All nouns we learnt in one of the previous lessons were ending with consonant, so adding definite article “-um” wasn't a problem. But what if there were some words ending with a vowel? Then, definite article is changed to just “-m”, e.g. “slave” is “snaga”, and “the slave” is “snagam”. Groups of words that are changed similarly during inflection are called “declension classes”.
Nûrlâm has two declension classes:
Declension class is very important, as not only the articles, but some other grammatical suffixes differ depending on declension class too.
There are very few words ending with a vowel (declension class II) to learn. Probably more than half of them are listed here:
You may notice, that most of them actually end with a diphthong, so technically a semi-vowel, but nonetheless they all belong to declension class II.
All adjectives also have two declension classes depending on if the word ends with a consonant or vowel.
Every addition of suffix or clitic should be done according to declension class of the previous part. For example the word “slave” (⇒ “snaga”) belongs to declension class II, adding adjective “dirty” (“dug”) to say “filthy snaga” changes the resulting word “snagadug” to class I. Thus “the slave” becomes “snagam”, but “the filthy slave” becomes “snagadugum”. On the contrary, “orc” (= “uruk”, declension class I) becomes “urukum” with article “the”, but adding adjective ending with vowel like “sta” (= “short”) converts it to declension class II: “urukstam”. Some suffixes are the same for both declension classes, like word “za” (this): “this slave” = “snagaza”, “this orc” = “urukza”.
Translate into Nûrlâm. Join the words together whenever it's possible as in previous lesson.
show answers
show answers
Translate these words from Nûrlâm into English:
show answers
show answers