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Verbs

Ces chapitres viennent des notes grammaticales actuelles. Ils restent descriptifs et peuvent grandir avec le corpus.

Source: Grammar/en/verbs.md

1. Overview

Verbs in Blaken do not encode time directly. Instead, they encode whether a concept (morpheme) manifests as an event, and how that event unfolds (aspect). Temporal interpretation arises from context, not from obligatory tense marking.

Any free morpheme is a root. By itself, it can express a concept and may function nominally or verbally depending on context. When speakers wish to profile that concept as an event, they attach an event modifier to the root.

  • Root alone: concept, quality, capacity, state
  • Root + event modifier: event, process, functioning

This distinction is ontological, not temporal.

RootEvent Modifier Morphemes
Monosyllabic lexical root (e.g. blin “love”, kwom “walk”)Event modifiers specify how the event unfolds

There is no person agreement on the verb. All participant roles are expressed externally through alignment markers (_blum_ / _prum_), which follow the event predicate. However, verbs can also be zero-valency and lack an explicit subject. In such cases, _blum_ / _prum_ indicate whether the event is construed as volitional or non-volitional. With perception and acquisition roots, the same contrast also marks attentional stance: _blum_ profiles directed awareness, while _prum_ profiles receptive or accidental contact.

2. Event Modifiers

Blaken does not encode time directly. Instead, it encodes how an event unfolds and its evidentiality. Event modifiers are monosyllabic morphemes that are attached to lexical morphemes. Orthographically, verbs and event modifiers form a single unit, a word. There are two main aspects: perfective and imperfective, each of which can take one evidential form: direct evidential or inferential evidential. Event modifiers are mutually exclusive within a single morpheme.

2.1. Imperfective

This is the base form for imperfective events. It is built by attaching the _ken_ suffix to a morpheme. This form commonly covers:

  • General statements
  • Present events
  • Ongoing actions
  • Timeless truths

Absence of further marking implies present relevance.

2.1.1. Direct Evidential: Root + _ken_

This form denotes direct evidence (obtained through the senses). It constitutes the highest commitment: events accepted as true by both the community and the speaker.

BlakenMeaningDirect Evidentiality Interpretation
__kwomken__ senblumShe/he walks intentionallyI see she/he walk intentionally
__blinken__ woblum nasI love youI am aware I love you
sɑko trjom tin, drifken senblum krifpolThese times, she/he read many booksI have seen them reading books
mimken iɸønblum nasThe man observes you / looks at you attentivelyI see the man is watching you
pønko trjom tin, __krifken__ woblum blapolWhen a kid (lit. in young time), I used to write stories (I know it)I know it from my personal experience I used to write book when a kid
__blaken__ ɸønprumHumans inadvertently speakI have seen / heard how humans speak, even unconsciously
keken senpolblum pinko trwøʂThey make one houseI have seen them making a house

2.1.2. Inferential Evidential: Root + bu

This is an indirect abductive evidential. It conveys the assumed possibility of an event; the speaker is unsure about the event. It is formed by attaching the bu suffix to any root:

BlakenInterpretation
mimbu iɸønblum nasThe man must be observing you / looking at you attentively
drifbu senblum krifpolThey (singular) must be mindfully reading books
__blabu__ senprumThey (singular) must be speaking unintentionally
afbu afprum tanko jamFire could burn the whole mountain (the speaker already saw a fire and infers its consequences)

2.2. Perfective

2.2.1. Direct Evidential: Root + _tan_

This is the base form for perfective events. It conveys completion: the event is construed as closed. Past interpretation arises pragmatically. It is formed by attaching the -tan suffix to verbs.

BlakenMeaning
blintan blum(I saw) loved once
kwomtan blum(I saw) walked once
zrjɑχtan prum(I saw) broke once by accident
lɑko trjom tin, tutan (wo)prum wo to ɲomAt that moment, I lost my friend without wanting it

Temporal past interpretation arises pragmatically.

2.2.2. Inferential Evidential: Root + tu

It is formed in the same way it is in the imperfective aspect.

BlakenInterpretation
blintu pu blimprum blelI assume you did not love be
bljomdom tin, wowo, kwomtu senblumI assume, like all of us, he once walked in the park
krjombu prɑχtu prumI assume (someone) was running and fell

2.3. Reportative: Root + bla

In ancient times, there existed a reportative evidential that was formed by attaching the bla morpheme to a root. This form has almost fallen out of oral use and nowadays is not used as systematically as the other evidential markers. It is mainly used in verse and formal texts.

