Advanced Ge’ez (ግዕዝ) Grammar

examples included

Ge’ez (the script) is an ancient African script that originated as an abjad (consonant-only alphabet) and – though it is now used for writing several languages in Eritrea and Ethiopia, including the closely related languages of Tigre, Tigrinya and Amharic – it was originally used to write it’s pre-Abrahamic religions, namesake language, ነ ግዕዝ, which currently survives only as the liturgical language of the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church and the Eritrean Orthodox Tewahedo Church.

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Examples in American English to the pronunciations of the 7 orders of the አ syllabary group using phonetic values as indicated in Merriam-Webster:

    1. as in the first phoneme of the word “uncle” (ˈəŋ-kəl);
    2. as in the first phoneme of the prefix “über” (ü-bər);
    3. as in the first phoneme of the word “eager” (ˈē-gər);
    4. as in the first phoneme of the word “olive” (ˈä-liv);
    5. as in the first phoneme of the word “apron” (ˈā-prən);
    6. as in the first phoneme of the word “inner” (ˈi-nər); and
    7. as in the first phoneme of the word “offer” (ˈȯ-fər ).

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Special thanks to H.M. Zafer for allowing me to reproduce his work!

The phonetic values used from the source vary slightly than those used by qdm:

  • ፀ: “ð” instead of “ş”
  • ጸ: “ş” instead of “ṣ”
  • ሠ: “š” instead of “ś”
  • ኀ: “x” instead of “h̬”

To avoid confusion, I’ve aligned the phonetic values of the 1st, 4th and 5th orders of the syllabaries with that of the qdm project as follows:

  • first order: ä replaced a
  • fourth order: a replaced ā
  • fifth order: e replaced é
  • and other minor transliteration fixes to maintain consistency

Please let me know if there are any errors on Instagram – qdmisfirst.

For basic Ge’ez (script, calendar, etc.) → Ge’ez Script.

 

9: Prepositions

Ge’ez prepositions stand as independent words with three very important exceptions:

በ_ (bä) in / into / by [locative] ቤት” = bäbet – in the house
(lä) for / to [dative] ቤት” = läbet – to the house
እም (ʾəm) from / out of [ablative] እምቤት” = ʾəmbet – from the house

These three also assimilate into many of the prepositions below, to nuance their meanings (predictably). Here’s a list of all the important prepositions, in order of frequency in texts:

ኅበ (xäbä) with, near, by ቤተ፡ነጉሥ፡ውእቱ፡ኀበ፡ሀገር።
The house of the king is near the city.
ውስተ (wəstä) within, inside ወስተ፡ሀገር፡ውእቱ።
It is inside the city.
ዲበ (dibä) on, over ዲበ፡ደብር፡ውእቱ።
It is on the mountain.
ላዕለ (laʿlä) upon, concerning ላዕለ፡ዝክታብ
Concerning this book…
ታሕተ (taʾhtä) under ታሕተ፡ዛዕፅ፡አንተ።
You are under this tree.
ከመ (kämä) like, similar to ከመ፡ወለተ፡ንጉሥ፡ይእቲ።
She is like a princess.
ምስለ (məslä) in the company of ምስለ፡ሊቃነ፡ዛቲ፡ሀገር፡ንሕነ።
We are in the company of the elders of this town.
እንተ (ʾəntä) by way of, through እንተ፡ቤት፡ካህን
…through the priest’s house
በእንተ (bäʾntä) about, concerning በእንተ፡አግበርተ፡አምላክ
…concerning the Lord’s servants.
ድኅረ (dəxrä) behind, after ድኅረ፡ቤተ፡ክርስቲያን፡ አነ።
I am behind the church.
ቅድመ (qədmä) in front of, before ቅድመ፡ዛቤት፡አንቲ።
You [f.] are in front of the house.
እስከ (ʾəskä) until, up to, as far as መድረ፡ንጉሥ፡እስከ፡አድባር፡ይእቲ።
The land of the king [extends] up to the mountains.
ማከለ (makälä) among ነቢይ፡ውእቱ፡ማከለ፡ነቢያት።
He is a prophet among the prophets.

 

10: Verbs: Simple – Perfective

The vast majority of Ge’ez verbs are triliteral i.e. they have three root letters and a fair amount are quadriliteral i.e. they have four root letters. A small minority of verbs has two or five root letters. All verbs fall into three broad categories or stems. The best way to think of these stems is as vowel templates in which the root-letters are fixed. Unlike other Semitic languages, these stems in Ge’ez are not derivative from each other i.e. most roots appear in only one stem.

The majority of verbs appear in the simple stem or the basic stem [B-stem], which correlates with the G-stem in Aramaic (קטל); the Pa’al in Hebrew (פעל) and Form-I in Arabic (فعل).

«The Perfective = The Past Tense»

With three letter roots (R1R2R3) the Simple stem has two slight variations in the perfective aspect. The perfective aspect denotes completed actions i.e. usually it correlates to what we would think of as the past tense.

R1eR2eR3eusually used for action verbs e.g. ሐነጸ (ḥänäşä) to build
R1eR2R3e – usually used for stative verbs e.g. ፈርሀ (färhä) to be afraid

There are many exceptions to these generalizations, and for the most part in classical Ge’ez the difference in meaning of these two variations has become blurred. In any case, this difference in form is slight and is only even noticeable in the 3rd person perfective forms. Here are the conjugation charts:

ሐነጸ (ḥänäşä) to build – B-stem1, Perfective:

Singular
Plural
1st Person ሐነጽኩ ḥänäşku ሐነጽነ ḥänäşnä
2nd Person ሐነጽከ ḥänäşkä (m.) ሐነጽክሙ ḥänäşkəmu (m.)
ሐነጽኪ ḥänäşki (f.) ሐነጽክን ḥänäşkən (f.)
3rd Person ሐነ ḥänäşä (m.) ሐነ ḥänäşu (m.)
ሐነጸት ḥänäşät (f.) ሐነ ḥänäşa (f.)

ብረ (brä) to do – B-stem2, Perfective:

Singular
Plural
1st Person ገበርኩ gäbärku ገበርነ gäbärnä
2nd Person ገበርከ gäbärkä (m.) ገበርክሙ gäbärkəmu (m.)
ገበርኪ gäbärki (f.) ገበርክን gäbärkən (f.)
3rd Person ብረ gäbrä (m.) ብሩ gäbru (m.)
ገብረት gäbrät (f.) gäbra (f.)

Here’s a list of some common B-stem verbs for you to get started with. From now on, I’ll put [B] next to new verbs that occur in this stem.

ነበረ (näbärä) to live, to sit, to remain ነበርኩ፡በዛሀገር።
I lived in this city.
ሐነጸ (ḥänäşä) to build, to construct ሐነጸ፡ንጉሥ
The king built…
ወረደ (wärädä) to descend, to go down ወረደ፡እምዲበ፡ድብር።
He came down from on the mountain.
ረከበ (räkäbä) to find, to acquire ረከብኪ
You [f.] found…
ሰበከ (säbäkä) to preach ሰበክነ፡በዋንጌል።
We preached the Gospel.
ጸሐፈ (şääfä) to write, to compose ጸሐፈ፡ጸሓፌ፡ንጉሥ
The king’s scribe wrote…
ኅለፈ (xäläfä) to pass ኀለፍኩ፡ምስለ፡ሀገር።
I passed through the town.
ሰአለ (säälä) to ask, to inquire ሰእሉ: ሊቃነ፡ሀገር
The elders of the city asked…
ገብረ (gäbrä) to do, to act, to create ገብረ፡እግዚአብሔር
God created…
በጽሐ (bäşä) to arrive በጽሓ
They [f.] arrived…
ወፅዐ (wäðʿä) to depart ወፅዑ፡ካህናት።
The priests derparted.
መርሐ (märḥä) to guide, to lead መረሕክሙ
You all [m.] guided…
መጽአ (mäşä) to come መጽአነ፡እምዛሀገር።
We came from this city.
ሖረ (ḥore) to go ሖሩ፡ወሉደ፡ንግሥት፡ለሀገር።
The queen’s son went to the city.
ረእየ (rä’yä) to see ረእየ፡ብእሲ
The man saw…
ሰምዐ (sämʿä) to hear ሰምዐት፡ብእሲት
The woman heard…
ኮነ (konä) to become ኮነ፡ካህን
The priest became…
ሞተ (motä) to die ሞተት፡ንግሥት።
The queen died.

 

 

11: The Accusative Case

The normal word order in Gəʿəz is: Verb + Subject + Object i.e. “The man reads books” becomes “Reads the man the books” in Gəʿəz. This word order can be manipulated to nuance the meaning of the sentence.

The last vital piece of the puzzle, at this stage, is the accusative case. For those of you not familiar with declensions, the accusative case marks a word as the direct object of a transitive verb. Itʾs usually a change in the ending of the word, similar to how the word he changes to him in the sentence: “the girl saw him.” In Gəʿəz, the accusative case also marks the destination of a motion verb (where we would otherwise expect to find “to” to “into” etc) and sometimes to designate a period of time adverbially (at night, in the evening etc). The accusative form, youʾll notice, closely resembles the construct state:

11.1: For most singular and plural words, the accusative case is marked with the ending “-ä”:

ሐነጸ፡ንጉሥ፡ሀገረ
ḥänäṣä nəguś hägärä.
The king built the city.
ሐነጹ፡ነገሥት፡አህጉረ
ḥänäṣu nägäśt ähgurä.
The kings built the cities.
ረከበት፡በእሲት፡ካህነ
räkäbät bäʾsit kahənä.
The woman found the priest.
ረከባ፡አንስት፡ካህናተ።
räkäbät ʾänəst kahənatä.
The women found the priests.
ቦአክሙ፡ቤተ
boʾäkəmu betä.
You all entered into the house.
ሖረ፡ነቢይ፡ድባረ
ḥorä näbiy dəbrä.
The prophet went to the mountain.

11.2: For words that end with “-i”, the accusative case is marked with an “-e” ending:

ሰመዕነ፡አነ፡ወንግሥት፡ጸሓፌ
sämäʿnä ʾänä wä-nəgəśt ṣəhafe.
The queen and I heard the scribe.
ሰአልኩ፡ብእሴ
säʾälku bəʾse.
I questioned the man.

