Content created: 2001-01-06
File last modified:
A Nahuatl noun is always either "possessed" or "absolutive" (free-standing), and its form varies accordingly; when it is absolutive it takes a distinctive absolutive ending; when it is possessed, it takes a distinctive prefix showing the possessor; in compounds or with other affixes it also drops the absolutive suffix. By convention, dictionaries enter nouns in their absolutive form.
Noun Suffixes | ||
---|---|---|
Singular | Animate Plural | |
Absolutive (= not possessed) | C-tli V-tl l-li -in | C-tin/meh V-h, V-meh -tin |
Possessed | C-# V-uh | -huän |
In this table and hereafter C = consonant,
V = vowel, # = end of a word.
Examples | ||
---|---|---|
Singular | Animate Plural | |
Absolutive (= not possessed) | oc-tli ä-tl cal-li | telpoch-tin/meh azca-meh cal-tin |
Possessed (n(o) = my) | n-oc-# n-ä-uh no-cal-# | no-toch-huän |
Do not include the long mark over any vowel and do not use periods to separate elements. (The program is too dumb to understand that that can be part of a right answer.)
Each space can be filled in only with the right answer; if you enter anything else, the Answer Ghost will make it vanish as soon as your cursor leaves the box. You can use all upper-case or all lower-case or can capitalize the first letter of each answer (because that is automatic in some browsers).
If you get stuck, place the cursor in the nearest "Uncle Box" and the correct answer to the most recent item you attempted will briefly appear there. One item is already filled in as an example. It cannot be changed.
Challenge: The prefix "to-" means "our." Generate the correct form for each of the following nouns: