In Afro-Asiatic LanguagesSomaliIn the Somali language, the abessive case is marked by -laa or "-la" and dropping all but the first syllable on certain words For example:
In Australian languagesMartuthuniraIn Martuthunira, the privative case is formed with two suffixes, -wirriwa and -wirraa. What determines which suffix is used in a given situation is unclear.
In Caucasian languages
In Finno-Ugric languagesFinnishIn the Finnish language, the abessive case is marked by -tta for back vowels and -ttä for front vowels according to vowel harmony. For example:
An equivalent construction exists using the word ilman and the partitive:
or, more uncommonly:
The abessive case of nouns is rarely used in writing and even less in speech, although some abessive forms are more common than their equivalent ilman forms:
The abessive is, however, commonly used in nominal forms of verbs (formed with the affix -ma- / -mä-), such as puhu-ma-tta "without speaking", osta-ma-tta "without buying," välittä-mä-ttä "without caring:"
This form can often be replaced by using the negative form of the verb:
It is possible to occasionally hear what is wrong usage of the abessive in Finnish, where the abessive and ilman forms are combined:
There is debate as to if this is interference from Estonian. EstonianEstonian also uses the abessive, which is marked by -ta in both the singular and the plural:
Tallinn boasts a pair of bars that play on the use of the comitative and abessive, the Nimeta baar (the pub with no name) and the Nimega baar (the pub with a name). The nominal forms of verbs are marked with the affix -ma- and the abessive marker -ta:
Skolt SamiThe abessive marker for nouns in Skolt Sámi is -tää in both the singular and the plural:
The abessive-like non-finite verb form (converb) is -ǩâni or -kani:
Unlike in Finnish, the abessive is still commonly used in Skolt Sámi. Inari SamiThe abessive marker for nouns in Inari Sámi is -táá. The corresponding non-finite verb form is -hánnáá, -hinnáá or -hennáá. Other Sami languagesThe abessive is not used productively in the Western Sámi languages, although it may occur as a cranberry morpheme. In Altaic LanguagesTurkishThe suffix -siz (variations: -sız,-suz,-süz) is used. Ex: Evsiz, barksız, görgüsüz, yurtsuz. See alsoReferences
External links
| | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||