11.3: For words that end with other vowels the accusative ending is not marked. This also includes the vowel “-e” i.e. if a word is in the construct state and the object of an action, it will not be marked for the accusative case:

ገብረ፡አምላከ፡ሰማይ፡አረዊተ፡ምድር
gabra ʾämlakä səmay ʾäräwitä mədr.
The lord of heaven created the beasts of the earth.
ረእየት፡ወለተ፡ንጉሥ፡ጸሓፌ፡ቤተ፡ንጉሥ
räʾyät wälättä nəguś ṣəḥafe betä nəguś.
The princess saw the scribe of the palace.

11.4 Proper names i.e. names of people, places, groups, typically do not take an accusative case ending. In some texts, they take a special ending: “-ha”

መርሐ፡ሙሴ፡እስራኤል፡እምውስተ፡ግብጽ።
märḥä muse ʾəsrael ʾəmwəsta gəbṣ.
Moses led Israel out of Egypt.
ረእዩ፡መልአክት፡ያዕቆብሃ
räʾyu mälʾäkt yäʿqobha.
The angels saw Jacob.

11.5: And here are the accusative versions of the demonstrative pronouns:

Masculine
Feminine
ዘንተ zänta This1 ዛተ zatä This1
za- This2 za- This2
እሎንተ ʾəllontä These እላንተ ʾəllantä These
ውእተ wəʾəta That ይእተ yəʾəta That

 

12: Posession

As in other Semitic languages, possession in Ge’ez is typically indicated through a set of pronominal suffixes added directly on to the noun:

12.1: Here are all the possessive pronominal suffixes. Some of them have accusative forms which are indicated in the parenthesis: <X>

Masculine
Feminine
ዘንተ zänta This1 ዛተ zatä This1
za- This2 za- This2
እሎንተ ʾəllontä These እላንተ ʾəllantä These
ውእተ wəʾəta That ይእተ yəʾəta That

12.2: Nouns that end in a vowel take a helping consonant -h- in all the 3rd person possessions. For instance, with the word “ምንዳቤ (məndabe =  anguish, suffering, affliction.) There are no distinct accusative forms for nouns that end in vowels:

ምንዳ
məndabehu
His anguish
ምንዳቤ
məndabehomu
Their (m.) anguish
ምንዳቤ
məndabeha
Her anguish
ምንዳቤ
məndabehon
Their (f.) anguish

12.3: The only exceptions are nouns that end in the vowel –i. In 2nd person possessions, the accusative form replaces the -i with an -e:

ዝንቱ፡ጸሓፊከ፡ውእቱ። Zəntu şaḥafikä wə’ətu This is your scribe. ረከብኩ፡ ጸሓከ። räkäbku şäḥafe I found your scribe.

12.4: All plurals, both regular and broken, take the vowel –i(h)- before for all pronomial suffixes above (12.1). They have no distinct accusative forms:

ሊቃኒየ liqaniyä my elders ሊቃኒነ liqaninä our elders
ነቢያቲከ nabiyatikä your (m.) prophets ነቢያቲክሙ näbiyatikəmu your (m. pl.) prophets
አህጉሪሃ ahguriha her cities አህጉሪሆን ähgurihon their (f. pl.) cities

12.5: Most biconsonantal nouns take the vowel –u(h)- before the pronominal suffixes above (12.1). In the accusative form, they vowel changes to –a(h)-.

 የ፡በቤትየ፡ውእቱ። äbuyä bäbetyä wə’ətu My father is in my house. ረእየኩ፡አየ። rä’yäku äba I saw my father.
በጽሐ፡እሁ።
bäşḥä əxuhu His brother arrived. መርሐ፡እኁየ፡እሁ። märḥä əxuye əxʷahu My brother led his brother.

12.6: The preposition “la-” has a distinct set of pronominal suffixes:

ሎቱ lotu to him ሎሙ lomu to them (m.)
ላቲ läti to her ሎን lon to them (f.)
ለከ läka to you ለክሙ läkemu to you all (m.)
ለኪ läki to you ለክን läkən to you all (f.)
ሊተ lita to me ለነ länä to us (m.)

 

14: Verbs: Intensive – Perfective

The Intensive verb form, also called the “D-stem”, correlates to the D-stem in Aramaic (קִטֵּל), the Pi’el in Hebrew (פִעֵל) and the Form-II in Arabic (فعّل). It’s characterized by a doubling of the second radical in the root. Unlike these other scripts however, the Ethiopic script does not mark doubled sound (with a dagesh or shadda) which can cause some ambiguity. The intensive form of the verb typically denotes some kind of intensity, but this is not always the case. For example, the simple verb ቀተለ (qätälä) means “to kill” — the intensive form, ቀተለ (qättälä), means “to annihilate, to kill off completely” etc.

ገሠጸ [gäššäşä = to teach] – D-stem, Perfect

Singular
Plural
1st Person ገሠጽኩ gäššäşku ገሠጽነ gäššäşnä
2nd Person ገሠጽከ gäššäşkä (m.) ገሠጽክሙ gäššäşkəmu (m.)
ገሠጽኪ gäššäşki (f.) ገሠጽክን gäššäşkən (f.)
3rd Person ገሠ gäššäşä (m.) ገሠ gäššäşu (m.)
ገሠጸት gäššäşät (f.) ገሠ gäššäşa (f.)

Here’s a list of some oft-appearing D-stem verbs to get started with. From now on, I’ll put [D] next to new verbs that occur in this stem.

ነጸረ (näşşärä) to look, to watch ነጸርኩ፡ሀገረ፡እምዲበ፡ድብር።
I looked at the city from the hill.
ነስሐ (nässää) to repent ነሰሐ፡እምነ፡ኀጢአቱ።
He repented for his sin.
ፈነወ (fännäwä) to send ፈነወት፡ንግሥትነ፡ማየ፡ለአግበርታ።
Our queen sent the water to her servants.
ሀለወ (hälläwä) to exist ሀለወት፡ሀገር፡ህየ።
There was a town here.
ጸውዐ äwwəʿä) to call, to proclaim ጸውዑ፡ሰብአ፡ደቂቆሙ።
The men called their children.

 

14: Verbs: Frequentative – Perfective

The third type of stem is the frequentative stem, also called the called the “L-stem.” It correlates to Form-III in Arabic (فاعل). It’s characterized by a lengthening of the first radical in the root. This stem typically carries a frequentative meaning. For example, the simple verb ተለ (qätälä) means “to kill” – the frequentative form, ተለ (qatälä), means “to continuously kill, to persist in killing.”

ባረከ [baräkä = to bless] – L-stem, Perfect

Singular
Plural
1st Person ባረ baräkku ባረክ baräknä
2nd Person ባረ baräkkä (m.) ባረክሙ baräkkämu (m.)
ባረ baräkki (f.) ባረክነ baräkkən (f.)
3rd Person ባረ baräkä (m.) ባረኩ baräku (m.)
ባረከት baräkät (f.) ባረካ baräka (f.)

 

16: Verbs: Quadriliterals – Perfective

The fourth category of verbs are those which have four (quadriliteral) or sometimes five (quinquiliteral) root consonants. These are fairly common in Ge’ez and the form itself has no particular meaning / effect. Quadriliteral verbs often emerge from borrowed terms from other languages. For instance, the verb መንኰሰ (mänkʷäsä) “to become a monk, to retreat into asceticism” probably came from the Greek term μοναχός (monakhos) “solitary”.

መንኰሰ [mänkʷäsä = to become a monk] – Q-stem, Perfect

Singular
Plural
1st Person መንኰስ mänkʷäsku መንኰስክነ mänkʷäsknä
2nd Person መንኰስ mänkʷäskä (m.) መንኰስክሙ mänkʷäskəmu (m.)
መንኰስ mänkʷäski (f.) መንኰስክን mänkʷäskən (f.)
3rd Person መንኰ mänkʷäsä (m.) መንኰ mänkʷäsu (m.)
መንኰሰት mänkʷäsät (f.) መንኰ mänkʷäsä (f.)

 

19: Adjectives

The majority of adjectives in Gəʿəz, as in other Semitic languages, are verbal participles. A smaller number are denominal. They appear in a few different patterns and I’ve explained these patterns further below. Adjectives always reflect the number, gender and case of the nouns they modify and all the patterns follow, more or less, the following scheme:

M
F
Singular / – -ት‎ / -t
Plural -ኣን / -an -ኣት /- āt

As in other Semitic languages, adjectives usually adjectives appear after the noun(s) they modify, so:

ሐነጹ፡ንጉሥ፡ምሁር፡ወአግብርቱ፡ጠበብት፡ሀገረ፡ሠናይተ፡ለካህናት፡ጻድቃን።
ḥänäṣu nəguš məhur wäʾägbərtu ṭäbäbt hägärä šännaytä läkahnat ṣadəqan //
The learned king, and his skilled servants, built a beautiful city for the pious priests.

ዴገነት፡ንግሥትነ፡ክብርት፡ሊቃነ፡ዕልዋነ፡ወእሙንቱ፡ጐዩ፡ብሔረ፡ባዕደ።
degänät nəgəštnä kəbərt liqanä ʿələwanä wäʾəmuntu gʷäyyu bḥerä baʿədä //
Our mighty queen pursued the rebellious elders and they fled to another land.

Similarly, cardinal / ordinal numbers and some quantifying adjectives generally precede the noun(s) they modify.

ቀለመ፡ብዙኃነ፡መጻሐፍተ፡ወተርጐመ፡ጸሓፊሁ፡ክታቦ፡ቅዱሰ፡ለካልእተ፡ልሳነ።
qälämä bəzuxanä mäṣaḥəftä wätärgʷämä ṣäḥafihu kətabo qəddusa läkalʾətä ləsanä //
He authored many books and his scribe translated his sacred writing into another language.

And, as you would expect, adjectives are also fully functioning nouns. They can thus appear as predicates or in the construct state:

ራትዕ፡ነቢይክሙ።ኢራትዓን፡አንትሙ።እኩያነ፡ለብ፡ወነዳያነ፡መንፈስ፡አንትሙ።
ratʿə näbiykəmu // ʾiratʿan ʾäntəmu // ʾəkuyanä ləbb wänäddayanä mänfäs äntəmu //
Your prophet is righteous. You all are not righteous. You all are evil of heart and poor of spirit.

