List of glossing abbreviations


This article lists common abbreviations for grammatical terms that are used in linguistic interlinear glossing of oral languages in English.
The list provides conventional glosses as established by standard inventories of glossing abbreviations such as the Leipzig Glossing rules, the most widely known standard. Synonymous glosses are listed as alternatives for reference purposes. In a few cases, long and short standard forms are listed, intended for texts where that gloss is rare or uncommon.

Conventions

  • Grammatical abbreviations are generally in full or small caps to visually distinguish them from the translations of lexical words.
  • * For instance, capital or small-cap glosses a grammatical past-tense morpheme, while lower-case 'past' would be a literal translation of a word with that meaning. Similarly, cap might be a locative suffix used in nominal inflections, prototypically indicating direction downward but possibly also used where it is not translatable as 'down' in English, whereas lower-case 'down' would be a direct English translation of a word meaning 'down'. Not all authors follow this convention.
  • Person-number-gender is often further abbreviated, in which case the elements are in lowercase rather than in small caps.
  • * e.g. 3ms, 2fp, 1di and 1pe rather than,, and.
  • Glosses may be abbreviated more severely than is the norm, if the grammatical terms are particularly frequent within a text.
  • *This helps keep the gloss graphically aligned with the parsed text when the abbreviations are longer than the morphemes they gloss. Such shortened forms may be ambiguous with other authors or texts and so are not presented as normative here.
  • Glosses may also be less abbreviated than the norm if they are not common in a particular text, so as to not tax the reader.
  • *At the extreme, glosses may not be abbreviated at all but simply written in small caps, e.g., or rather than, or. Such spellingse.g. in have been omitted from the list below, but are always possible.
  • A morpheme will sometimes be used as its own gloss, either when it is the topic of discussion and the author wishes it to be immediately recognized in the gloss among other morphemes with similar meanings, or when it has multiple or subtle meanings that would be impractical to gloss with a single conventional abbreviation.
  • *For example, if a passage has two contrasting nominalizing suffixes under discussion, ɣiŋ and jolqəl, they may be glossed and, with the glosses explained in the text. This is also seen when the meaning of a morpheme is debated, and glossing it one way or another would prejudice the discussion.
  • Lexical morphemes are typically translated, using lower-case letters, though they may be given a grammatical gloss in small caps if they play a grammatical role in the text. Exceptions include proper nouns, which typically are not translated, and kinship terms, which may be too complex to translate. Proper nouns/names may simply be repeated in the gloss, or may be replaced with a placeholder such as "" or "". For kinship glosses, see the dedicated section below for a list of standard abbreviations.
  • *For example, a gloss of the French 'le garçon mange la pomme' would include the words 'boy' and 'apple' rather than 'garçon' and 'pomme'.
  • Lehmann recommends that abbreviations for syntactic roles not be used as glosses for arguments, as they are not morphological categories. Glosses for case should be used instead, e.g. or for A. Morphosyntactic abbreviations are typically typeset as full capitals even when small caps are used for glosses.
  • *These morphosyntactic abbreviations include A, B, D or I, E, G or R, L, O or P, S, SA and SP or SO, Se and Sx, Su, and T.
  • **Such abbreviations are, however, commonly used as the basis for glosses for symmetrical voice systems, such as,, .
  • Glosses for generic concepts like 'particle', 'infix', 'tense', 'object marker' and the like are generally to be avoided in favor of specifying the precise value of the morpheme. However, they may be appropriate for historical linguistics or language comparison, where the value differs between languages or a meaning cannot be reconstructed, or where such usage is unambiguous because there is only a single morpheme that can be glossed that way. When a more precise gloss would be misleading, but glossing it as its syntactic category would be ambiguous, the author may disambiguate with digits. Such pseudo-glossing may be difficult for the reader to follow.
  • Authors also use placeholders for generic elements in schematicized parsing, such as may be used to illustrate morpheme or word order in a language.
  • *Examples include or 'head'; or 'root'; or 'stem';, or 'prefix';, or 'suffix';, or 'clitic' or 'enclitic'; 'preposition' and or 'postposition', 'person-number-gender element' and 'tense-aspect-mood element' etc. These are not listed below as they are not glosses for morphological values.

