Open main menu
Home
Random
Recent changes
Special pages
Community portal
Preferences
About Wikipedia
Disclaimers
Incubator escapee wiki
Search
User menu
Talk
Dark mode
Contributions
Create account
Log in
Editing
Grammatical number
(section)
Warning:
You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you
log in
or
create an account
, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.
Anti-spam check. Do
not
fill this in!
===Basque=== [[Basque language|Basque]] declension has four grammatical numbers: indefinite, definite singular, definite plural, and definite close plural: * The '''indefinite''' is used after the question words {{lang|eu|Zer?}} ("What?"), {{lang|eu|Zein?}} ("Which?") and {{lang|eu|Zenbat?}} ("How much? / How many?"), after indefinite numerals, such as {{lang|eu|zenbait}} ("some"), {{lang|eu|hainbat}} ("several"), {{lang|eu|honenbeste / horrenbeste / hainbeste}} ("so many / so much"), {{lang|eu|bezainbeste}} ("as much as / as many as"), and before {{lang|eu|asko}}, {{lang|eu|anitz}} (this one can go before nouns), {{lang|eu|ugari}}, {{lang|eu|pilo bat}}, {{lang|eu|mordo bat}}, after {{lang|eu|makina bat}} ("much, many, a lot, lots of, plenty of..."), before {{lang|eu|gutxi}} ("a few, little") and {{lang|eu|batzuk}} ("some"), and the numbers, if they do not refer to a defined amount: {{lang|eu|'''Zer etxe''' eraberritu duzu?}} ("What house[s] have you renewed?"), {{lang|eu|'''Zer etxe''' eraberritu dituzu?}} ("What houses have you renewed?"). {{lang|eu|'''Zein''' etxe'''tan''' bizi zinen?}} ("In what house[s] were you living?"). {{lang|eu|'''Zenbat''' etxe dituzu?}} ("How many houses have you got?"). {{lang|eu|Lapurrak '''hainbat''' etxe'''tan''' sartu dira}} ("The thieves have broken into a number of houses"). {{lang|eu|Lapurra '''hainbeste''' etxe'''tan''' sartu da!}} ("The thief has broken into so many houses!"). A noun followed by an adjective or a demonstrative is in the absolutive case, and the last word in the phrase is declined: {{lang|eu|Etxe'''a'''}} ("The house / House"). {{lang|eu|Etxe '''bat'''}} ("A house"). {{lang|eu|Etxe '''handi bat'''}} ("A big house"). {{lang|eu|Etxe '''handi batean'''}} ("In a big house"). {{lang|eu|Etxe '''handi hori'''}} ("That big house"). {{lang|eu|Etxe '''zuri handi horretan'''}} ("In that big white house"). If the amount is known, the plural grammatical numbers are used: {{lang|eu|Lapurrak '''bi''' etxe'''tan''' sartu dira}} ("The thieves have broken in two houses" [indefinite: the houses are unknown to the speakers]). {{lang|eu|Lapurrak '''bizpahiru''' etxe'''tan''' sartu dira}} ("The thieves have broken in two or three houses" [indefinite: the speakers does not know the exact amount of houses]). {{lang|eu|Lapurrak '''bi''' etxe'''etan''' sartu dira}} ("The thieves have broken in both houses" [definite plural: both are known to the speakers]). {{lang|eu|Lapurrak '''bi''' etxe'''otan''' sartu dira}} ("The thieves have broken in these two houses" [definite close plural: both are being shown by the speaker]). The indefinite is also used in some idioms and set phrases: {{lang|eu|Egun '''on'''!}} ("Good day! / Good morning!"), {{lang|eu|'''On''' egin!}} ("Bon appetit!"), {{lang|eu|Etxe'''z''' etxe}} ("From house to house"), {{lang|eu|Meza'''tara''' joan}} ("Go to the mass"), {{lang|eu|'''Etxe''' bila ibili}} ("To look for a house"), and as the root for compound words ({{lang|eu|'''etxe'''-galgarri}}, {{lang|eu|'''etxe'''kalte}}, "Person or thing which brings loss to a home") or derivative words ({{lang|eu|'''etxe'''ratu}}, "To go home / To send home"; {{lang|eu|'''etxe'''koi}}, "fond of home"; {{lang|eu|'''etxe'''gile}}, "housebuilder"). * The '''definite singular''' is used to designate a person or thing known or to present: {{lang|eu|Zer da eraikin hori? Nire etxe'''a''' da.}} ("What is that building? It is my home"). {{lang|eu|Etxe'''a''' nire'''a''' da}} ("The house is mine"). * The '''definite plural''' designates people or things known or present: {{lang|eu|Zer dira eraikin horiek? Nire etxe'''ak''' dira.}} ("What are those buildings? They are my houses"). {{lang|eu|Etxe'''ak''' nire'''ak''' dira}} ("The houses are mine"). * The '''definite close plural''' refers to people or things which are in the vicinity of the speakers: {{lang|eu|Zer dira eraikin'''ok'''? Nire etxeak dira.}} ("What are those buildings? They are my houses"). {{lang|eu|Etxe'''ok''' nireak dira}} ("These houses are mine"). It is also used to include oneself in the group referred to: {{lang|eu|Nafarr'''ak''' festazale'''ak''' dira}} ("The Navarrese like celebrations": the speaker is not a Navarrese). {{lang|eu|Nafarr'''ok''' festazaleak gara}} ("We Navarrese like celebrations": the speaker is a Navarrese). Verbs have four singular persons and three plural ones, as follows: '''Singular''': * First person (the speaker): {{lang|eu|Euskalduna naiz}} ("I am Basque"). {{lang|eu|Testua idatzi dut}} ("I have written the text"). * Informal second person (the person the speaker is addressing to, i.e., an inferior, an animal, a child, a monologue with oneself): {{lang|eu|Euskalduna haiz}} ("Thou art Basque"). In some tenses, there are different verbs for a man or a woman: {{lang|eu|Testua idatzi duk}} ("Thou hast written the text [said to a man, a boy]", {{lang|eu|Testua idatzi dun}} ("Thou hast written the text [said to a woman, a girl]"). * Formal second person (the person the speaker is addressing to: a superior, somebody older, one's parents), the most frequent one: {{lang|eu|Euskalduna zara}} ("You [singular] are Basque"). {{lang|eu|Testua idatzi duzu}} ("You [sing.] have written the text"). * Third person (neither the speaker nor the listener): {{lang|eu|Handia da}} ("He / She / It is big"). {{lang|eu|Testua idatzi du}} ("He / She / It has written the text"). '''Plural''': * First person (the speaker and somebody else at least): {{lang|eu|Euskaldunak gara}} ("We are Basque"). {{lang|eu|Testua idatzi dugu}} ("We have written the text"). * Second person (the addressees): {{lang|eu|Euskaldunak zarete}} ("You [plural] are Basque [said to a group, either informally or formally]"). {{lang|eu|Testua idatzi duzue}} ("You [pl.] have written the text"). * Third person (more than one person outside the conversation): {{lang|eu|Handiak dira}} ("They are big"). {{lang|eu|Testua idatzi dute}} ("They have written the text").
Edit summary
(Briefly describe your changes)
By publishing changes, you agree to the
Terms of Use
, and you irrevocably agree to release your contribution under the
CC BY-SA 4.0 License
and the
GFDL
. You agree that a hyperlink or URL is sufficient attribution under the Creative Commons license.
Cancel
Editing help
(opens in new window)