-ni

See also: Appendix:Variations of "ni"

Classical Nahuatl

Suffix

-ni

  1. Marks a verb's habitual or customary present tense.

Curripaco

Suffix

-ni

  1. third person singular masculine patient marker

References

  • Swintha Danielsen, Tania Granadillo, Agreement in two Arawak languages, in The Typology of Semantic Alignment (edited by Mark Donohue, Søren Wichmann) (2008, →ISBN), page 398

Finnish

Suffix

-ni (appended to the (strong) vowel stem; the final -n of the genitive and illative singular and plural or the -t of the nominative plural is omitted)

  1. (possessive) suffix used with or without minun (the genitive of the personal pronoun minä), corresponds to the English possessive pronoun my:
    (minun) kirjani = my book/books
    (minun) valaani = my oath/of my oath (partitive of vala) or my whale/whales (valas)
  2. (possessive) appended to a genitive-requiring postposition that is after or without minun (the genitive of the personal pronoun minä), me:
    (minun) edessäni = in front of me
    (minun) takanani = behind me
  3. (possessive) used in a participle structure replacing an "että" clause, preceded by a verb expressing, e.g., telling, claiming, asserting, confirming, thinking, wish, desire, seeming, when the clauses have the same subject "I"; appended to the active present participle in genitive singular when the action is concurrent with the main clause:
    Sanoin tekeväni läksyjäni.
    I said that I was doing my homework. (similar to the Latin structure accusativus cum infinitivo, e.g., "se dicit facere")
  4. (possessive) used in a participle structure replacing an "että" clause, preceded by a verb expressing, e.g., telling, claiming, asserting, confirming, thinking, wish, desire, seeming, when the clauses have the same subject "I"; appended to the active past participle in genitive singular when the said/alleged (etc.) action antedates the main clause:
    Väitin tehneeni läksyjäni.
    I claimed to have been doing my homework.
  5. (possessive) used in a shortened sentence expressing concurrent actions when the clauses have the same subject "I", appended to the inessive of the active second infinitive:
    Tehdessäni läksyjäni (minä) kuulin laukauksen ulkoa.
    (While) doing my homework, I heard a shot from outside.
  6. (possessive) used in a shortened sentence expressing subsequent actions when the clauses have the same subject "I", appended to the partitive of the passive past participle singular:
    Tehtyäni läksyni (minä) kuulin laukauksen ulkoa.
    (After) having done / After doing my homework, I heard a shot from outside.
  7. (possessive) used in a final shortened sentence expressing "in order to do" when the clauses have the same subject "I", appended to the long first infinitive:
    Tehdäkseni läksyni hyvin (minä) menin hiljaiseen huoneeseen.
    (In order) to do my homework well, I went into a quiet room.
  8. (possessive) Used in some adverbs, when the clause has the subject "I".
    Olen hyvin pahoillani siitä.
    I'am very sorry about it.
  9. (possessive) Always appended to a noun in the comitative case when the clause has the subject "I".
    Kävelin kirjoineni ovesta ulos.
    I walked with my books out the door.

Usage notes

  • The possessive suffix -ni is compulsory in standard Finnish. In standard Finnish, when expressing ownership or before a postposition, the genitive form of the corresponding personal pronoun "minä" before the main word can be omitted. In colloquial Finnish, the suffix -ni is very rare and only the genitive form "minun" (or its colloquial or dialectal variants) is used before the main word.
  • The shortened sentences except for the participle structures pertain mainly to formal/standard Finnish, not to informal/colloquial Finnish. It is also to be noticed that the shortened clauses are never separated from the main clauses with a comma.

Derived terms

See also

Anagrams


Hungarian

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [ni]

Suffix

-ni

  1. (infinitive suffix) Used to form the infinitive.
    ad (give)adni (to give)
  2. Used to devalue the predicate of the sentence when repeated and followed by a clause that contrasts with or contradicts it. See also -nak/-nek.
    Elindulni elindul, de rögtön le is áll.It does start, but it turns off right away.

Usage notes

  • (infinitive suffix) Variants:
    -ni is added to most verbs
    ad (give)adni (to give)
    -ani is added to back vowel verbs ending in -ít or in two consonants
    tanít (teach)tanítani (to teach)
    akaszt (hang)akasztani (to hang)
    bont (demolish)bontani (to demolish)
    -eni is added to front vowel verbs ending in -ít or in two consonants
    veszít (lose)veszíteni (to lose)
    ijeszt (frighten)ijeszteni (to frighten)
    csökkent (reduce)csökkenteni (to reduce)
    -nni is added to verbs with variant stems
    vesz (buy)venni (to buy)
    eszik (eat)enni (to eat)

See also

  • Category:Hungarian infinitives
  • Appendix:Hungarian suffixes

Icelandic

Suffix

-ni

  1. This term needs a translation to English. Please help out and add a translation, then remove the text {{rfdef}}.

Derived terms

<a class='CategoryTreeLabel CategoryTreeLabelNs14 CategoryTreeLabelCategory' href='/wiki/Category:Icelandic_words_suffixed_with_-ni' title='Category:Icelandic words suffixed with -ni'>Icelandic words suffixed with -ni</a>

Maltese

Etymology

From Arabic ـنِي (-nī).

Suffix

-ni

  1. me (object suffix, first person singular)

Old Irish

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Proto-Celtic *snīs (we) (compare Welsh ni).

Suffix

-ni

  1. 1st person plural emphatic suffix

Derived terms

<a class='CategoryTreeLabel CategoryTreeLabelNs14 CategoryTreeLabelCategory' href='/wiki/Category:Old_Irish_words_suffixed_with_-ni' title='Category:Old Irish words suffixed with -ni'>Old Irish words suffixed with -ni</a>

Quechua

Suffix

-ni

  1. First-person singular subject.
    rimay (to speak)ñuqa rimani (I speak)
  2. Epenthetic suffix inserted between consonant clusters.
    yachachiq (teacher) + -y (my) → *yachachiqyyachachiqniy (my teacher)

See also


Sicilian

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [nɪ]

Suffix

-ni

  1. added to words that are stressed on the final syllable to move stress to the penultimate syllable
    tutuni (you)
    ccàccani (here)

Swahili

Suffix

-ni

  1. Second person plural:
    you, (archaic) ye
  2. With nouns, indicates location: in/inside, at, on
    nyumbani (at home, in the house)
    mezani (on the table)

Usage notes

  • (second-person plural) Used in conjunction with the direct imperative to form the plural. With native (Bantu)/nativized verbs in -a, vowel changes to -e:
    Kisomeni (Read it!) (from soma)
    Jibuni (Answer!) (from jibu)
  • (second-person plural) Used in conjunction with the class 1 (personal) object affix -wa- to disambiguate the second-person plural from the third person plural; verbs in -a change this to -e before the affix:
    Niliwasomeeni (I read to you) vs. Niliwasomea (I read to them)

Warlpiri

Suffix

-ni

  1. non-past marker, applied to verbs of class 5 to indicate non-past tense

Zulu

Etymology 1

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ní/

Pronoun

-ni

  1. what
    Udlani?
    What are you eating?
    Yini lokhu?
    What is this?
Usage notes

Unlike other pronouns, -ni always appears attached to another word. However, it does have a copulative form yini.

Etymology 2

Pronunciation

Suffix

-ni

  1. Forms the plural of the imperative of verbs.

References

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