Lists

Nonabbreviated English words used as glosses are not included in the list below. Caution is needed with short glosses like,, and, which could potentially be either abbreviations or nonabbreviated English prepositions used as glosses.
Transparent compounds of the glosses below, such as or 'remote past', a compound of 'remote' and 'past', are not listed separately.
Abbreviations beginning with are not listed separately unless they have alternative forms that are included. For example, is not listed, as it is composable from +. This convention is grounded in the Leipzig Glossing Rules. Some authors use a lower-case n, for example for 'non-human'.
Some sources are moving from classical lative terminology to 'directional', with concommitant changes in the abbreviations. Other authors contrast -lative and -directive.
Some sources use alternative abbreviations to distinguish e.g. nominalizer from nominalization, or shorter abbreviations for compounded glosses in synthetic morphemes than for independent glosses in agglutinative morphemes. These are seldom distinct morphosyntactic categories in a language, though some may be distinguished in historical linguistics. They are not distinguished below, as any such usage tends to be idiosyncratic to the author.

Punctuation and numbers

Conventional GlossVariantsMeaningReference
-separator for segmentable morphemes, e.g., Lezgian amuq’-da-č "will not stay"
=꞊, ‿ separator for clitics, e.g., West Greenlandic palasi=lu niuirtur=lu "both the priest and the shopkeeper"
.when a morph is rendered by more than one gloss, the glosses are separated by periods, e.g., French aux chevaux "to the horses"
A period is not used between person and number, e.g.,,, .
_ when the language of the gloss lacks a one-word translation, a phrase may be joined by underscores, e.g., Turkish çık-mak "to come out"
With some authors, the reverse is also true, for a two-word phrase glossed with a single word.
>, →, : direction of polypersonal agreement in a single gloss, whether
possession
or transitivity " do you two want to spear?"
A colon is used by some authors:, -poke.
: separates glosses where segmentation is irrelevant
;: separates glosses that are combined in a portmanteau morpheme, as in aux chevaux "to the horses".
Some authors use the colon indiscriminately for this convention and the previous.
+ compound word or fused morpheme.
vs 1+3
& cross-referencing: X&Y = X›Y or Y›X or both
/alternative meanings of ambiguous morpheme, e.g. 2/3 for a morpheme that may be either 2nd or 3rd person, or for a suffix used for both dative and genitive.
\ a morpheme indicated by or affected by mutation, as in Väter-n "to fathers"
indicates unmarked element. The null suffix -∅ may be used instead.
inherent category, such as covert gender
~ marks reduplication and retriplication
<...> marks off an infix
⟩...⟨-...-, >...< marks off a circumfix or bipartite stem. The second element may be glossed the same as the first, or as, or $:
ge⟩lauf⟨en run
ge⟩lauf⟨en ⟩run⟨
ge⟩lauf⟨en ⟩run⟨
ge-lauf-en -run-
ge-lauf-en -run-
$
used by some authors to mark which element is the root
???,
0, Øzero (null) morpheme. Brackets may be used instead.
0zeroth person
0epenthetic segment
1first person : speaker-honorific, speaker-humiliative/humble
2second person
3third person
12, 13inclusive, exclusive person
3spimpersonal 'space' subject
4fourth person
4first person inclusive
4indefinite person
etc.noun classes / genders
> ≥
< ≤
older and younger: 'I', 'you', 's/he' speaker or
= ≠same and different generations: 'they two', = 'we'
varies with

