NAME

Lingua::Zompist::Verdurian - Inflect Verdurian nouns, verbs, and adjectives

VERSION

This document refers to version 0.03 of Lingua::Zompist::Verdurian, released on 2001-11-15.

SYNOPSIS

use Lingua::Zompist::Verdurian;
$i_am = Lingua::Zompist::Verdurian::demeric('esan')->[0];

or

use Lingua::Zompist::Verdurian ':all';
$i_am = demeric('esan')->[0];

or

use Lingua::Zompist::Verdurian qw( demeric crifel );
$you_know = demeric('shrifec')->[1];
$they_had = crifel('tenec')->[5];


$word = noun('cuon');  # nouns
$word = noun('se');    # pronouns
$word = adj('haute');  # adjectives
$word = adj('so');     # definite article

# verbs
$word = demeric('ivrec');     # present
$word = scrifel('ivrec');     # past
$word = izhcrifel('ivrec');   # past anterior
$word = ctanec('ivrec');      # future
$word = epesec('ivrec');      # conditional
$word = befel('ivrec');       # imperative
$word = classimp('ivrec');    # "classical" imperative
$word = part('ivrec');        # participles

DESCRIPTION

Overview

Lingua::Zompist::Verdurian is a module which allows you to inflect Verdurian words. You can conjugate verbs and decline nouns, pronouns, adjectives, and the definite article.

There is one function to inflect nouns and pronouns, and another to inflect adjectives and the definite article. Verbs are covered by several functions: one for each tense or mood and another for the participles.

Exports

Lingua::Zompist::Verdurian exports no functions by default, in order to avoid namespace pollution. This enables, for example, Lingua::Zompist::Verdurian and Lingua::Zompist::Cadhinor to be used in the same program, since otherwise many of the function names would clash. However, all functions listed here can be imported explicitly by naming them, or they can be imported all together by using the tag ':all'.

A note on the character set used

This module expects input to be in iso-8859-1 (Latin-1) and will return output in that character set as well. For example, redelcë (meaning woman) should have a byte with the value 235 as the last character, and its accusative, redelcä, will have a byte with the value 228 as its last character.

In the future, this module may expect and produce the charset used by the Maraille font. At that point, the module Lingua::Zompist::Convert is expected to be available, which should be able to convert between that charset and standard charsets such as iso-8859-1 and utf-8.

noun

This function allows you to inflect nouns and pronouns (including personal pronouns such as se and le and relative and interrogative pronouns such as ktë, fsya, and ifkio).

It takes one argument, the noun or pronoun to inflect, and returns an arrayref on success, or undef or the empty list on failure (for example, because it could not determine which conjugation a noun belonged to).

In general, the arrayref will have eight elements, in the following order: nominative singular, genitive singular, accusative singular, dative singular, nominative plural, genitive plural, accusative plural, dative plural. In some cases, some of those elements may be undef (especially in the plural of non-personal pronouns such as kio or ifcë -- but not ke).

The function should determine the gender and declension of the noun or pronoun automatically. Nouns ending in -a are taken to be feminine unless they are on an internal list of masculine nouns in -a. If you find a masculine noun in -a which is not recognised correctly, please send me email.

Some special notes:

  • The personal pronouns ta, mu, ca, and za are not recognised by this function; rather, they are returned as part of se, le, ilu / ila / il, and ze respectively. So to find out the genitive of we, look for the genitive plural of I.

  • The accusative singular of tu is returned as tu/tü, to show that this form may be either tu (when tu is used as an impersonal pronoun meaning one) or (when tu is used as a polite or formal pronoun meaning you).

  • fsuda and nikudá do not decline. However, these words are not checked for in the noun function.

adj

This function inflects adjectives and the definite article so (which behaves like a declension I adjective). It expects one argument (the adjective to decline or the word so) and returns an arrayref on success, or undef or the empty list on failure.

The arrayref will itself contain two arrayrefs, each with eight elements. The first arrayref will contain the masculine forms and the second arrayref will contain the feminine forms. The forms are in the same order as in the arrayref returned by the noun function. Briefly, this order is nominative - genitive - accusative - dative in singular and plural.

This function should determine the declension of an adjective automatically.

There is currently no function which returns the declension of an adjective (partly because the matter is so simple -- declension I adjectives end in -C/-a, II in -e/-ë, III in -y/-y, and IV in -ë/a); however, if there is popular demand for such a function it could be quickly added.

demeric

This function declines a verb in the present tense. It takes the verb to inflect as its argument and returns an arrayref on success, or undef or the empty list on failure.

The arrayref will contain six elements, in the following order: first person singular ("I"), second person singular ("thou"), third person singular ("he/she/it"), first person plural ("we"), second person plural ("[all of] you"), third person plural ("they").

scrifel

This function declines a verb in the past tense. It is otherwise similar to the function demeric.

However, note that esan behaves slightly differently in the past tense. The third person singular and plural form returned are fue/esne and fueu/esneu. fue and fueu are the normal forms for "he/she/it was" and "they were", but esne and esneu are used in an existential sense, as "there was" and "there were". (For example, Ver2Eng.doc gives esne mudray as "there was a wise man" and fue mudray as "he was wise".)

Note

http://www.zompist.com/morphology.htm only mentions esne in this sense, but I believe esneu should also be possible. Ver2Eng.doc, on the other hand, gives a full complement of forms esnai, esnei, esne, esnam, esno, esnu, but I don't think those are all correct.

izhcrifel

This function declines a verb in the past anterior tense. It is otherwise similar to the function demeric.

ctanec

This function declines a verb in the future tense. It is otherwise similar to the function demeric.

epesec

This function declines a verb in the conditional. It is otherwise similar to the function demeric.

befel

This function declines a verb in the imperative. It is otherwise similar to the function demeric.

Note that kies has no imperative.

classimp

This function declines a verb in the so-called "classical imperative". It is otherwise similar to the function demeric, except for the fact that of the six elements in the arrayref that is returned on success, only elements 1 and 4 have a value, the others being undef -- since the classical imperative only has forms for le and mu.

Note that kies has no classical imperative.

part

This function returns the three participles of a verb. It takes the verb as an argument and returns an arrayref (in scalar context) or a list (in list context) of three elements: the present participle, the past participle, and the gerund ("to be <verb>ed"). On failure, it returns undef or the empty list.

Specifically, the form returned for each participle is the masculine nominative singular form of the participle (which can be considered the citation form). Since participles decline like declension I adjectives (or declension IV adjectives, in the case of present participles of verbs of the C conjugation), the other forms of the participles may be obtained by calling the adj function, if desired.

BUGS

This module should handle irregular words correctly. However, if there is a word that is inflected incorrectly, please send me email and notify me.

However, please make sure that you have checked against a current version of http://www.zompist.com/morphology.htm or that you asked Mark Rosenfelder himself; the grammar occasionally changes as small errors are found or words change.

SEE ALSO

Lingua::Zompist::Kebreni, http://www.zompist.com/verdurian.htm, http://www.zompist.com/morphology.htm

AUTHOR

Philip Newton, <pne@cpan.org>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

Copyright (C) 2001 by Philip Newton. All rights reserved.

Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:

  • Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.

  • Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.

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