Indicating existence or presence The principal meaning of existential clauses is to refer to the existence of something or the presence of something in a particular place or time. For example, "There is a God" asserts the existence of a God, but "There is a pen on the desk" asserts the presence or existence of a pen in a particular place. Existential clauses can be modified like other clauses in terms of
tense,
negation,
interrogative inversion,
modality,
finiteness, etc. For example, one can say "There was a God", "There is not a God" ("There is no God"), "Is there a God?", "There might be a God", "He was anxious for there to be a God" etc.
Pingelapese An existential sentence is one of four structures associated within the
Pingelapese language of
Micronesia. The form heavily uses a post-verbal subject order and explains what exists or does not exist. Only a few Pingelapese verbs are used existential sentence structure:
minae- "to exist",
soh- "not to exist",
dir- "to exist in large numbers", and
daeri- "to be finished". All four verbs have a post-verbal subject in common and usually introduce new characters to a story. If a character is already known, the verb would be used in the preverbal position.
Indication of possession In some languages, linguistic
possession (in a broad sense) is indicated by existential clauses, rather than by a verb like
have. For example, in
Russian, "I have a friend" can be expressed by the sentence у меня есть друг ''u menya yest' drug
, literally "at me there is a friend". Russian has a verb иметь imet''' meaning "have", but it is less commonly used than the former method. Other examples include
Irish "(There) is (a) pen at me" (for "I have a pen”).
Hungarian "(There) is a fish-my" (for "I have a fish") and
Turkish "two notebook-my (there) is" (for "I have two notebooks"). In
Maltese, a change over time has been noted: "in the possessive construction, subject properties have been transferred diachronically from the possessed noun phrase to the possessor, while the possessor has all the subject properties except the form of the verb agreement that it triggers." == References ==