Tibetan Grammar - Syntactic particles
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Articles on Tibetan Grammar |
1. Introduction |
2. Formation of the Tibetan Syllable |
3. Formation of the Tibetan Word |
4. First case: ming tsam |
5. agentive particle |
6. Connective Particle |
7. La don particles |
8. La don particles—Notes |
9. Originative case |
10. Verbs |
11. Verbs—Notes |
12. Syntactic particles |
by Stefan J. E.
Syntactic Non Case Marking Particles
The following particles are "non case marking" when taking the eight Tibetan cases as base to determine which particles are case marking. Some of them are considered case marking particles in other presentations.
- For instance Nicolas Tournadre[1]: "In summary, according to the above morphological analysis, Literary Tibetan has ten grammatical cases:
- absolutive, ངོ་བོ་ཙམ་,
- agentive, བྱེད་སྒྲ་,
- genitive, འབྲེལ་སྒྲ་,
- dative, ལ་སྒྲ་,
- purposive, དུ་སྒྲ་,
- locative, ན་སྒྲ་,
- ablative, ལས་སྒྲ་,
- elative, ནས་སྒྲ་,
- associative, དང་སྒྲ་, and
- comparative, བས་སྒྲ་."
1. Possessor particle, བདག་སྒྲ་
[...]
Endnotes
- ↑ Tournadre, Nicolas: Himalayan Linguistics, Vol. 9(2): 87-125, 2010, The Classical Tibetan cases and their transcategoriality—From sacred grammar to modern linguistics.