Umbrean/Lessons/03 Adding Object

=Introduction= So now one knows how to make a very simple sentence, just a subject and the verb. That's all good but how much can be expressed by it? Well alot if its done right but thats for later lessons. =Cases= For now we shall move onto transitive verbs which takes on an object aswell, lets check the table from before again.
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! colspan=2 | Term ! Description ! Example ! colspan=2 | Subject sentence doing the verb ! colspan=2 | Verb ! rowspan=2 | Object ! Direct affected by the verb ! Indirect affected by the verb
 * The entity in a
 * Mary kissed john
 * The action in a sentence
 * You kissed him
 * The thing that is directly
 * I gave you a flower
 * The entity that is indirectly
 * I gave you a flower
 * }

There are two types of objects but we will only use the direct one, indirect is for later lessons.

While in many languages if you know how the subject is said in intransitive verbs you know it for transitive aswell.

That is unfortunately not the case in Umbrean, in intransitive verbs it takes on the intransitive case, which is a no brainer hearing the names, but in transitive verbs it takes the ergative case.

One hear that the subject of both cases takes different cases and the direct object have also its own case called accusative case and it all need to be done properly.

Lets show it below using the word döndiu meaning "tooth"


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! Case name ! Noun declension ! Suffix ! English example ! Umbrean example ! Intransitive ! Ergative ! Accusative
 * Döndiul
 * -ul
 * A tooth fell
 * Döndiul lyomavy
 * Döndius'
 * -us'
 * a tooth hit him
 * Döndius' lixr nov'óñ
 * Döndiuv
 * -uv
 * He hit a tooth
 * Röc döndiuv nov'óñ
 * }


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