Latvian grammar

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The Latvian language is a highly inflected language, with complex nominal and verbal morphology. Word order is relatively free, but the unmarked order is SVO. Latvian has pre-nominal adjectives and both prepositions and postpositions. There is no definite or indefinite article.

Contents

[edit] Noun phrases

This section presents aspects of the structure of noun phrases in Latvian. For details about the nominal morphology of Latvian (inflection of nouns, pronouns, numerals, and adjectives), see Latvian declension.

[edit] Verbs

Latvian has three simple tenses (present, imperfect (or preterite) and future), and three compound perfect tenses: present perfect, past perfect, future perfect. Latvian verbs are used in five moods: indicative, imperative, conditional, conjunctive (or "relative", used for reported speech) and "debitive" (for expressing obligation). The relations between tenses and moods are shown in the following table.

  Indicative  Imperative  Conditional  Conjunctive  Debitive 
Simple present 
Simple imperfect  
Simple future 
Present perfect 
Past perfect 
Future perfect 

Latvian verbs have two voices, active and passive. The passive voice is analytic, combining an auxiliary verb (tikt "become", būt "be", or more rarely, tapt "become") and the past passive participle form of the verb. Reflexive verbs are marked morphologically by the suffix -s.

[edit] Participles

  • Past active
  • Past passive
  • Present active in -dams
  • Present active in -ošs
  • Present active in -ot
  • Present passive

[edit] Conjugation classes

Regular verbs in Latvian are divided into three conjugation classes. The first conjugation includes all verbs with a monosyllabic infinitive and their compounds. The second conjugation includes verbs that are derived with suffixes -ā, -ē, -o, -ī, -alē, -aļā, -elē, -uļo and that exhibit syllable lengthening in the imperfect and present tenses. The third conjugation includes verbs that are derived with suffixes -ā, -ē, -ī, -inā and display syllable lengthening in the imperfect. The following verbs are irregular: būt "be", iet "go", dot "give".

A verb's conjugation pattern can be specified by giving three base forms: the infinitive form, the present stem and the past stem. The following table shows the correspondence between the base stem and the tense/mood.

stem moods and tenses derived from this stem
present stem present indicative, present conjunctive, imperative mood, debitive mood, present participles
past stem imperfect tense, past active participle
infinitive stem infinitive, future indicative, conditional mood, future conjunctive, past passive participle

[edit] Prepositions

Main article: Latvian prepositions

Latvian has prepositions, and a small number of postpositions. Although each preposition requires a particular case (genitive, accusative, or dative) if the following noun phrase is singular, all plural noun phrases appear in the dative case after a preposition.

[edit] References

  • Ceplīte, B.; L. Ceplītis (1991). Latviešu valodas praktiskā gramatika. Zvaigzne. 
  • (Italian) Dini, Pietro U. (1997). Le Lingue Baltiche. Scandicci (Florence): La Nuova Italia Editrice. 
  • Endzelīns, J. (1951). Latviešu valodas gramatika. 
  • (1959) Mūsdienu latviešu literārās valodas gramatika. LPSR ZA izdevniecība. 
  • Fennell, T. G.; H. Gelsen (1980). A Grammar of Modern Latvian (Vols. 1–3). Mouton. 
  • Karulis, K. (2001). Latviešu etimoloģijas vārdnīca. Avots. 
  • Mathiassen, Terje (1996). A Short Grammar of Latvian. Columbus, OH: Slavica. ISBN 0-89357-270-5. 
  • (French) Petit, Justyna and Daniel (2004). Parlons letton. Paris: L'Harmattan. ISBN 2-7475-5910-6. 

[edit] External links

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