ADJECTIVAL PATTERNS

1. The most frequently appearing adjectival pattern is characterized by an /-u/ on the second radical, so: ቅቱል (qətul) from B-verbs; ቅቱል (qəttul) from D-verbs and ቁቱል (qutul) from L verbs. Note that the –u is absent in the feminine singular inflection:

መሀረ mähärä = to teach :
ምሁር məhur = educated / learned

M
F
Singular ምሁር -ት‎ / -t
məhur məhərt
Plural ራን -ኣት /- āt
məhuran məhurat

ነጸሐ näṣäḥä = to be pure :
ንጹሕ nəṣuḥ = pure / innocent / sincere

M
F
Singular ንጹሕ ንጽሕት
nəṣuḥ nəṣuḥt
Plural ንጹሓን ንጹሓት
nəṣuḥan nəṣuḥat

ሰበሐ säbbäḥ = to praise :
ስቡሕ səbbuḥ = honorable / glorious / praised

M
F
Singular ንጹሕ ንጽሕት
nəṣuḥ nəṣuḥt
Plural ንጹሓን ንጹሓት
nəṣuḥan nəṣuḥat

ሠነየ šännäyä = to be beautiful :
ሥኑይ šännuy = adorned / decorated

M
F
Singular ንጹሕ ንጽሕት
nəṣuḥ nəṣuḥt
Plural ንጹሓን ንጹሓት
nəṣuḥan nəṣuḥat

ለበወ läbbäwä = to understand :
ልብው ləbbəw = wise / prudent

M
F
Singular ንጹሕ ንጽሕት
nəṣuḥ nəṣuḥt
Plural ንጹሓን ንጹሓት
nəṣuḥan nəṣuḥat

2. Another adjectival pattern is characterized by an /-a/ on the first radical, so: ቃትል (qatəl). The ordinal numbers appear in this pattern (ኃምስ xaməs = fifth), which inflects quite simply:

ረትዐ rätʿä = to be righteous :
ራትዕ ratəʿ = righteous / just

M
F
Singular ራትዕ ራትዕት
ratəʿ rātəʿt
Plural ራትዓን ራትዓት
ratəʿan rātəʿat

ብዕለ bəʿlä = to be / become wealthy :
ባዕል baʿəl = rich / wealthy

M
F
Singular ባዕል ባዕልት
baʿəl baʿəlt
Plural ባዕላን ባዕላት
baʿəlan baʿəlat

3. The third adjectival pattern includes few, albeit important, adjectives and is characterized by a /-i/ on the second radical, so: ቲል (qätil) from B-verbs and ቲል (qättil) for D-verbs. Note that the feminine form does not contain a /-t/ and that there is a common plural form:

ሐደሰ ḥäddäsä = to restore :
ሐዲስ ḥädis = new

M
F
Singular ሐዲስ ሐዳስ
ḥädis ḥädas
Plural ሐደስት
ḥädäst

ዐብየ ʿäbyä = to enlarge :
ዐቢይ ʿäbiy = large

M
F
Singular ዐቢይ ዐባይ
ʿäbiy ʿäbay
Plural ዐበይት
ʿäbäyt

4. The fourth adjectival pattern contains a characteristic doubling and elongation of the second radical, so: ቀታል (qättal). Note that this form resembles the f. sing. form in the previous pattern.

ኄረወ xeräwä = to be good :
ኄር xer = good

M
F
Singular ኄር ኄርት
xer xert
Plural ኄራን ኄራት
xeran xerat

ሠነየ šännäyä = to be beautiful :
ሠናይ šännay = beautiful

M
F
Singular ሠናይ ሠናይት
šännay šännayt
Plural ሠናያን ሠናያት
šännayan šännayat

5. Gəʿəz also derives adjectives from nouns. Whereas a few denominal adjectives have idiosyncratic patterns, e.g. ዐብድ ʿabd = ignorant, from ዐብድ ʿabd = a fool, most denominal adjectives are formed with the suffix –awi or –ay.

ዓለም ʿaläm = the world :
ዓለማዊ ʿalämawi = worldly

M
F
Singular ዓለማዊ ዓለማዊት
ʿalämawi ʿalämawit
Plural ዓለማዊያን ዓለማዊያት
ʿalämawiyan ʿalämawiyat

መንፈስ mänfäs = the spirit / the essence :
መንፈሳዊ mänfäsawi = spiritual

M
F
Singular መንፈሳዊ መንፈሳዊት
mänfäsawi mänfäsawit
Plural መንፈሳዊያን መንፈሳዊያት
mänfäsawiyan mänfäsawiyat

 

20: Object Suffixes

In Gəʿəz, pronominal suffixes on transitive verbs typically denote a direct object, i.e. a noun in the accusative case. To review the direct object, have another look at the entry on the accusative case.

ሐነጸ፡ንጉሥ፡ሀገረ። → ሐነ፡ንጉሥ።
ḥänäṣä nəguš hägärä // hänäṣo nəguš //
The king built a city. The king built it.

ዴገነት፡ወለታ፡ሊቃነ፡ዘመድ። → ዴገነቶሙ፡ወለታ።
degänät wälätta liqanä zämäd // degänätomu wälätta //
Her daughter pursued the tribe’s elders. Her daughter pursued them.

These same suffixes however may also denote indirect objects, particularly when affixed to verbs of speaking (addressing, telling, asking etc), verbs of giving (surrendering, depriving etc) and verbs of motion (going, befalling etc), so:

መጠወ፡ጳጳስ፡ሀገረነለአፍርንጅ። → መጠዎሙ፡ጳጳስ፡ሀገረነ።
mäṭṭäwä pappas hägäränä läʾäfrənj // mäṭṭäwomu pappas hägäränä //
The bishop surrendered our city to the Romans. The bishop surrendered our city to them.

ነገረ፡ዘንተ፡ስመ፡ለካህን። → ነገ፡ዘንተ።
nägärä zäntä səmä läkahən// nägäro zäntä //
He told this name to the priest. He told this to him.

Oftentimes, as in Aramaic / Syriac, these suffixes will anticipate an object which appears later in the sentence, prefixed with the lä- preposition. Lambdin terms this the “qätälo lä-nəguš construction.” This type of anticipatory-suffix infuses the object with greater specificity and definiteness. Note that, in this construction, the object affixed with the lä- is not marked in the accusative case.

ሐነጸ፡ንጉሥ፡ሀገረ። → ሐነ፡ንጉሥ፡ሀገር።
ḥänäṣä nəguš hägärä // hänäṣo nəguš lähägär//
The king built a city. → The king built [it,] the city.

ተርጐሙ፡ዛተመጻሕፍተ። → ተርጐምዋ፡ለዛቲመጻሕፍት
tärgʷämu zatä mäṣahəftä // tärgʷäməwwa läzati mäṣaḥəft //
They translated these books. They translated [them,] these books.

The pronominal suffixes are, for the most part, fairly easy to spot and decipher. Here’s a general overview of how they appear

Singular
Plural
3rd masculine -o -omu -ኦሙ
3rd feminine -a -on ኦን
2nd masculine -kä -kəmu ክሙ
2nd feminine -ki kən -ክን
1st common -ni -na

Some predictable phonetic changes occur to accommodate the 3rd person suffixes. Importantly, a helping “-h-” appears if they are affixed to stems ending in –a. If they are affixed to stems ending in –u or -ə, they appear beginning with -əww and -əyy, respectively, so:

ቀተላ፡አነስት፡አርዌምድር። → ቀተላ
qätäla ʾänäst ʾärwemədr // qätälahu //
The women killed a snake. They killed it.

ነጸሩ፡ዕብራዊያን፡መልእክተ። → ነጸርዎሙ
näṣṣäru ʿəbrawiyan mälaʾəktä // näṣṣärəwwomu //
The Hebrews saw angels. They saw them.

 

21: Verbs: The Passive Voice etc.

21.1: Most active verbs assume the passive voice when the prefix << >> (tä-) is added to them. This prefix also sometimes produces a reflexive or a reciprocal meaning. The tä-prefix be added to any of the four types of verbs, making Bt, Dt, Lt and Qt.

Active
Passive
B ሐነጸ
to build
Bt ሐንጸ
to be built
ገብረ
to do
ገብረ
to be done
to be made
ረከበ
to find
ረክበ
to be found
to exist
ነገረ
to speak
ነግረ
to be said
to be proclaimed
ወሀበ
to give
ውህበ
to be given

Note that oftentimes, in Bt, the medial vowel disappears, so: (sägädä – he worshipped) becomes ተሰግ (täsägdä – he was worshipped). Also, not every Bt, Dt, Lt and Qt form verb has a corresponding “active” form.

Active
Passive
D ገሠጸ
to instruct
Dt ገሠጸ
to be admonished
ፈነወ
to send
ፈነወ
to be sent
ፈወሰ
To cure
ፈወሰ
to be healed
L ሣቀየ
to torment
Lt ሣቀየ
to suffer
ባረከ
to bless
ባረከ
to receive benediction
ቤዘወ
to redeem
ቤዘወ
to be redeemed
Q ተርጐመ
to translate
Qt ተርጐመ
to be translated
to be interpreted

21.2: Dt verbs, especially those derived from stative verbs, can also have the meaning of “to show / regard oneself as something,” so:

ጸደቀ
To be righteous
Dt ተጸደቀ
(tääddäqä)
to feign righteousness
ዐብየ
to be powerful
ተዐበየ
(täʿäbbäyä)
to be arrogant
ሀይመነ
to be a believer
ተሀይመነ
(tähäymänä*)
to portray oneself
as a believer
*not Dt, but same idea

21.3: Lt verbs that are derived from B verbs often denote reciprocal, repeated or iterated actions, so:

Active
Passive
D ነጸረ
to see
Lt ተናጸረ
to look at each other
ነገረ
to say
ተናገረ
(tänaṣärä)
to converse
ወለደ
to bear
ተዋለደ
(täwalädä)
to procreate
ጸብአ
to make war
ተጻብአ
(täṣabʿä)
to fight one another

21.4: Some nouns appear verbalized in Dt form, so:

Noun ነቢይ
a prophet
Dt ተነበየ
(tänäbbäyä)
to prophesy
ሰብእ
a man
ተሰብእ
(täsäbbəʾ)
to become a man
ምስጢር
a secret
ተመስጠረ
(tämäsṭära*)
to be kept secret
*not Dt, but same idea

25: Relative Clauses

25.1: Relative clauses are formed with the following relative pronouns (i.e. who, which etc):

M
F
Singular ዘ- እንተ
zä- əntä
Plural እለ
əllä

ሞተ፡ንጉሥ፡ዘሐነጸ፡ሀገረ።
mota nəguš zä-hänäşä hägärä.
The king who built the city died

ሞተት፡ንግሥት፡እንተ፡ሐነጸት፡ሀገረ።
motät nəgəšt əntä hänäşät hägärä.
The queen who built the city died.