BlakenInterpretation
pinko trjom tin, domtan syko kenOnce, this happened
pinko trjom tin, dombla syko kenOnce, I heard this happened

2.4. Exhortative: root + blum

Imperative meaning is expressed by attaching the volitional morpheme blum directly to the bare root, without -ken. In this use, imperative -blum is a verbal form and should not be confused with the noun-phrase-level volitional subject marker written after nouns.

BlakenMeaning
kwomblum!walk (intentionally)!
blinblum wo!love me!

2.5. Prospective / Interrogative Uncertainty: Root + ra

It is used to express doubt about the development of an action. Since it encodes uncertainty, it can also support interrogative readings. This is the bound verbal use of the same morpheme that appears as free clause-scope ra in interrogatives.

BlakenMeaning
ʎilraPerhaps it rains / Will it rain? [zero valency verb]
gurkurra senprumWhether she/he will come back is unknown
kurra woblum?Should I go?

3. Existential and Appearance Predicates

To declare that a thing exists or appears in a state, Blaken uses two core predicates depending on how transitory or inherent that state is construed.

3.1. Existential Predicate for Transitory States

Location and transitory states are expressed using the dom root. This root can function as an existential predicate whose state is anchored by other phrases in the clause.

BlakenMeaningLit. gloss
domken woblum sydom tinI am hereI occupy this place
domken woblum num tinI am in the state of being sadI am in a state of sadness
domken gum vlomwor tinThe fruit is green, unripenedThe fruit is in the state of the color of plants

3.2. Appearance Predicate for Inherent States

For more inherent and inalienable states, the root om can be used. It essentially expresses how something appears. When used in the imperfective aspect with a direct evidential (-ken), this form represents the highest possible assertion in Blaken. Usually it refers to inanimate entities and has a fairly limited use.

BlakenMeaningLit. gloss
omken andomprum narnarThe sky is blueSky appears bluely
omken tankoprum bʁirbʁirEverything changesAll appears in a cycling way

4. Negation: pu

To negate a verb or series of verbs, the particle pu is placed immediately after the verb or event series. The particle scopes over the verbal predicate and denies that the event took place; it does not negate properties, results, or inherent states.

BlakenMeaning
publinken blumnot love / does not love
pugromtu blum gumdid not eat food
pudomken blaɲaprum wo tin(I) do not want to speak
pukenblum !Do not do it
pugromken nasblum gumYou do not eat fruits

5. Additional Event Modifiers

5.1. Agent-Oriented Ability: blø

The morpheme blø is used here in its verbal, agent-oriented sense to express ability or the physical possibility of performing an action. This use should be kept distinct from adjectival -blø, which marks patient-oriented potential or affordance.

BlakenMeaning
bløken nas blum krifyou can write
bløken senprum nas mimshe/he can't see you (she/he doesn't happen to perceive you)
bløken senblum nas mimshe/he can't see you (she/he decided she/he should not see you)
bløken blum Blakencan [speak] Blaken

5.2. Epistemic Possibility: root + bu

Meaning: may / might / possibly. This construction may also convey a possible future.

BlakenMeaning
buken blum kwommay walk
buken blum blinmay love

5.3. Inceptive Event: root + draf-

To express the “growth" or "beginning” of an action, draf- can be used.

BlakenMeaning
draftan nasblum kwomyou began walking
drafken kiprum tjeχkjofThe tree begins losing the leaves
drafbu nasprum trenko woeχYou grow different from me

5.4. Cessative Event: root + srjɑχ

To express “emptiness / cessation”.

BlakenMeaning
srjɑχken blum kwomstops walking
srjɑχken prum blinstops loving
srjɑχbu blum sento slɑsI assume that willingly he/she stops [doing] his duties

6. Voice

In Blaken, impersonal events affecting an object may be expressed with the impersonal morpheme o.

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Sydom blaken oprum Blaken _Here one speaks Blaken._

A morphologically more complex construction can be formed by adjectivizing an event with the perfective modifier. In this construction, the agent may be mentioned using and the object may be promoted to subject by attaching prum or blum (usually prum for inanimate objects):

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Blablom frablaprum (fraɸøn eχ) _French is spoken by the French._ _Lit. spoken French (by the French)._