification that likely originates from the original
sigmatic aorist of the Proto-Indo-European language. This form, the s-perfect, is entirely unattested in Umbrian with the possible exception of one form: . However, this form is more often interpreted as a reduplicated perfect, leaving no evidence of the existence of s-perfects in Umbrian and thus compelling some linguists to reject the existence of such forms in the language. The perfect marker , , or appears in Umbrian terms such as and . The etymological origins of this root are unclear, it may have emerged from a reconstructed Proto-Italic form , itself possibly related to Proto-Indo-European ("to bear, to bring."). This form was preserved into the Ancient Greek term (), the aorist form of ("," "to bear," to "bring") and the
Old Irish suffix , found as a marker of
perfective aspect in forms such , the perfect stem of ("to give," "to bring"). The linguist Kenneth Shields, Jr. argued that this perfect ending originated from the combination of third-person singular forms ending in with the
deictic particle , creating . According to Shields, this form was later reanalyzed to produce and was then suffixed with , culminating in the form . This form may have then been reanalyzed as , concluding the process of evolution and creating the Umbrian perfect morpheme. Shields proposes that the term may be cognate with the Lithuanian imperative suffix and that the deictic particle can be observed in terms such as Latin ("on," "to this," "on this side") or
Ancient Greek (, "this year"). The linguist David Jerrett, noting that perfect marker exclusively appears in
denominal verbs, argued that the perfect stem originated from nouns combined with the perfect forms of an unattested Umbrian verb deriving from Proto-Indo-European (meaning, "to lie down, to settle"), which may have developed a new meaning akin to "to set in motion, be in motion." Such a semantic shift occurred in other
Indo-European languages: the Ancient Greek verbs "" ("," "to set in motion, stir, meddle") or "" ("," "to go") and the Latin verb ("to set in motion, move, stir") all demonstrate this transformation. When certain nouns were used alongside this unattested verb in
periphrastic phrases, they may have merged together to create new verbs. Jerrett cites one possible example of such a development in the verb , which may have originated from the reconstructed noun combined with the verb form 3rd person singular future perfect active form . Thus, Jerret proposes a semantic shift from " ," meaning "has made an announcement," to "," meaning "has announced."
Future perfect formation Uniquely, Sabellic future perfects are marked with the ending and, in some cases, . The "" form appeared as, in Umbrian, intervocalic -- became . Both forms are of disputed etymology: it is possible that it relates to the Proto-Italic form , from the Proto-Indo-European form . These verbs, both meaning "to be," evolved into the Umbrian form , which possibly predicated the development of the similar future perfect endings. However, the linguist Nicholas Zair suggests that, given the dual meaning of as both a future and future perfect term, it is unlikely that it would evolve into an exclusively future perfect suffix. Furthermore, Zair considers it unlikely that the term would be reanalyzed into a unique suffix as it already consists of combined with the future marker . One proposal to rectify these concerns suggests that the suffix may originate from a reduplicated future perfect stem , which, although formed from , came to be reanalyzed as . Alternatively, it may have emerged due to the generalization of the
zero-grade Proto-Indo-European perfect active participle root or the lengthened grade , itself possibly from . In either scenario, the forms would yield to in Umbrian due to inevitable loss of initial after most consonants and the loss of long in Oscan-Umbrian in non-initial syllables. However, the linguist
Madison Beeler critiqued this theory, arguing that there is insufficient evidence for the existence of a perfect active participle in any Italic language related to the Proto-Indo-European perfect active participle, and consequently no evidence for the existence of such a form of Proto-Italic. Another possibility is that this form is related the u-perfect in Latin, as seen in verbs such as or . This theory holds that the original Sabellic future marker, , likely combined with a perfect marker in to form the Umbrian future perfect form . Zair suggests that, although the Umbrian future perfect form was based on an original Sabellic perfect ending, it is entirely unrelated to the Latin perfect. Instead, Zair argues that it was likely related to the possible
South Picene perfect formation, which is represented orthographically by and may appear in terms such as (meaning, "they set up"). According to Zair, the original Proto-Indo-European language formulated perfect terms through the reduplication of the initial consonant and the shift of the root into the o-grade, leading the creation of a perfect stem that was transformed into a future perfect stem in Proto-Sabellic through the addition of the morpheme . Zair continues, proposing that the Proto-Sabellic language likely utilized the morpheme in its perfect and aorist tenses, although these were largely lost during the generalization of the perfect stems following the loss of the aorist tense, leaving the future perfect form as the only remnant of the original stem as there were no aorist parallels.