ሞቱ፡ንጉሥ፡ወንግሥት፡እለ፡ሐነጹ፡ሀገረ።
motu nəguš wä-nəgəšt əllä hänäşu hägärä.
The king and queen who built the city died.

You’ll notice that the masculine singular relative pronoun is written as a proclitic. It is used frequently like a preposition marking a genitive relationship, especially in cases where a construct cannot be made due to an adjective, suffix or proper names.

ስም፡ቅዱስ፡ዘነቢይነ፡ዮሐንስ።
səm qəddus zä-näbiynä yoḥännəs.
The holy name of our prophet is John.

ዴገንዎ፡እምጋሊላ፡ዘአሕዛብ።
degänəwwo əm-galila zä-äḥzab.
They chased out of the Galilee of the Gentiles.

ተወለደ፡በቤተልሔም፡ዘይሁዳ።
täwälädä bä-betälḥem zä-yhuda.
He was born in the Bethlehem of Judah.

25.2: Similar to Arabic, when the relative pronoun marks a direct object, the verb (usually) takes on a resumptive pronoun. The same is true for when a relative pronoun is in a prepositional relationship i.e. whose, to whom, of which etc.

ነቢይ፡ዘቀተልዎ፡ተነበየ፡በሀገርየ።
näbiy zäqätäləwwo tänäbbäyä bä-hägäryä.
The prophet whom they killed prophesied in my city.

ብእሲት፡እንተ፡ርእያ፡ሞተት።
bə’sit əntä rə’ya motät.
The woman whom he saw died.

ካህናት፡እለ፡ስሞሙ፡ቅድመክሙ፡ህየ፡ውእቱ።
kahnat əllä səmomu qədmäkəmu həyyä wə’ətu.
The priests whose names are before you are here.

ስመ፡ሀገር፡ዘሐነጹ፡ወስቴታ፡ሀይከሎሙ፡ኢየሩሳሌም፡ይእቲ።
səmä hägär zähänäşu wästeta häykälomu iyärusalem yə’əti.
The name of the city in which they built their temple is Jerusalem.

25.3: Relative clauses frequently appear as nominal units.

ዘቀተለ፡ተሠቀየ።
zä-qätälä täšäqqäyä.
The-one –who-killed (i.e. the killer) suffered.

ስመ፡እንተ፡ሰበሕዋ፡አርዳሚስ፡ይእቲ።
səmä əntä sebbeḥəwwa ärdamis yə’əti.
The name of the-one-whom they-worshipped-her (i.e. their goddess) is Artemis.

ዴገኑ፡እለ፡ነበሩ፡በምድር።
Degänu əllä näbäru bä-mdər
They persecuted the-ones-who-lived (i.e. the locals) in the land.

25.4: Relative pronouns can also function as absolute nouns on their own and form the first part of a construct.

ርእዩ፡እንተ፡ዮሐንስ፡በቤታ።
rə’yu əntä yoḥännəs bä-bäyta
They saw she-of John (i.e. John’s wife) in her house.

እለ፡አጋንንት፡መጽኡ፡ለቤተ ክርስቲያን።
əllä äganənt mäş’u lä-betä krstiyan
They-of demons (i.e. the possessed) came to the church.

ዝብእሲ፡ዘሰገል፡ውእቱ።
zä-bə’əsi zä-sägäl wə’ətu
This man is he-of divination (i.e. a diviner)

25.5: The relative pronoun of time is “አመ” (ämä) i.e. “when” in the non-interrogative sense. It can appear as a preposition, a conjunction or a relative adverb. The relative pronoun of place is “ኀበ” (xäbä) i.e. “where” in the non-interrogative sense.

አመ፡ቦእክሙ፡ቤት፡ኀበ፡ነበረ፡ኢረከብክምዎ።
ämä bo’əkəmu betä xäbä näbärä iräkäbkəməwwo?
When you entered the house where he lived, you did not find him?

ጐየት፡እምኀበ፡ዴገንዋ፡ወሮጸት፡እስከ፡አመ፡በልሐክዋ።
gʷäyyät əm-xäbä degänəwwa wä-roşät əskä ämä bälḥäkəwwa.
She fled from where the persecuted her and she ran until the-time-when I saved her.

ዝመካን፡ይእቲ፡ኀበ፡መሀርነ፡ቶማ፡ዋንጌል፡ዘእግዚእነ፡አመ፡ሀለውነ፡ደቅ።
zə-mäkan yə’əti xäbä mähärnä toma wangel zä-əgzi’ənä ämä hälläwnä däqq.
This is the location where Thomas taught us the gospel of our Lord when we were children.

26: Verbs: The Causative Form

26.1: Most verbs take on a causative sense when the suffix <<  >>-) is added to them. This sense includes causing directly, ordering, permitting, suggesting etc.  This suffix can give a causative sense to any of the verbal bases, producing Bc, Dc, Lc, Qc.

Base
Causative
B ሞተ
to die
Bc ሞተ
to put to death
ሐዘነ
to be sad
ሕዘነ
to sadden
ሐየወ
to live
ሕየወ
to restore to life
ነበረ
to reside
አንበረ
to deposit
ሮጸ
to run
ሮጸ
to cause to run
ርእየ
to see
ርአየ
to show
ሰምዐ
to hear
ስምዐ
to announce
ነደ
to burn
ንደደ
to set aflame

Note in the Bc construction the medial vowel disappears, so: ወደቀ (wädäqä – he fell) becomes አውደቀ (‘äwdäqä – he cast down).

Base
Causative
D ሠነየ
to be beautiful
Dc ሠነየ
to decorate
ገበረ
to pay taxes
ገበረ
to impose tribute
ነሰሐ
to repent
ነሰሐ
to lead to repentance
L ማሰነ
to perish
Lc ማሰነ
to destroy
ቤዘወ
to redeem
ቤዘወ
to have someone redeemed
Q Qደንገፀ
to be disturbed
Qc ደንገፀ
to disturb

26.2: Note the slight phonetic change in the negation of causative verbs from “iʾä” to “iyä”:

ሠነየት፡ቤቶ።
äšännäyät beto
She decorated his house
ኢየሠነየት፡ቤቶ።
iyäšännäyät beto
She didn’t decorate his house.
ርአይክዎ፡ሎቱ።
ärʾäykəwwo lotu
I showed it to him
ኢየርአይክዎ፡ሎቱ።
iyärʾäykəwwo lotu
I did not show it to him

26.3: Consider the following sentences that use causative verbs:

አሕዘነት፡ሞቱ፡ነገዶ፡ወአቅበርዎ፡ኀበ፡ሞተ።
äḥzänät motu nägädo wä-äqbärəwwo xäbä motä
His death saddened his family and they had him buried where he died.

አማሰነ፡ንጉሥ፡ሀገረ፡ወአቅተሎሙ፡ለንቡራን፡ወአገበረ፡በምድር፡ዘሞዐ።
ämasänä nəguš hägärä wä-äqtälä nəburana wä-ägäbbärä bä-mdər zä-moʿä.
The king destroyed the city and ordered all its inhabitants killed, and he imposed a tax on the land he conquered.

አንበረ፡እግዚእነ፡አብርሃምሃ፡ውስተ፡ግብጽ፡ወአርከቦ፡ብዙኀ፡እጓለ፡ወብዕለ።
änbärä əgzi’ənä äbrəhamhä wəstä gəbş wä-ärkäbo bəzuxä əgʷälä wä-bʿəlä
Our Lord settled Abraham in Egypt and he caused him to acquire great progeny and wealth.

አስምዕኩ፡ቃላተ፡ነቢይነ፡ለንቡራነ፡ሀገርየ፡ወባሔቱ፡ኢየብከይዎሙ።
äsməʿku qalatä näbiynä lä-nəburanä hägär wä-baḥəttu iyäbkäyewwomu.
I announced the words of our prophet to the residents of the city but they did not move them to tears.

አንደደ፡ኵሎሙ፡ተርጐምያተ፡ዋንጌል፡እለ፡አጽሕፎሙ።
ändädnä kʷəllomu tärgʷämyatä wangel əllä äṣḥäfomu.
All the translations that he has ordered written, we set on fire.

27: Indicating Existence and Possession (contd.)

27.1: The Preposition «bä-» (by, with, in) has several important functions. Much like the preposition «lä-» (of, to, for) [see: 12.6], this preposition has a distinct set of pronominal suffixes:

Singular
Plural
3rd m. bo ቦሙ bomu
ቦቱ botu
3rd f. ba ቦን bon
ባቲ bati ቦቶን boton
ቦንቱ bontu
2nd m. ብከ bəkä ብክሙ bəkəmu
2nd f. ብኪ bəki ብክን bəkən
1st c. ብየ bəyä ብነ bənä

27.2: The negative particle with this preposition is the enclitic አል «äl-», thus forming: አልቦሙ (älbomu = not in them) አልብነ (älbənä = not in us) etc.

27.3: The most important function of this preposition is that (with the 3rd m. sing. suffix) it indicates existence (there is…, there are…), just like the particle yeš in Hebrew, īt in Aramaic and thamma in Arabic. The following noun may sometimes decline in the accusative.

ቦ፡ቤት፡በዘሀገር።
bo bet bä-zä-hägär
There is a house in this city.

አልቦ፡አብያት፡በዘሀገር።
äl-bo äbyat bä-zä-hägär
There are no houses in this city.

ቦቱ፡ከዋክብት፡በስመይ።
botu käwakəbt bä-smäy
There are stars in the sky.

አልቦቱ፡ኮከበ፡በስመይ።
äl-botu kokäbä bä-smäy
There is no star in the sky.

27.4: Also, note these examples:

ቦ፡ዘረከበኒ፡ወባሕቱ፡ኢዜነወ፡ሊተ፡ስሞ።
bo zä-räkäbäni wäbaḥəttu i-zenäwä litä səmo
There is someone who found me but he did not tell me his name.

አልቦ፡ዘሰምዐ፡ቃላቶሙ፡አመ፡ቦኡ፡ሀገረ።
älbo zä-sämʿä qalatomu ämä boʾu hägärä
There was no one who heard their voices when they entered the city.