Grammatical abbreviations

Conventional GlossVariantsMeaningReference
athematic
associating
addressee authority
from. May be equivalent to or. Compounded for,, etc. if a single morpheme, as, or, etc. if not.
, above deictic center
, abessive case
Lehmann recommends using privative or aversive instead
, ability or capability
ablative case
ablative-modalis case
, absolutive case
absolute
cnabstractive; abstract
abstract
absentive
about
motion across
animacy classifier
accusative case
accompanier
achievement
, accomplishment
, cn?actor role
active voice
action
actual
actualizing
activity
near, by. May be equivalent to or. Compounded for,, etc. if a single morpheme, as,, etc. if not.
agent demotion
anti-deictic
adaptive
additive case; additive focus
,, adessive case. See.
adelative
adjective
adjunct
adjectivizer
admonitive mood
, addressive; addressee-anchored/orientated/perspective
adverb(ial) ; adverbial case
advancement
adverb marker
,, adversative
, adverbializer
,, aequalis (equalis) case, equational particle, equative
, affirmative
affectionate
aforementioned
affective case
aargument-focus marker
away from water
aggregate, collective
,, agent nominalization/noun
, agreement affix
Lehmann recommends avoiding and specifying agreement categories.
agentive case
adjacent
cn?alienable possession
, allative case
allocutive
alterphoric, =
ambiphoric pronoun
amplifier
, animate gender
,, action noun, action nominalizer
, adnominalizer
, anaphoric
action narrowly averted
andative
adnominal verb
anterior tense
Antecedent
, anticipated, anticipating
in front of. May be equivalent to or. Compounded for,, etc. if a single morpheme, as,, etc. if not.
anteelative
antessive case, anteessive
, anticausative
anticipatory
, ,,, antipassive voice
antelative, antedirective
agent-orientated verb
attributive oblique
aorist
adverbial particle
adjective prefix
,, applicative
apposition, appositional mood
approbation
apprehensive mood, apprehensional
,, active participle, present participle
approximative
near, in the vicinity of. May be equivalent to or. Compounded for,, etc. if a single morpheme, as,, etc. if not.
, areal
argumentative
article
aseverative
actor
,, associative case
,, associative plural
,, associative mood
,, compounds, e.g. associated motion
aspect, aspectual
Lehmann recommends avoiding 'aspect' as a gloss and specifying the aspect.
,, assertive mood
asserted past participle
, cn?assumptive mood, assumed evidential
assistive
asymmetric
at
attention-calling
, attributive, attributor
, attenuative
auditory evidential, auditive
augmentative
augment
augmented number
auxiliary verb
Per Lehmann, this should only be used if it uniquely identifies the morpheme
,, agent/actor voice/focus/trigger
avertive
aversative, aversive
, 'be' verb
below deictic center
benefactive case
background
bivalent
bottom
, boundary
bound root
boundary tone
beneficiary voice/focus/trigger
common gender
current evidence
conceptualizer
'compass', in languages where relative position is based on cardinal direction rather than left, right, front and behind
complementizing
ceased existence
caritive case
cardinal numeral
, causal-final case; causal
,, causative
conditional converb
clause-chain marker
core development
conjunct dubitive neutral
conjunct dubitive preterite
continued event
celerative
centric case
centrifugal
centripetal
certainty
cessative
contrastive focus
at X's place, at the home of
chômeur
cohortative
contrary information flow
, circumstantive
, circumstantial voice
, $
circumferential
circumessive
, cislocative
citation form ending
conjoint
close link
nominal class
clause-level, e.g. clause-level 'and', completive clause marking
,, classifier . Some distinguish classifier from class marker.
The category of classifier should be specified, e.g. ":round" or ""
conjugation marker
noun-class marker
concatenative marker
compound
,,,,, completive aspect - normally =
,,, comparative
, commitment, committal
common noun
conjunct nominal
,, connegative
, conjunction
,, construct state/form
,, consequential
,,, counterfactual conditional, contrafactuality
,,, contrastive, contranstive focus, contrasted topic
continuer
counter-assertive
counterexpectation
co-agency
concomitative-causitive
coherence
collective number/numeral
, comitative case
,, complementizer
compassion
, comparative case
compulsional
, conative
concrete
, concessive
concurrent
concord marker
, conditional mood
, confirmational, confirmative
, congruent
conjunctive, conjunct person marking
conjectural
,, connective
, connector
consecutive; concessive
, consecutive mood
,, constant, constancy
,, continuous aspect, continuative aspect
on a vertical surface. May be equivalent to or. Compounded for,, etc. if a single morpheme, as, or, etc. if not.
continuous direction
contentive
cooperative