Voice The Umbrian language inflected for two voices: the
active, which concerned verbs performed by the subject, and the
passive, which concerned verbs performed upon the subject. In Umbrian, the passive voice may have additionally partially fulfilled the role of the
middle voice: The Umbrian verb , a passive form, was utilized to express the middle meaning of "to raise, elevate oneself;" "to rise." Like Latin, the Umbrian language contained
deponent verbs, verbs that—although passive in form—conveyed active meanings. However, terms that are deponent in Latin are regular in Umbrian and vice versa: the regular Umbrian verb is contrasted with the deponent Latin verb whereas the Umbrian deponent is equivalent to the Latin active form , an inflection oft the verb .
Moods The Umbrian language inflects for three grammatical moods:
indicative,
subjunctive, and
imperative. In the Umbrian language,
relative clauses are exclusively attested as utilizing the indicative; although, evidence from the closely related Oscan language indicates that it may have been possible to employ the subjunctive in relative clauses that expressed characteristic. Like Latin, the Umbrian subjunctive comprises the old functions of the original Proto-Italic
optative and subjunctive, which fused together during the transition from Proto-Italic to Latin and Umbrian. Both the Latin and Umbrian languages exclusively preserved traces of the original optative in subjunctive inflections of verbs that derive from
athematic Proto-Italic verbs: the athematic irregular Proto-Italic verb , with the optative 3rd person singular inflection , evolved into Latin and the equivalent Umbrian form . Umbrian and Latin are largely identical in their choice of derivation from either the Proto-Italic subjunctive or optative for their subjunctive forms respectively, although the Umbrian perfect subjunctive forms derive from the Proto-Italic subjunctive whereas in Latin they derive from the optative. Umbrian and Latin both contain the vowel in the endings for the subjunctive forms of the second, third, and fourth conjugations (compare Latin and Umbrian ), while first conjugation verbs shift the vowel in the stem to . One possible exception to this rule appears in the Umbrian verb , which may constitute an subjunctive of a third conjugation verb, although this form may be explained as a perfect indicative form based on the perfect stem of the verb. The Umbrian present imperative is exclusively attested in two first conjugation forms: ("observe") and ("bargain"), both substituting the final for . All other known Umbrian imperatives represent the future imperative. The Subjunctive in Umbrian could also be used to express orders; the subjunctive of command is the most frequently appearing usage of the subjunctive in the Umbrian corpus. This jussive function of the subjunctive appears throughout the Iguvine tablets, which decree "," meaning "[the
Flamen]
shall have the care of the sacred affair; he
shall furnish whatever is necessary."
Carl Darling Buck, an American
philologist, argued that, in the attested Umbrian corpus, the jussive subjunctive and the imperative were used largely interchangeably. However, the linguist D.M. Jones suggests that, while the imperative considered specific instructions, the jussive subjunctive was largely limited to descriptions of duties or punishments for officials. Thus, the aforementioned sentences utilized the subjunctive as they were outlining ritual practices for Flamini, while statements such as "" (Jupiter Grabovius, purify!) utilize the imperative. In negative commands, which call for something to not occur, Umbrian primarily utilizes the imperative, although the subjunctive form appears in one inscription to mean "let them not use." Furthermore, this term appears to violate the previously established distinction between the subjunctive and the imperative, as it is used as an explicit instruction. The full sentence, reading "," may translate to "When he has purified the jar, thereafter
they shall not use any of that mead." This interpretation proposes that the subjunctive form constitutes a special instruction outside of the original description of the ritual, thereby fitting the standard pattern of subjunctive use. However, Jones instead opts to resolve this anomaly with the translation "during the preliminary purification of the the aforesaid mead
is not to be used." Jones argues that this interpretation is not just a more accurate translation but also ensures consistency with the standard rules of the Umbrian subjunctive as—in his version—the prohibitive command is distinct from the actual section of the description of the ritual that first mentions the mead, and thus, there is some level of discontinuity between the two pieces of the text. The Umbrian subjunctive and imperative also seemingly shared the capacity to express optative meanings, a function that—in Latin—is fulfilled by the subjunctive of wish. The Iguvine tablets contain the phrase "," reading "may you be favorable, be propitious," which utilizes the subjunctive forms for optative meanings. However, it later contains a phrase of identical meaning which employs the imperative: "." Instances of a subjunctive of cause, in which the subjunctive is used in tandem with clauses of cause and result, are also attested in Umbrian. These clauses are typically introduced with the term , the Umbrian equivalent of Latin , meaning—in such clauses—"so that." However, such clauses can also be introduced without the