ቦ፡ዘጐዩ፡እምቤት፡ኀበ፡ደበዩ።
bo zä-gʷäyyu əm-bet xäbä däbäyu
There were those who fled from the house where they were hiding.

27.5: Another very common function of this preposition is that it indicates possession. The possessed object is usually declined in the accusative case, like the object of a verb.

ብነ፡ቤተ፡ዲበ፡ድብር።
bənä betä dibä dəbr
We have a house on the mountain.

ብየ፡ማየ፡ወአልብከ፡ማየ።
bəyä mayä wä-älbəkä mayä.
I have water and you have no water.

ንግሥት፡አልባ፡አግብርተ፡በጽርሓ።
nəgəšt älba ägbərtä bä-şərḥa.
The queen has no servants in her chamber.

ቦቱ፡ካህን፡ክርታሳኖ።
botu kahən kərtasano.
The priest has his scrolls.

አልቦሙ፡አራሚያን፡ሃይማኖተ።
älbomu äramiyan haymanotä.
The infidels have no faith.

9: Prepositions

Ge’ez prepositions stand as independent words with three very important exceptions:

በ_ (bä) in / into / by [locative] ቤት” = bäbet – in the house
(lä) for / to [dative] ቤት” = läbet – to the house
እም (ʾəm) from / out of [ablative] እምቤት” = ʾəmbet – from the house

These three also assimilate into many of the prepositions below, to nuance their meanings (predictably). Here’s a list of all the important prepositions, in order of frequency in texts:

ኅበ (xäbä) with, near, by ቤተ፡ነጉሥ፡ውእቱ፡ኀበ፡ሀገር።
The house of the king is near the city.
ውስተ (wəstä) within, inside ወስተ፡ሀገር፡ውእቱ።
It is inside the city.
ዲበ (dibä) on, over ዲበ፡ደብር፡ውእቱ።
It is on the mountain.
ላዕለ (laʿlä) upon, concerning ላዕለ፡ዝክታብ
Concerning this book…
ታሕተ (taʾhtä) under ታሕተ፡ዛዕፅ፡አንተ።
You are under this tree.
ከመ (kämä) like, similar to ከመ፡ወለተ፡ንጉሥ፡ይእቲ።
She is like a princess.
ምስለ (məslä) in the company of ምስለ፡ሊቃነ፡ዛቲ፡ሀገር፡ንሕነ።
We are in the company of the elders of this town.
እንተ (ʾəntä) by way of, through እንተ፡ቤት፡ካህን
…through the priest’s house
በእንተ (bäʾntä) about, concerning በእንተ፡አግበርተ፡አምላክ
…concerning the Lord’s servants.
ድኅረ (dəxrä) behind, after ድኅረ፡ቤተ፡ክርስቲያን፡ አነ።
I am behind the church.
ቅድመ (qədmä) in front of, before ቅድመ፡ዛቤት፡አንቲ።
You [f.] are in front of the house.
እስከ (ʾəskä) until, up to, as far as መድረ፡ንጉሥ፡እስከ፡አድባር፡ይእቲ።
The land of the king [extends] up to the mountains.
ማከለ (makälä) among ነቢይ፡ውእቱ፡ማከለ፡ነቢያት።
He is a prophet among the prophets.

 

10: Verbs: Simple – Perfective

The vast majority of Ge’ez verbs are triliteral i.e. they have three root letters and a fair amount are quadriliteral i.e. they have four root letters. A small minority of verbs has two or five root letters. All verbs fall into three broad categories or stems. The best way to think of these stems is as vowel templates in which the root-letters are fixed. Unlike other Semitic languages, these stems in Ge’ez are not derivative from each other i.e. most roots appear in only one stem.

The majority of verbs appear in the simple stem or the basic stem [B-stem], which correlates with the G-stem in Aramaic (קטל); the Pa’al in Hebrew (פעל) and Form-I in Arabic (فعل).

«The Perfective = The Past Tense»

With three letter roots (R1R2R3) the Simple stem has two slight variations in the perfective aspect. The perfective aspect denotes completed actions i.e. usually it correlates to what we would think of as the past tense.

R1eR2eR3eusually used for action verbs e.g. ሐነጸ (ḥänäşä) to build
R1eR2R3e – usually used for stative verbs e.g. ፈርሀ (färhä) to be afraid

There are many exceptions to these generalizations, and for the most part in classical Ge’ez the difference in meaning of these two variations has become blurred. In any case, this difference in form is slight and is only even noticeable in the 3rd person perfective forms. Here are the conjugation charts:

ሐነጸ (ḥänäşä) to build – B-stem1, Perfective:

Singular
Plural
1st Person ሐነጽኩ ḥänäşku ሐነጽነ ḥänäşnä
2nd Person ሐነጽከ ḥänäşkä (m.) ሐነጽክሙ ḥänäşkəmu (m.)
ሐነጽኪ ḥänäşki (f.) ሐነጽክን ḥänäşkən (f.)
3rd Person ሐነ ḥänäşä (m.) ሐነ ḥänäşu (m.)
ሐነጸት ḥänäşät (f.) ሐነ ḥänäşa (f.)

ብረ (brä) to do – B-stem2, Perfective:

Singular
Plural
1st Person ገበርኩ gäbärku ገበርነ gäbärnä
2nd Person ገበርከ gäbärkä (m.) ገበርክሙ gäbärkəmu (m.)
ገበርኪ gäbärki (f.) ገበርክን gäbärkən (f.)
3rd Person ብረ gäbrä (m.) ብሩ gäbru (m.)
ገብረት gäbrät (f.) gäbra (f.)

Here’s a list of some common B-stem verbs for you to get started with. From now on, I’ll put [B] next to new verbs that occur in this stem.

ነበረ (näbärä) to live, to sit, to remain ነበርኩ፡በዛሀገር።
I lived in this city.
ሐነጸ (ḥänäşä) to build, to construct ሐነጸ፡ንጉሥ
The king built…
ወረደ (wärädä) to descend, to go down ወረደ፡እምዲበ፡ድብር።
He came down from on the mountain.
ረከበ (räkäbä) to find, to acquire ረከብኪ
You [f.] found…
ሰበከ (säbäkä) to preach ሰበክነ፡በዋንጌል።
We preached the Gospel.
ጸሐፈ (şääfä) to write, to compose ጸሐፈ፡ጸሓፌ፡ንጉሥ
The king’s scribe wrote…
ኅለፈ (xäläfä) to pass ኀለፍኩ፡ምስለ፡ሀገር።
I passed through the town.
ሰአለ (säälä) to ask, to inquire ሰእሉ: ሊቃነ፡ሀገር
The elders of the city asked…
ገብረ (gäbrä) to do, to act, to create ገብረ፡እግዚአብሔር
God created…
በጽሐ (bäşä) to arrive በጽሓ
They [f.] arrived…
ወፅዐ (wäðʿä) to depart ወፅዑ፡ካህናት።
The priests derparted.
መርሐ (märḥä) to guide, to lead መረሕክሙ
You all [m.] guided…
መጽአ (mäşä) to come መጽአነ፡እምዛሀገር።
We came from this city.
ሖረ (ḥore) to go ሖሩ፡ወሉደ፡ንግሥት፡ለሀገር።
The queen’s son went to the city.
ረእየ (rä’yä) to see ረእየ፡ብእሲ
The man saw…
ሰምዐ (sämʿä) to hear ሰምዐት፡ብእሲት
The woman heard…
ኮነ (konä) to become ኮነ፡ካህን
The priest became…
ሞተ (motä) to die ሞተት፡ንግሥት።
The queen died.

 

 

11: The Accusative Case

The normal word order in Gəʿəz is: Verb + Subject + Object i.e. “The man reads books” becomes “Reads the man the books” in Gəʿəz. This word order can be manipulated to nuance the meaning of the sentence.

The last vital piece of the puzzle, at this stage, is the accusative case. For those of you not familiar with declensions, the accusative case marks a word as the direct object of a transitive verb. Itʾs usually a change in the ending of the word, similar to how the word he changes to him in the sentence: “the girl saw him.” In Gəʿəz, the accusative case also marks the destination of a motion verb (where we would otherwise expect to find “to” to “into” etc) and sometimes to designate a period of time adverbially (at night, in the evening etc). The accusative form, youʾll notice, closely resembles the construct state:

11.1: For most singular and plural words, the accusative case is marked with the ending “-ä”:

ሐነጸ፡ንጉሥ፡ሀገረ
ḥänäṣä nəguś hägärä.
The king built the city.
ሐነጹ፡ነገሥት፡አህጉረ
ḥänäṣu nägäśt ähgurä.
The kings built the cities.
ረከበት፡በእሲት፡ካህነ
räkäbät bäʾsit kahənä.
The woman found the priest.
ረከባ፡አንስት፡ካህናተ።
räkäbät ʾänəst kahənatä.
The women found the priests.
ቦአክሙ፡ቤተ
boʾäkəmu betä.
You all entered into the house.
ሖረ፡ነቢይ፡ድባረ
ḥorä näbiy dəbrä.
The prophet went to the mountain.

11.2: For words that end with “-i”, the accusative case is marked with an “-e” ending:

ሰመዕነ፡አነ፡ወንግሥት፡ጸሓፌ
sämäʿnä ʾänä wä-nəgəśt ṣəhafe.
The queen and I heard the scribe.
ሰአልኩ፡ብእሴ
säʾälku bəʾse.
I questioned the man.

11.3: For words that end with other vowels the accusative ending is not marked. This also includes the vowel “-e” i.e. if a word is in the construct state and the object of an action, it will not be marked for the accusative case:

ገብረ፡አምላከ፡ሰማይ፡አረዊተ፡ምድር
gabra ʾämlakä səmay ʾäräwitä mədr.
The lord of heaven created the beasts of the earth.
ረእየት፡ወለተ፡ንጉሥ፡ጸሓፌ፡ቤተ፡ንጉሥ
räʾyät wälättä nəguś ṣəḥafe betä nəguś.
The princess saw the scribe of the palace.

11.4 Proper names i.e. names of people, places, groups, typically do not take an accusative case ending. In some texts, they take a special ending: “-ha”

መርሐ፡ሙሴ፡እስራኤል፡እምውስተ፡ግብጽ።
märḥä muse ʾəsrael ʾəmwəsta gəbṣ.
Moses led Israel out of Egypt.
ረእዩ፡መልአክት፡ያዕቆብሃ
räʾyu mälʾäkt yäʿqobha.
The angels saw Jacob.

