Sotho deficient verbs
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Deficient verbs, being "deficient", are never used alone. Many of them are irregular in form and have irregular inflexions. Many of these verbs seem radical in nature, while others are obviously derived from certain extant normal verbs. What distinguishes the deficient usage of these normal verbs is the fact that they are followed by another verb and affect its meaning.
Multi-verbal syntax
Deficient verbs are used to alter the meaning of complementary normal verbs, which have to follow the deficient verb in word order. The following diagram represents the general shape of a typical multi-verbal conjugation :Apart from the verbal complex, researchers of Bantu languages have noted that when the main verb is followed by its direct object then this structure creates a "verb phrase", which may be treated as one phonological unit or domain by some grammatical processes. For example, many languages with unbounded tonal shift or spread laws may often shift or spread a high tone underlying in the verbal complex all the way to the final, penult, or antepenultimate syllable of the following word, but only if that word is the verb's object. One Sesotho tonal law that's mildly sensitive to the verb phrase is the finality restriction, which is not applied if the verb is immediately followed by the object.
The structure created by deficient verbs followed by a normal verb is unique in a few ways:
- Deficient verbs must have a complementary verb, and this main verb must follow the deficient verbs, with no intervening words and no variation in word order. This is one of the very few instances in the Sesotho language when word order is absolutely immutable. If one wishes to emphasise the main verb's object then it needs to be placed before the very first deficient verb in the sequence, not just before the main verb.
- There may be no pauses in speech between the deficient verbs and the main verb, contrary to how other words are treated. The entire sequence is pronounced as one whole unit, and may not be broken up.
Classification
By examining the mood and tense of the main verb, deficient verbs may be classified into six groups according to the type of complement they govern. It is clear that most groups are followed by participial or subjunctive moods, which are precisely the moods often used when forming sequences of verbs or subordinate clauses using non-deficient verbs.
Within the groups, the verbs tend to have similar forms, but often vastly differing conjugation possibilities and behaviours. Some of the verbs are only used in a handful of tenses and moods; some verbs indicate negation by negating the deficient verb itself, some by negating the main verb, and some may do either.
Within Groups IV to VI, there is no set number of members and different speakers and communities may differ in the verbs they regularly use. Basically, a verb may become deficient if it used in certain consecutive constructions with a slightly modified meaning that disappears when the verb is used alone. Since the modified meaning does not make any sense when the verb is used alone, the deficient use is marked by having the complement follow the verb directly and with no pause.
In the example sentences under the following sections, the entire verb sequence is bold while the complement verb to the deficient verbs is bold and underlined.
- Group I contains a small number of essential verbs, without some of which it would be impossible to form certain meanings in Sesotho. In form they seem to be contracted perfects, ending with the vowel instead of the usual. Each verb only has one form with no change in tense or mood, but the complement may assume a variety of participial tenses. These deficient verbs may be compounded to form certain tenses, and they may be contracted as well.
The firn -se comes from -setse, the perfect of -sala, and this form is often used in the Northern Sotho languages for the same purpose as the Sesotho form.
Examples: - Group II contains three verbs. Two of these look like normal verbs ending with -a, while the other is obviously the perfect -ile of the verb -ya. These verbs behave very differently from each other, but are united by the fact that they take only a past subjunctive complement.
The morpheme -ile forms the bi-verbal past tense. Basically, using a verb with this deficient verb is an alternative to using the perfect form of a verb, but the use of the deficient verb definitely has a more "completed" — though not perfect — feel to it. With stative verbs the perfect form actually gives a present-perfect stative tense, and this differs from the use of this deficient verb as it gives a completed past tense meaning.
This may be compounded with most Group I verbs to form perfect, past exclusive, past potential, and past future tenses. The Group I verb appears first, with -ile following pronounced with participial sub-mood tones.
The morpheme -ka is used in two tenses — remote past indicative, and present potential — and is connected with the simple verbal auxiliary infix -ka- used to form the potential mood. The remote past form is highly irregular and is basically an alternative to the -ile deficient verb ; the present potential emphasises the use of the simple infix -ka-. As with the simple infix, the first person singular subjectival concord ke- becomes a syllabic by dissimilation.
An alternative to -kile is to compound -ka with -ile. This construction is very frequently contracted.
The morpheme -tla is only found in the positive present potential with a meaning of "lest" or "or else", used in a type of consecutive construction. The verb is obviously connected with the normal verb meaning "come", but used deficiently with a modified meaning. - Group III contains a small number of verbs, all with irregular forms ending in the vowel. Four of the verbs signify habitual actions, with very minor semantic differences between them, another is occasional in the positive but habitual in the negative, and yet another simply the serves the same function as Group II -ile. Note that, apart from a rare consecutive past habitual construction, the only time the perfect subjunctive mood may be used is after these deficient verbs. To form past, future, and potential tenses the Group -ne, -tla be, and -ka be are used by most of these verbs to form tri-verbal forms.
Examples: - Group IV verbs are rather special in that they may be used in a variety of tense forms, but the form of the deficient verb influences the form of the complement. No one verb may be used in all these configurations and the verbs differ in their uses. Most of them have non-deficient counterparts and end with the normal -a, but some conjugate slightly irregularly.
Examples: - Group V contains several normal looking verbs with regular inflexions, most of which have non-deficient uses. Several tense forms exist for the deficient verbs, while the complement is usually present participial though some of the verbs may also have a perfect participial complement.
Example: - Group VI contains a number of verbs used with an infinitive complement and which give certain shades of meaning. The infinitive complement is basically a direct noun object, and indeed many other verbs may be used this way but are not considered deficient as their meanings do not change slightly when they are.
Examples: