Referencia en borrador

Adjectives

Estos capítulos salen de las notas gramaticales actuales. Son material descriptivo de trabajo y pueden crecer con el corpus.

Fuente: Grammar/en/adjectives.md

1. Adjectives

In Blaken, “adjectives” are not a primitive lexical class. They are derived states or relations built by attaching an adjectivizer to any root. The adjectivizer determines whether the meaning is (i) a simple property/relation, (ii) a result state, (iii) a latent potential, or (iv) the negation of any of these.

1.1. Main Adjective Types

Blaken has four productive adjectival patterns.

SuffixFunctionCore meaningEvent presupposition
-koADJrelational property / characteristicno
-blomRESresultative affected stateyes
-bløPOTlatent potential / affordance (patient-oriented)no
-wɨNEGabsence of derived statedepends

1.1.1. -ko Adjectives (ADJ)

The suffix -ko derives a relational or characteristic property. It anchors the root as a salient quality, disposition, or topic of the referent, without encoding completion or modality.

It does not mark tense, aspect, or eventhood.

Examples:

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blin-ko blin-ADJ _loving | affectionate_

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bɑn-ko big-ADJ _big_
num-ko sad-ADJ _sad_
bla-ko speak-ADJ _speech-related | verbal_

Proper names may also take -ko to mark referential or social association (often interpreted as kinship or affiliation by discourse convention).

1.1.2. -blom Adjectives (RES)

The suffix -blom derives a resultative state. It presupposes a completed event whose core is the root. The referent is interpreted as affected and now in the post-event state.

External agents are not required; internal events (emotional change, realization) qualify.

Examples:

bla-blom speak-RES _spoken_
grom-blom eat-RES _eaten_
blin-blom love-RES _loved_
num-blom sad-RES _made sad | saddened_

1.1.3. -blø Adjectives (POT)

The suffix -blø encodes latent potential / affordance: the referent is compatible with undergoing the root-event. This is patient-oriented potential, not agent ability or intention.

It does not imply that the event occurs, only that it is possible in principle or context.

Examples:

grom-blø eat-POT _edible_
bɑn-blø big-POT _capable of growth | growable_
blin-blø love-POT _lovable_
bla-blø speak-POT _speakable_

Contrast (important to state explicitly): Adjectival -blø ≠ verbal ability or permission. It describes the object’s affordance, not an agent’s capacity.

1.1.4. -wɨ Negation of States (NEG)

The morpheme -wɨ negates states, not events. It denies the presence of a derived state, property, or existential condition. Canonical order:

ROOT + wɨ + {ko | blom | blø}

Negation of -ko (property absence)

prin-wɨ-ko hate-NEG-ADJ _without hatred | hateless_
bla-wɨ-ko speak-NEG-ADJ _speechless_
num-wɨ-ko sad-NEG-ADJ _without sorrow_
glel-wɨ-ko liquid-NEG-ADJ _non-liquid_

Negation of -blom (non-result)

bla-wɨ-blom speak-NEG-RES _unspoken_
grom-wɨ-blom eat-NEG-RES _uneaten_
blin-wɨ-blom love-NEG-RES _unloved_
num-wɨ-blom sad-NEG-RES _not made sad_

Negation of -blø (impossibility)

grom-wɨ-blø eat-NEG-POT _inedible_
bɑn-wɨ-blø big-NEG-POT _incapable of growth_
blin-wɨ-blø love-NEG-POT _unlovable_
bla-wɨ-blø speak-NEG-POT _unspeakable_

1.2. Adjective Nominalization (Head Insertion)

Adjectives may be nominalized by inserting a generic head noun that receives the adjectival modification.

HeadMeaning
ɸøngeneric animate entity
mongeneric inanimate entity

This yields the meaning “the one / the thing that is ADJ”.

Minimal examples:

blin-ko ɸøn love-ADJ being _the loving one_
num-ko ɸøn sad-ADJ being _the sad person_
bla-blom mon speak-RES thing _the spoken thing | the utterance_
grom-blø mon eat-POT thing _the edible thing_

Integrated examples (your originals, cleaned):

gjof-ken ɸwaɲa-ko ɸøn-blum gwo search/find-IPFV.DIR happy-ADJ being-AGT truth _The happiness-seeking one searches for truth._
trjom-trjom dom-wɨ-ken num-ko mon-prum tør tin, aχaχ tin tin time-time EXIST-NEG-IPFV.DIR sad-ADJ thing-PAT outside LOC inside LOC LOC _Often sadness is not outside, but inside._

1.3. Adjectives and Compounding

Relational adjectives formed with -ko may alternatively be realized as compounds, by omitting the adjectivizer and directly merging the morphemes.

The two strategies encode the same conceptual relation, but differ in grammatical status:

  • -ko constructions remain syntactically transparent and descriptive
  • Compounds lexicalize the relation as a unified concept

Examples:

blin-ko ɸøn love-ADJ being _a loving person_
blinɸøn love-being _a lover_
bla-ko dom speak-ADJ place _a speaking-related place_
bladom speak-place _language space | forum_

Compounding is often preferred when:

  • the relation is stable or culturally salient
  • lexical economy is desired
  • the compound does not exceed the four-morpheme limit

It is avoided when:

  • the relation is temporary
  • the referent is discourse-specific
  • ambiguity would arise