11.5: And here are the accusative versions of the demonstrative pronouns:

Masculine
Feminine
ዘንተ zänta This1 ዛተ zatä This1
za- This2 za- This2
እሎንተ ʾəllontä These እላንተ ʾəllantä These
ውእተ wəʾəta That ይእተ yəʾəta That

 

12: Posession

As in other Semitic languages, possession in Ge’ez is typically indicated through a set of pronominal suffixes added directly on to the noun:

12.1: Here are all the possessive pronominal suffixes. Some of them have accusative forms which are indicated in the parenthesis: <X>

Masculine
Feminine
ዘንተ zänta This1 ዛተ zatä This1
za- This2 za- This2
እሎንተ ʾəllontä These እላንተ ʾəllantä These
ውእተ wəʾəta That ይእተ yəʾəta That

12.2: Nouns that end in a vowel take a helping consonant -h- in all the 3rd person possessions. For instance, with the word “ምንዳቤ (məndabe =  anguish, suffering, affliction.) There are no distinct accusative forms for nouns that end in vowels:

ምንዳ
məndabehu
His anguish
ምንዳቤ
məndabehomu
Their (m.) anguish
ምንዳቤ
məndabeha
Her anguish
ምንዳቤ
məndabehon
Their (f.) anguish

12.3: The only exceptions are nouns that end in the vowel –i. In 2nd person possessions, the accusative form replaces the -i with an -e:

ዝንቱ፡ጸሓፊከ፡ውእቱ። Zəntu şaḥafikä wə’ətu This is your scribe. ረከብኩ፡ ጸሓከ። räkäbku şäḥafe I found your scribe.

12.4: All plurals, both regular and broken, take the vowel –i(h)- before for all pronomial suffixes above (12.1). They have no distinct accusative forms:

ሊቃኒየ liqaniyä my elders ሊቃኒነ liqaninä our elders
ነቢያቲከ nabiyatikä your (m.) prophets ነቢያቲክሙ näbiyatikəmu your (m. pl.) prophets
አህጉሪሃ ahguriha her cities አህጉሪሆን ähgurihon their (f. pl.) cities

12.5: Most biconsonantal nouns take the vowel –u(h)- before the pronominal suffixes above (12.1). In the accusative form, they vowel changes to –a(h)-.

 የ፡በቤትየ፡ውእቱ። äbuyä bäbetyä wə’ətu My father is in my house. ረእየኩ፡አየ። rä’yäku äba I saw my father.
በጽሐ፡እሁ።
bäşḥä əxuhu His brother arrived. መርሐ፡እኁየ፡እሁ። märḥä əxuye əxʷahu My brother led his brother.

12.6: The preposition “la-” has a distinct set of pronominal suffixes:

ሎቱ lotu to him ሎሙ lomu to them (m.)
ላቲ läti to her ሎን lon to them (f.)
ለከ läka to you ለክሙ läkemu to you all (m.)
ለኪ läki to you ለክን läkən to you all (f.)
ሊተ lita to me ለነ länä to us (m.)

 

14: Verbs: Intensive – Perfective

The Intensive verb form, also called the “D-stem”, correlates to the D-stem in Aramaic (קִטֵּל), the Pi’el in Hebrew (פִעֵל) and the Form-II in Arabic (فعّل). It’s characterized by a doubling of the second radical in the root. Unlike these other scripts however, the Ethiopic script does not mark doubled sound (with a dagesh or shadda) which can cause some ambiguity. The intensive form of the verb typically denotes some kind of intensity, but this is not always the case. For example, the simple verb ቀተለ (qätälä) means “to kill” — the intensive form, ቀተለ (qättälä), means “to annihilate, to kill off completely” etc.

ገሠጸ [gäššäşä = to teach] – D-stem, Perfect

Singular
Plural
1st Person ገሠጽኩ gäššäşku ገሠጽነ gäššäşnä
2nd Person ገሠጽከ gäššäşkä (m.) ገሠጽክሙ gäššäşkəmu (m.)
ገሠጽኪ gäššäşki (f.) ገሠጽክን gäššäşkən (f.)
3rd Person ገሠ gäššäşä (m.) ገሠ gäššäşu (m.)
ገሠጸት gäššäşät (f.) ገሠ gäššäşa (f.)

Here’s a list of some oft-appearing D-stem verbs to get started with. From now on, I’ll put [D] next to new verbs that occur in this stem.

ነጸረ (näşşärä) to look, to watch ነጸርኩ፡ሀገረ፡እምዲበ፡ድብር።
I looked at the city from the hill.
ነስሐ (nässää) to repent ነሰሐ፡እምነ፡ኀጢአቱ።
He repented for his sin.
ፈነወ (fännäwä) to send ፈነወት፡ንግሥትነ፡ማየ፡ለአግበርታ።
Our queen sent the water to her servants.
ሀለወ (hälläwä) to exist ሀለወት፡ሀገር፡ህየ።
There was a town here.
ጸውዐ äwwəʿä) to call, to proclaim ጸውዑ፡ሰብአ፡ደቂቆሙ።
The men called their children.

 

14: Verbs: Frequentative – Perfective

The third type of stem is the frequentative stem, also called the called the “L-stem.” It correlates to Form-III in Arabic (فاعل). It’s characterized by a lengthening of the first radical in the root. This stem typically carries a frequentative meaning. For example, the simple verb ተለ (qätälä) means “to kill” – the frequentative form, ተለ (qatälä), means “to continuously kill, to persist in killing.”

ባረከ [baräkä = to bless] – L-stem, Perfect

Singular
Plural
1st Person ባረ baräkku ባረክ baräknä
2nd Person ባረ baräkkä (m.) ባረክሙ baräkkämu (m.)
ባረ baräkki (f.) ባረክነ baräkkən (f.)
3rd Person ባረ baräkä (m.) ባረኩ baräku (m.)
ባረከት baräkät (f.) ባረካ baräka (f.)

 

16: Verbs: Quadriliterals – Perfective

The fourth category of verbs are those which have four (quadriliteral) or sometimes five (quinquiliteral) root consonants. These are fairly common in Ge’ez and the form itself has no particular meaning / effect. Quadriliteral verbs often emerge from borrowed terms from other languages. For instance, the verb መንኰሰ (mänkʷäsä) “to become a monk, to retreat into asceticism” probably came from the Greek term μοναχός (monakhos) “solitary”.

መንኰሰ [mänkʷäsä = to become a monk] – Q-stem, Perfect

Singular
Plural
1st Person መንኰስ mänkʷäsku መንኰስክነ mänkʷäsknä
2nd Person መንኰስ mänkʷäskä (m.) መንኰስክሙ mänkʷäskəmu (m.)
መንኰስ mänkʷäski (f.) መንኰስክን mänkʷäskən (f.)
3rd Person መንኰ mänkʷäsä (m.) መንኰ mänkʷäsu (m.)
መንኰሰት mänkʷäsät (f.) መንኰ mänkʷäsä (f.)

 

19: Adjectives

The majority of adjectives in Gəʿəz, as in other Semitic languages, are verbal participles. A smaller number are denominal. They appear in a few different patterns and I’ve explained these patterns further below. Adjectives always reflect the number, gender and case of the nouns they modify and all the patterns follow, more or less, the following scheme:

M
F
Singular / – -ት‎ / -t
Plural -ኣን / -an -ኣት /- āt

As in other Semitic languages, adjectives usually adjectives appear after the noun(s) they modify, so:

ሐነጹ፡ንጉሥ፡ምሁር፡ወአግብርቱ፡ጠበብት፡ሀገረ፡ሠናይተ፡ለካህናት፡ጻድቃን።
ḥänäṣu nəguš məhur wäʾägbərtu ṭäbäbt hägärä šännaytä läkahnat ṣadəqan //
The learned king, and his skilled servants, built a beautiful city for the pious priests.

ዴገነት፡ንግሥትነ፡ክብርት፡ሊቃነ፡ዕልዋነ፡ወእሙንቱ፡ጐዩ፡ብሔረ፡ባዕደ።
degänät nəgəštnä kəbərt liqanä ʿələwanä wäʾəmuntu gʷäyyu bḥerä baʿədä //
Our mighty queen pursued the rebellious elders and they fled to another land.

Similarly, cardinal / ordinal numbers and some quantifying adjectives generally precede the noun(s) they modify.

ቀለመ፡ብዙኃነ፡መጻሐፍተ፡ወተርጐመ፡ጸሓፊሁ፡ክታቦ፡ቅዱሰ፡ለካልእተ፡ልሳነ።
qälämä bəzuxanä mäṣaḥəftä wätärgʷämä ṣäḥafihu kətabo qəddusa läkalʾətä ləsanä //
He authored many books and his scribe translated his sacred writing into another language.

And, as you would expect, adjectives are also fully functioning nouns. They can thus appear as predicates or in the construct state:

ራትዕ፡ነቢይክሙ።ኢራትዓን፡አንትሙ።እኩያነ፡ለብ፡ወነዳያነ፡መንፈስ፡አንትሙ።
ratʿə näbiykəmu // ʾiratʿan ʾäntəmu // ʾəkuyanä ləbb wänäddayanä mänfäs äntəmu //
Your prophet is righteous. You all are not righteous. You all are evil of heart and poor of spirit.