coordination, coordinative
copula, copulative
, coreference, coreferential
conjunctive participle
complementizer phrase
content question
crastinal tense
, cardinal pronoun
current relevance marker, currently relevant state
change of state marker
cosubordinator
circumstantial topic
contraexpectative
contingent mood
contiguous
,,, contemporative
control
,, customary
, circumstantial/theme voice/focus/trigger
copula verbalizer
characteristic vowel
conveyance voice
,, converb
dative case
dectic center
downcoast
discourse definite
different event, change of event
discontinued event
-dedual exclusive
deagentive
,, debitive / obligative
decausative
, declarative mood
deductive evidential
definite
definitive
defocus
deferential
cn?,,,, deixis, deictic
delayed imperative
delative case
, delimiter, delimitative, delimiting
deliberative mood
demonstrative
denizen
denominal
deontic mood
deobjective
dependent, dependent clause marking
deportmentive
depreciatory, deprecative
derivation, derivational morpheme
derelational
cn?, desiderative mood
destinative aspect or case
determiner
detransitivizer, detransitive
detrimental
default
downhill, seaward
-didual inclusive
direct information flow
diminutive
,,, direct evidential
directive, directional ; typically suffixed to another element such as.
, direct case
, direct voice
directed
dislocative
,, discourse marker
discursive connector
, disjunction, disjunctive, disjunct person marking
dissatisfaction
,,,, distal, distant
,, distributive case
,, distributive plural
,, distributive aspect
ditransitive
diversative
deverbal noun
denizen
demonstrative marker
directive marker
DO, direct object
do like a...
differential object marking
direct-object marker
donative
doxastic
distant past. =
discourse particle
destinative participle
direct past
distant past continuative
distant past completive
downriver
different reference
different-subject/actor/agent marker
, discontinuative aspect
different taxis
detrimentary
, ddual number
, dubitative mood, dubiative
dummy affix
, duplicative
durative aspect
direction voice/focus/trigger
, downward
cn?dyadic
dynamic aspect / eventive
epistemic authority
euphonic consonant
effector
extra-focal
egophoric
egressive
euphonic insertion
,, elative case
existential + locative + possessive + attributive
extension marker
evaluative marker
emotive
,, emphatic
,, emphasizer, emphatic marker
,, clause-final particle
Per Lehmann, glosses as 'particle' should be avoided; instead translate/gloss the meaning.
endopathic
enunciative particle, as in Gascon
,,, 0epenthetic morpheme, epenthetical
,,,, epistemic mood or modality
epithet
equative
ergative case
echo subject
essive case
,, evidential
euphonic vowel
experiencer voice
evitative case
eventual
exaltive/deferential
, excessive
, , eexclusive person
,, exclamative, exclamatory
excessive duration
executive
exessive case
extrafocal
exocentric case
, cn?experiencer, experiencer case
, experiential, eyewitness = direct evidential. experienced past.
expectational
, expletive
expressive
extended, extendible; extension
extent
external evidential
extraversive
extended topic
,, ezafe = izafet
feminine gender
future actor
factive evidential/mood, factual
factitive
familiar, as for familiar register and familiar pronominal
future conjunct
facilitive
future disjunct
, firsthand
feminine indefinite
, morphological filler, sentence filler
finite verb
finalis
former, deceased, 'late'
first name
phrase-final suffix
focus
,, formal register
,, formal mood
,, formal case
future participle
, far past
fraction, fractional (numeral)
, cn?frequentative aspect
front
,,, frustrative
false start
factative tense
functional
functive case
, future tense
, future intention, intentional future
, final/terminal vowel
,,, etc. etc.gender / noun class
generalized evaluative marker
, genitive case, genitive form of pronoun
generalized
gerund, gerundive
given
general knowledge
gender marker
general non-finite
gnomic (generic) aspect
,,,, generic, general
general tense
,, associated motion.
general past
group numeral
ggiven topic
, goal voice/focus/trigger
head
hearer/reader
high variety/code, in adiglossic situation
human, anthropic gender
higher animacy, higher object
habitual aspect
habilitive
hypocoristic
hesitation, hesitation particle
hesternal tense
historic, as in historical present or past historic tense
number of hundreds -
hodiernal tense
,, honorific
horizon of interest
horizontal
hortative
human plural
heard evidential
,,, hearsay/reported evidential
, cn?humiliative, humble
, cn?hypothetical mood
inflected
involuntary agent
IAindirect agent
instrumental advancement
iamitive
involuntary causative
indirective copula
involuntary comitative
, imperfective converb
, identity, identical,
identificational
identifiable
, ideophone
informal ending