conjunction: the phrase , reading "demand that I observe," expresses a meaning that can be translated into English utilizing the word "that," but lacks the equivalent Umbrian conjunction. Another Umbrian conjunction, or—alternatively—, meaning "if" (compare Latin ""), was involved in indirect questions: the Umbrian sentence "." reading "if the greater part of the Atiedii brothers announce it to not be properly cared for, then the magister or the quaestor should ask the brothers how many flamini there are." The conjunctions and were also often used to introduce
conditional clauses, which typically contained two components: a main verb in the imperative or subjunctive of command, followed by a secondary statement completed with a verb in the future or future perfect tense. However, scant evidence has been preserved indicating that the present or perfect subjunctive may have also fulfilled this function. One example of a conditional clause without an introductory conjunction appears in the Iguvine tablets, which stipulates "," meaning "if the flamen wishes to make the sacrifice, it is proper." Jones suggests that the uses of the subjunctive may have extended to invocation, citing another passage from the Iguvine tablets which reads "." According to Jones, this statement utilizes a subjunctive form of "" to mean "
Jupiter Grabovius, I invoke thee."
Participles The Umbrian language contained a
present active participle attested in a handful of words, including "" ("sitting") and "" ("standing, stopping"). Umbrian also contained a
gerundive, a future passive participle, with forms marked by in contrast to the Latin gerundive marker . Few gerundive Umbrian forms are attested, although the terms "" ("which is to be appeased"), (possibly means "which is to be buried"), and "" ("which is to be carried around") are known. Perfect passive conjugations in Umbrian were formed via the combination of the perfect passive participle with the present form of the verb "to be." For instance, the Umbrian perfect passive formation "" ("it has been written"). Likewise, Umbrian future perfect passive conjugations could be formed via the combination of the perfect passive participle with the future form of the verb "to be." For example, the Umbrian phrase "," meaning "it will have been appeased." It is also possible that, like in Latin, Umbrian future perfect passive forms could be generated through the combination of the passive participle with the future perfect form of the verb "to be." Such as feature may be attested in the phrase "," possibly meaning "it will have arisen." However, Zair postulates that the term may be alternatively interpreted as an orthographical mistake: the author may have intended to write but began writing , a term which appears in the ensuing sentence.
Vittore Pisani, an Italian linguist, suggested the form may have been perfect form marked by the suffix , equivalent to the Latin third-person plural active perfect suffix -, although Zair considers a perfect formation semantically unfeasible given the context of the sentence. Another proposal suggests that the term may have constituted an imperfect subjunctive equivalent to Old Latin , although such a usage of the imperfect subjunctive in the context of the statement is not paralleled in other Italic languages.
Endings Verbs in Umbrian are inflected for the following categories: •
Tense (present, future, perfect, and future perfect) •
Voice (active, deponent/passive) •
Mood (indicative, imperative, subjunctive) •
Person (1st, 2nd, 3rd) •
Number (singular, plural) Present, future and future perfect forms in the active voice use the following set of personal endings (primary): Perfect indicative and all tenses of the subjunctive in the active voice use a different set of endings (secondary): Passive endings are attested only for the 3rd person: singular primary
-ter, singular secondary
-(n)tur, plural
-endi. Perfect stems are derived from the present stem in different ways. Latin
-vī- perfects are not attested in Umbrian. Instead, Umbrian uses its own set of forms, including reduplicated perfects such as
dede 'gave', the -s- suffix, as in
sesu-s-t 'will have sat', and the
-nçi- suffix, as in
purdi-nçi-ust 'will have presented'. Some verbs also use suppletive forms. Other tenses are formed by suffixation: The following non-finite forms are attested (all of them are based on the present stem): ==Sample texts==