ADJECTIVAL PATTERNS

1. The most frequently appearing adjectival pattern is characterized by an /-u/ on the second radical, so: ቅቱል (qətul) from B-verbs; ቅቱል (qəttul) from D-verbs and ቁቱል (qutul) from L verbs. Note that the –u is absent in the feminine singular inflection:

መሀረ mähärä = to teach :
ምሁር məhur = educated / learned

M
F
Singular ምሁር -ት‎ / -t
məhur məhərt
Plural ራን -ኣት /- āt
məhuran məhurat

ነጸሐ näṣäḥä = to be pure :
ንጹሕ nəṣuḥ = pure / innocent / sincere

M
F
Singular ንጹሕ ንጽሕት
nəṣuḥ nəṣuḥt
Plural ንጹሓን ንጹሓት
nəṣuḥan nəṣuḥat

ሰበሐ säbbäḥ = to praise :
ስቡሕ səbbuḥ = honorable / glorious / praised

M
F
Singular ንጹሕ ንጽሕት
nəṣuḥ nəṣuḥt
Plural ንጹሓን ንጹሓት
nəṣuḥan nəṣuḥat

ሠነየ šännäyä = to be beautiful :
ሥኑይ šännuy = adorned / decorated

M
F
Singular ንጹሕ ንጽሕት
nəṣuḥ nəṣuḥt
Plural ንጹሓን ንጹሓት
nəṣuḥan nəṣuḥat

ለበወ läbbäwä = to understand :
ልብው ləbbəw = wise / prudent

M
F
Singular ንጹሕ ንጽሕት
nəṣuḥ nəṣuḥt
Plural ንጹሓን ንጹሓት
nəṣuḥan nəṣuḥat

2. Another adjectival pattern is characterized by an /-a/ on the first radical, so: ቃትል (qatəl). The ordinal numbers appear in this pattern (ኃምስ xaməs = fifth), which inflects quite simply:

ረትዐ rätʿä = to be righteous :
ራትዕ ratəʿ = righteous / just

M
F
Singular ራትዕ ራትዕት
ratəʿ rātəʿt
Plural ራትዓን ራትዓት
ratəʿan rātəʿat

ብዕለ bəʿlä = to be / become wealthy :
ባዕል baʿəl = rich / wealthy

M
F
Singular ባዕል ባዕልት
baʿəl baʿəlt
Plural ባዕላን ባዕላት
baʿəlan baʿəlat

3. The third adjectival pattern includes few, albeit important, adjectives and is characterized by a /-i/ on the second radical, so: ቲል (qätil) from B-verbs and ቲል (qättil) for D-verbs. Note that the feminine form does not contain a /-t/ and that there is a common plural form:

ሐደሰ ḥäddäsä = to restore :
ሐዲስ ḥädis = new

M
F
Singular ሐዲስ ሐዳስ
ḥädis ḥädas
Plural ሐደስት
ḥädäst

ዐብየ ʿäbyä = to enlarge :
ዐቢይ ʿäbiy = large

M
F
Singular ዐቢይ ዐባይ
ʿäbiy ʿäbay
Plural ዐበይት
ʿäbäyt

4. The fourth adjectival pattern contains a characteristic doubling and elongation of the second radical, so: ቀታል (qättal). Note that this form resembles the f. sing. form in the previous pattern.

ኄረወ xeräwä = to be good :
ኄር xer = good

M
F
Singular ኄር ኄርት
xer xert
Plural ኄራን ኄራት
xeran xerat

ሠነየ šännäyä = to be beautiful :
ሠናይ šännay = beautiful

M
F
Singular ሠናይ ሠናይት
šännay šännayt
Plural ሠናያን ሠናያት
šännayan šännayat

5. Gəʿəz also derives adjectives from nouns. Whereas a few denominal adjectives have idiosyncratic patterns, e.g. ዐብድ ʿabd = ignorant, from ዐብድ ʿabd = a fool, most denominal adjectives are formed with the suffix –awi or –ay.

ዓለም ʿaläm = the world :
ዓለማዊ ʿalämawi = worldly

M
F
Singular ዓለማዊ ዓለማዊት
ʿalämawi ʿalämawit
Plural ዓለማዊያን ዓለማዊያት
ʿalämawiyan ʿalämawiyat

መንፈስ mänfäs = the spirit / the essence :
መንፈሳዊ mänfäsawi = spiritual

M
F
Singular መንፈሳዊ መንፈሳዊት
mänfäsawi mänfäsawit
Plural መንፈሳዊያን መንፈሳዊያት
mänfäsawiyan mänfäsawiyat

 

20: Object Suffixes

In Gəʿəz, pronominal suffixes on transitive verbs typically denote a direct object, i.e. a noun in the accusative case. To review the direct object, have another look at the entry on the accusative case.

ሐነጸ፡ንጉሥ፡ሀገረ። → ሐነ፡ንጉሥ።
ḥänäṣä nəguš hägärä // hänäṣo nəguš //
The king built a city. The king built it.

ዴገነት፡ወለታ፡ሊቃነ፡ዘመድ። → ዴገነቶሙ፡ወለታ።
degänät wälätta liqanä zämäd // degänätomu wälätta //
Her daughter pursued the tribe’s elders. Her daughter pursued them.

These same suffixes however may also denote indirect objects, particularly when affixed to verbs of speaking (addressing, telling, asking etc), verbs of giving (surrendering, depriving etc) and verbs of motion (going, befalling etc), so:

መጠወ፡ጳጳስ፡ሀገረነለአፍርንጅ። → መጠዎሙ፡ጳጳስ፡ሀገረነ።
mäṭṭäwä pappas hägäränä läʾäfrənj // mäṭṭäwomu pappas hägäränä //
The bishop surrendered our city to the Romans. The bishop surrendered our city to them.

ነገረ፡ዘንተ፡ስመ፡ለካህን። → ነገ፡ዘንተ።
nägärä zäntä səmä läkahən// nägäro zäntä //
He told this name to the priest. He told this to him.

Oftentimes, as in Aramaic / Syriac, these suffixes will anticipate an object which appears later in the sentence, prefixed with the lä- preposition. Lambdin terms this the “qätälo lä-nəguš construction.” This type of anticipatory-suffix infuses the object with greater specificity and definiteness. Note that, in this construction, the object affixed with the lä- is not marked in the accusative case.

ሐነጸ፡ንጉሥ፡ሀገረ። → ሐነ፡ንጉሥ፡ሀገር።
ḥänäṣä nəguš hägärä // hänäṣo nəguš lähägär//
The king built a city. → The king built [it,] the city.

ተርጐሙ፡ዛተመጻሕፍተ። → ተርጐምዋ፡ለዛቲመጻሕፍት
tärgʷämu zatä mäṣahəftä // tärgʷäməwwa läzati mäṣaḥəft //
They translated these books. They translated [them,] these books.

The pronominal suffixes are, for the most part, fairly easy to spot and decipher. Here’s a general overview of how they appear

Singular
Plural
3rd masculine -o -omu -ኦሙ
3rd feminine -a -on ኦን
2nd masculine -kä -kəmu ክሙ
2nd feminine -ki kən -ክን
1st common -ni -na

Some predictable phonetic changes occur to accommodate the 3rd person suffixes. Importantly, a helping “-h-” appears if they are affixed to stems ending in –a. If they are affixed to stems ending in –u or -ə, they appear beginning with -əww and -əyy, respectively, so:

ቀተላ፡አነስት፡አርዌምድር። → ቀተላ
qätäla ʾänäst ʾärwemədr // qätälahu //
The women killed a snake. They killed it.

ነጸሩ፡ዕብራዊያን፡መልእክተ። → ነጸርዎሙ
näṣṣäru ʿəbrawiyan mälaʾəktä // näṣṣärəwwomu //
The Hebrews saw angels. They saw them.

 

21: Verbs: The Passive Voice etc.

21.1: Most active verbs assume the passive voice when the prefix << >> (tä-) is added to them. This prefix also sometimes produces a reflexive or a reciprocal meaning. The tä-prefix be added to any of the four types of verbs, making Bt, Dt, Lt and Qt.

Active
Passive
B ሐነጸ
to build
Bt ሐንጸ
to be built
ገብረ
to do
ገብረ
to be done
to be made
ረከበ
to find
ረክበ
to be found
to exist
ነገረ
to speak
ነግረ
to be said
to be proclaimed
ወሀበ
to give
ውህበ
to be given

Note that oftentimes, in Bt, the medial vowel disappears, so: (sägädä – he worshipped) becomes ተሰግ (täsägdä – he was worshipped). Also, not every Bt, Dt, Lt and Qt form verb has a corresponding “active” form.

Active
Passive
D ገሠጸ
to instruct
Dt ገሠጸ
to be admonished
ፈነወ
to send
ፈነወ
to be sent
ፈወሰ
To cure
ፈወሰ
to be healed
L ሣቀየ
to torment
Lt ሣቀየ
to suffer
ባረከ
to bless
ባረከ
to receive benediction
ቤዘወ
to redeem
ቤዘወ
to be redeemed
Q ተርጐመ
to translate
Qt ተርጐመ
to be translated
to be interpreted

21.2: Dt verbs, especially those derived from stative verbs, can also have the meaning of “to show / regard oneself as something,” so:

ጸደቀ
To be righteous
Dt ተጸደቀ
(tääddäqä)
to feign righteousness
ዐብየ
to be powerful
ተዐበየ
(täʿäbbäyä)
to be arrogant
ሀይመነ
to be a believer
ተሀይመነ
(tähäymänä*)
to portray oneself
as a believer
*not Dt, but same idea

21.3: Lt verbs that are derived from B verbs often denote reciprocal, repeated or iterated actions, so:

Active
Passive
D ነጸረ
to see
Lt ተናጸረ
to look at each other
ነገረ
to say
ተናገረ
(tänaṣärä)
to converse
ወለደ
to bear
ተዋለደ
(täwalädä)
to procreate
ጸብአ
to make war
ተጻብአ
(täṣabʿä)
to fight one another

21.4: Some nouns appear verbalized in Dt form, so:

Noun ነቢይ
a prophet
Dt ተነበየ
(tänäbbäyä)
to prophesy
ሰብእ
a man
ተሰብእ
(täsäbbəʾ)
to become a man
ምስጢር
a secret
ተመስጠረ
(tämäsṭära*)
to be kept secret
*not Dt, but same idea

25: Relative Clauses

25.1: Relative clauses are formed with the following relative pronouns (i.e. who, which etc):

M
F
Singular ዘ- እንተ
zä- əntä
Plural እለ
əllä

ሞተ፡ንጉሥ፡ዘሐነጸ፡ሀገረ።
mota nəguš zä-hänäşä hägärä.
The king who built the city died

ሞተት፡ንግሥት፡እንተ፡ሐነጸት፡ሀገረ።
motät nəgəšt əntä hänäşät hägärä.
The queen who built the city died.

ሞቱ፡ንጉሥ፡ወንግሥት፡እለ፡ሐነጹ፡ሀገረ።
motu nəguš wä-nəgəšt əllä hänäşu hägärä.
The king and queen who built the city died.

You’ll notice that the masculine singular relative pronoun is written as a proclitic. It is used frequently like a preposition marking a genitive relationship, especially in cases where a construct cannot be made due to an adjective, suffix or proper names.

ስም፡ቅዱስ፡ዘነቢይነ፡ዮሐንስ።
səm qəddus zä-näbiynä yoḥännəs.
The holy name of our prophet is John.

ዴገንዎ፡እምጋሊላ፡ዘአሕዛብ።
degänəwwo əm-galila zä-äḥzab.
They chased out of the Galilee of the Gentiles.

