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Georgian : a learner's grammar / George Hewitt.

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Van Pelt Library PK9107 .H48 2005
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Hewitt, B. G.
Language:
English
Georgian
Subjects (All):
Georgian language--Grammar.
Georgian language.
Georgian language--Textbooks for foreign speakers--English.
Genre:
Textbooks -- for foreign speakers.
Textbooks.
Physical Description:
xi, 482 pages ; 24 cm
Edition:
Second edition.
Place of Publication:
London ; New York : Routledge, 2005.
Language Note:
English and Georgian.
Summary:
This new edition of Georgian: A Learner's Grammar is a completely revised and updated guide to the fascinating and most widely spoken language of the Caucasus. The Grammar presents the language in the form of dialogues and reading passages. Full attention is given to the script reproduction and recognition, pronunciation, lexis and individual points of grammar. There is also a varied and extensive range of exercise work. Features of this new edition include: - Highlighting of verbal roots throughout - New and varied exercises for practice of verb forms - Use of the new Georgian currency - Examples of Georgian literature, both poetry and prose, and each with its own self-contained vocabulary The reference section provides an answer key, a Georgian-English glossary and an index of grammatical terms.
Contents:
Handwritten examples 9
Greetings and introductions 15
Citation form of nouns and adjectives 16
Locative expressions 16
Formation of adverbs 16
Asking questions 17
Consonant-final words 17
Pronouns, possessive adjectives and possessive pronouns 17
Formality 18
The present tense of to be 18
The verb of motion and similar formations 19
The plural of nouns 26
The dative case 27
The genitive case 27
Declension of the demonstrative adjectives 28
Adjective agreement with datives and genitives 28
Preverbs 29
Numbers 29
Telling the time 30
Days of the week 31
Months of the year 31
The present tense of the verbs stand up, sit down, lie down 32
Names denoting common relationships and possessives 34
Asking about and stating one's age 40
The comparative and superlative grades of adjectives and adverbs 40
The instrumental case 41
Adjective agreement with the instrumental 41
Postpositions 41
Summary of the past tense of irregular verbs from previous lessons 43
Subject agreement markers within the verb for intransitive subjects 44
The division of the tense system 52
Subject and direct object case marking and verbal agreement for Series I transitives 52
Word order 53
Transitive verbs in the present indicative 53
Neutral version 55
Verb agreement with 3rd person plural subjects 55
Syncope of -o- in nouns 56
The adverbial case of nouns 56
Adjective agreement with nouns in the adverbial case 56
The postposition -mde up to 57
Subjective version 64
Indirect objects 66
Locative version 67
Indefinite pronouns and adverbs 68
Articles 69
The future indicative of transitive verbs 77
Object agreement affixes 79
Reflexives 81
Emphatic pronouns 82
Objective version 90
Expressions with too, also, as well 92
Emphatic interrogative particle 92
Relative clauses 92
The potential negative 93
The vocative case 94
Adjective agreement with the vocative 94
The syntax of Series II transitive verbs 103
The ergative case 104
Declension types and agreement patterns 104
The aorist indicative forms of transitive verbs 106
The formation of colloquial relative clauses 125
Temporal clauses meaning when 126
Temporal clauses meaning while 127
Manner clauses meaning as, like 128
Temporal clauses meaning as soon as 128
Temporal clauses meaning after 129
Noun clauses 129
Causal clauses because, since, as 130
Simple conditional (if) clauses 130
The verb know in the present indicative 131
The formation of the present and future indicatives of intransitive verbs 140
Meaning and syntax of Class 2 intransitive verbs 145
The marking of intransitive verbs with indirect objects 146
Some anomalies among the intransitives 150
Some irregular future indicatives 151
The formation of the aorist indicative of intransitive verbs 165
The syntax required by intransitive verbs in Series II 171
The medial verbs in the present, future and aorist indicatives 173
The syntax of medial verbs 177
Version as a change of tense marker 177
The formation of the aorist subjunctive for transitives, intransitives and medials 187
Some uses of the aorist subjunctive 194
How to give an instruction in the imperative 196
How to construct expressions of prohibition 198
Stative verbs 209
The indirect verbs 210
How to say X wants to [verb] and X can [verb] 219
How to express the notion convey 219
How to say know in the future indicative 220
Forms of the more important stative verbs 221
Formation of the imperfect indicative, present subjunctive, conditional and future subjunctive 232
Expressions of the type If X were to (be) [verb](ing), Y would [verb] 238
Constructing imperatives from verbs without an aorist indicative 239
Constructing expressions of the type X ought to be [verb]ing 240
Expressions of purpose relating to the future 240
Some other verbs that take the aorist subjunctive 241
The perfect forms of transitive and medial verbs 252
How to say X did not [verb] 259
Three colloquial uses for the perfect 260
The construction of sentences containing although/even if 261
Expressions like X is so [adjective] that [clause] 261
Negatives 262
The formation and meaning of the pluperfect of transitive and medial verbs 272
How to express the idea X should/ought to have [verb]ed 279
How to express a purpose relating to the past 280
How to express conditions of the type If X had [verb]ed 281
Examples of word formation 282
The main function of preverbs in the Modern Georgian verbal system 293
The formation and functions of the verbal noun 'masdar' 295
The formation and functions of participles 298
Expressing at the time of [verb]ing 310
The formation of the perfect of intransitive verbs 322
The formation of the perfect of indirect verbs 328
The structure of the perfect for stative verbs 330
Reported speech 331
The formation of the pluperfect of intransitive verbs 344
The formation of the pluperfect of indirect verbs 348
The formation of the pluperfect for stative verbs 350
Clauses introduced by the conjunctions before and until 350
Some patterns of word formation 352
Some useful sets of vocabulary 354
The form and use of the IIIrd subjunctive 370
The form and function of causative verbs 374
An alternative passive 380
An alternative Series III for transitive verbs 381
Indefinite clauses 381.
Notes:
Originally published: New York : Routledge, 1995.
Includes index.
ISBN:
0415333709
0415333717
OCLC:
58843138

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