ተወለደ፡በቤተልሔም፡ዘይሁዳ።
täwälädä bä-betälḥem zä-yhuda.
He was born in the Bethlehem of Judah.

25.2: Similar to Arabic, when the relative pronoun marks a direct object, the verb (usually) takes on a resumptive pronoun. The same is true for when a relative pronoun is in a prepositional relationship i.e. whose, to whom, of which etc.

ነቢይ፡ዘቀተልዎ፡ተነበየ፡በሀገርየ።
näbiy zäqätäləwwo tänäbbäyä bä-hägäryä.
The prophet whom they killed prophesied in my city.

ብእሲት፡እንተ፡ርእያ፡ሞተት።
bə’sit əntä rə’ya motät.
The woman whom he saw died.

ካህናት፡እለ፡ስሞሙ፡ቅድመክሙ፡ህየ፡ውእቱ።
kahnat əllä səmomu qədmäkəmu həyyä wə’ətu.
The priests whose names are before you are here.

ስመ፡ሀገር፡ዘሐነጹ፡ወስቴታ፡ሀይከሎሙ፡ኢየሩሳሌም፡ይእቲ።
səmä hägär zähänäşu wästeta häykälomu iyärusalem yə’əti.
The name of the city in which they built their temple is Jerusalem.

25.3: Relative clauses frequently appear as nominal units.

ዘቀተለ፡ተሠቀየ።
zä-qätälä täšäqqäyä.
The-one –who-killed (i.e. the killer) suffered.

ስመ፡እንተ፡ሰበሕዋ፡አርዳሚስ፡ይእቲ።
səmä əntä sebbeḥəwwa ärdamis yə’əti.
The name of the-one-whom they-worshipped-her (i.e. their goddess) is Artemis.

ዴገኑ፡እለ፡ነበሩ፡በምድር።
Degänu əllä näbäru bä-mdər
They persecuted the-ones-who-lived (i.e. the locals) in the land.

25.4: Relative pronouns can also function as absolute nouns on their own and form the first part of a construct.

ርእዩ፡እንተ፡ዮሐንስ፡በቤታ።
rə’yu əntä yoḥännəs bä-bäyta
They saw she-of John (i.e. John’s wife) in her house.

እለ፡አጋንንት፡መጽኡ፡ለቤተ ክርስቲያን።
əllä äganənt mäş’u lä-betä krstiyan
They-of demons (i.e. the possessed) came to the church.

ዝብእሲ፡ዘሰገል፡ውእቱ።
zä-bə’əsi zä-sägäl wə’ətu
This man is he-of divination (i.e. a diviner)

25.5: The relative pronoun of time is “አመ” (ämä) i.e. “when” in the non-interrogative sense. It can appear as a preposition, a conjunction or a relative adverb. The relative pronoun of place is “ኀበ” (xäbä) i.e. “where” in the non-interrogative sense.

አመ፡ቦእክሙ፡ቤት፡ኀበ፡ነበረ፡ኢረከብክምዎ።
ämä bo’əkəmu betä xäbä näbärä iräkäbkəməwwo?
When you entered the house where he lived, you did not find him?

ጐየት፡እምኀበ፡ዴገንዋ፡ወሮጸት፡እስከ፡አመ፡በልሐክዋ።
gʷäyyät əm-xäbä degänəwwa wä-roşät əskä ämä bälḥäkəwwa.
She fled from where the persecuted her and she ran until the-time-when I saved her.

ዝመካን፡ይእቲ፡ኀበ፡መሀርነ፡ቶማ፡ዋንጌል፡ዘእግዚእነ፡አመ፡ሀለውነ፡ደቅ።
zə-mäkan yə’əti xäbä mähärnä toma wangel zä-əgzi’ənä ämä hälläwnä däqq.
This is the location where Thomas taught us the gospel of our Lord when we were children.

26: Verbs: The Causative Form

26.1: Most verbs take on a causative sense when the suffix <<  >>-) is added to them. This sense includes causing directly, ordering, permitting, suggesting etc.  This suffix can give a causative sense to any of the verbal bases, producing Bc, Dc, Lc, Qc.

Base
Causative
B ሞተ
to die
Bc ሞተ
to put to death
ሐዘነ
to be sad
ሕዘነ
to sadden
ሐየወ
to live
ሕየወ
to restore to life
ነበረ
to reside
አንበረ
to deposit
ሮጸ
to run
ሮጸ
to cause to run
ርእየ
to see
ርአየ
to show
ሰምዐ
to hear
ስምዐ
to announce
ነደ
to burn
ንደደ
to set aflame

Note in the Bc construction the medial vowel disappears, so: ወደቀ (wädäqä – he fell) becomes አውደቀ (‘äwdäqä – he cast down).

Base
Causative
D ሠነየ
to be beautiful
Dc ሠነየ
to decorate
ገበረ
to pay taxes
ገበረ
to impose tribute
ነሰሐ
to repent
ነሰሐ
to lead to repentance
L ማሰነ
to perish
Lc ማሰነ
to destroy
ቤዘወ
to redeem
ቤዘወ
to have someone redeemed
Q Qደንገፀ
to be disturbed
Qc ደንገፀ
to disturb

26.2: Note the slight phonetic change in the negation of causative verbs from “iʾä” to “iyä”:

ሠነየት፡ቤቶ።
äšännäyät beto
She decorated his house
ኢየሠነየት፡ቤቶ።
iyäšännäyät beto
She didn’t decorate his house.
ርአይክዎ፡ሎቱ።
ärʾäykəwwo lotu
I showed it to him
ኢየርአይክዎ፡ሎቱ።
iyärʾäykəwwo lotu
I did not show it to him

26.3: Consider the following sentences that use causative verbs:

አሕዘነት፡ሞቱ፡ነገዶ፡ወአቅበርዎ፡ኀበ፡ሞተ።
äḥzänät motu nägädo wä-äqbärəwwo xäbä motä
His death saddened his family and they had him buried where he died.

አማሰነ፡ንጉሥ፡ሀገረ፡ወአቅተሎሙ፡ለንቡራን፡ወአገበረ፡በምድር፡ዘሞዐ።
ämasänä nəguš hägärä wä-äqtälä nəburana wä-ägäbbärä bä-mdər zä-moʿä.
The king destroyed the city and ordered all its inhabitants killed, and he imposed a tax on the land he conquered.

አንበረ፡እግዚእነ፡አብርሃምሃ፡ውስተ፡ግብጽ፡ወአርከቦ፡ብዙኀ፡እጓለ፡ወብዕለ።
änbärä əgzi’ənä äbrəhamhä wəstä gəbş wä-ärkäbo bəzuxä əgʷälä wä-bʿəlä
Our Lord settled Abraham in Egypt and he caused him to acquire great progeny and wealth.

አስምዕኩ፡ቃላተ፡ነቢይነ፡ለንቡራነ፡ሀገርየ፡ወባሔቱ፡ኢየብከይዎሙ።
äsməʿku qalatä näbiynä lä-nəburanä hägär wä-baḥəttu iyäbkäyewwomu.
I announced the words of our prophet to the residents of the city but they did not move them to tears.

አንደደ፡ኵሎሙ፡ተርጐምያተ፡ዋንጌል፡እለ፡አጽሕፎሙ።
ändädnä kʷəllomu tärgʷämyatä wangel əllä äṣḥäfomu.
All the translations that he has ordered written, we set on fire.

27: Indicating Existence and Possession (contd.)

27.1: The Preposition «bä-» (by, with, in) has several important functions. Much like the preposition «lä-» (of, to, for) [see: 12.6], this preposition has a distinct set of pronominal suffixes:

Singular
Plural
3rd m. bo ቦሙ bomu
ቦቱ botu
3rd f. ba ቦን bon
ባቲ bati ቦቶን boton
ቦንቱ bontu
2nd m. ብከ bəkä ብክሙ bəkəmu
2nd f. ብኪ bəki ብክን bəkən
1st c. ብየ bəyä ብነ bənä

27.2: The negative particle with this preposition is the enclitic አል «äl-», thus forming: አልቦሙ (älbomu = not in them) አልብነ (älbənä = not in us) etc.

27.3: The most important function of this preposition is that (with the 3rd m. sing. suffix) it indicates existence (there is…, there are…), just like the particle yeš in Hebrew, īt in Aramaic and thamma in Arabic. The following noun may sometimes decline in the accusative.

ቦ፡ቤት፡በዘሀገር።
bo bet bä-zä-hägär
There is a house in this city.

አልቦ፡አብያት፡በዘሀገር።
äl-bo äbyat bä-zä-hägär
There are no houses in this city.

ቦቱ፡ከዋክብት፡በስመይ።
botu käwakəbt bä-smäy
There are stars in the sky.

አልቦቱ፡ኮከበ፡በስመይ።
äl-botu kokäbä bä-smäy
There is no star in the sky.

27.4: Also, note these examples:

ቦ፡ዘረከበኒ፡ወባሕቱ፡ኢዜነወ፡ሊተ፡ስሞ።
bo zä-räkäbäni wäbaḥəttu i-zenäwä litä səmo
There is someone who found me but he did not tell me his name.

አልቦ፡ዘሰምዐ፡ቃላቶሙ፡አመ፡ቦኡ፡ሀገረ።
älbo zä-sämʿä qalatomu ämä boʾu hägärä
There was no one who heard their voices when they entered the city.

ቦ፡ዘጐዩ፡እምቤት፡ኀበ፡ደበዩ።
bo zä-gʷäyyu əm-bet xäbä däbäyu
There were those who fled from the house where they were hiding.

27.5: Another very common function of this preposition is that it indicates possession. The possessed object is usually declined in the accusative case, like the object of a verb.

ብነ፡ቤተ፡ዲበ፡ድብር።
bənä betä dibä dəbr
We have a house on the mountain.

ብየ፡ማየ፡ወአልብከ፡ማየ።
bəyä mayä wä-älbəkä mayä.
I have water and you have no water.

ንግሥት፡አልባ፡አግብርተ፡በጽርሓ።
nəgəšt älba ägbərtä bä-şərḥa.
The queen has no servants in her chamber.

ቦቱ፡ካህን፡ክርታሳኖ።
botu kahən kərtasano.
The priest has his scrolls.

አልቦሙ፡አራሚያን፡ሃይማኖተ።
älbomu äramiyan haymanotä.
The infidels have no faith.