indefinite future
ignorative
, illative case
interrogative marker
impersonal infinitive
,, immediate, as in immediate imperative mood, near future tense, immediate past; immediate evidential
immediate past, =
imminent =
,, imperative mood
imparfait
,,, imperfect
implicated
modal impossibility
cn?imprecative mood
,, cn?,, impersonal, impersonal verb
in a container. May be equivalent to or. Compounded for,, etc. if a single morpheme, as,, etc. if not.
, impotential
inablative
inactive
inalienable possession
inanimate gender
increment
,,, inceptive
,, inchoative
, inclusive person
, incipient
indicative mood
indirect causative
indeclinable
,, independent
indeterminate
indefinite human
indirective ; indirect ; indirect evidential
individualizer
indefinite non-human
inelative case
,,, inessive case
infinitive
inflectional
,, inferential mood, inferred evidential
, ingressive case
,,,, interjection, interjective
, instrumental case
instantiated
, interrogative ; content interrogative mood
internal evidential
within. May be equivalent to or. Compounded for,, etc. if a single morpheme, as,, etc. if not.
interessive
interpellative mood
interfix
, intentional conditional, intentive future
complement of interest
introversive
,,,,, intensifier, intensive
intentive
inverse
inverse number
inward
IO, indirect object
immediate past. =
indirective past
impeditive
impersonal passive
impersonalizer
indirect question, self-addressed question
irregular
cn?,, irrealis mood
, irrelevence
low variety/code, in adiglossic situation
local person -
L2tags translation as code-switching.
lower animacy
lative case
limited control
locational
vowel or consonant emphasis lengthening
lexical-thematic, lexical
ligature, possessor ligature
limitative
likely
land gender
lower level
landmark
, linking morph, linking interfix
last name
, linker, linking element: an interfix or a ligature
locative case, locative verb
logophoric
delocutive
linking particle
limiting quantifier
lexical stem
locative/location voice/focus/trigger
linking vowel
lengthened vowel
masculine gender
modal case
marked
malefactive case
male speaker
manner; mood-aspect-negation
matutinal
modal clitic
, meditative
multiple event
measure
mediative
medial
middle voice
maximal field of view
,,, middle voice, mediopassive
mimetic
minimal number
mirative / admirative
negative mirative
miscellaneous gender
mitigation
modal locative
, modal case, e.g. certainty
, mood, modal, modal particle
modifier
momentane, momentative
monofocal person
motion, mutative
movement
maximal scope
main speech-act participant
maṣdar
mental state
,, multiplicative case, numeral
multal
mover
, neuter gender
Sometimes = non-human.
Nnoun
n-, non-, in-, un-, a-
name
cn?narrative tense
noncontrol
noun-class marker
,,,,, incompletive/noncompletive aspect
in contemporative
noncurative
,,, indefinite
necessitative
, negation, negative
negatory, negator
final negator
negative nominalization
, neutral aspect
non-extended
non-final form/marker
non-finite
non-finite conditional
cn?non-finite
non-future neutral disjunct
non-future perfective disjunct
, nnon-human
, non-masculine
,,,,,,,,,,,,,, nominalizer/nominalization
nominative case
S-only nominative
'not yet'
noninstigational
neuter plural
noun particle
near past
non-past completive
noun-phrase delimiter
noun prefix
,,,,,, imperfective aspect
, non-possessed
non-past progressive
near
non-subject
non-singular
, new situation
non-speech-participant perspective
,, atelic
neutral direction
cn?,, intransitive
non-topical subject
numeral, numerative
neutral version
nonvisual experiential
, non-visual ; invisible
nominal cyclical expansion
, nonvolitional, avolitional, involuntative/involitive
non-witnessed
non-experienced past
object, 3m 3m object, 2sg object
, object(ive), object agreement ; objective case
oblique case, oblique form of pronoun
observation
obviative
object focus. = or
inverted object
object marker
onomatopoeia
object prefix
opposite
optative mood
orientation marker
open reference
ordinal numeral
ordinary
origin, originative
oblique stem
onstage region
non-main speech-act participant
outward
objective version
pre-, post-
proper article.
previous
possessor:, 3f, 3m. = etc.
past anterior
plural imperative
passive/imperative
,, passive voice
past absolutive
patientive
Lehmann recommends avoiding, as it is not the value of a morphological category.
pausal, pause
, cn?, pcpaucal number
past completive
concord particle
perfective converb
'polysemic clause linkage marker'
completive participle
participatory evidence
past, deferred realization
previous event, different subject
perpetuity
previous event
-peplural exclusive
pegative case
pejorative
perambulative
peripheral
cn?, perlative case
permission, permissive mood
permanent
personal ; personal/proper article ; 'personal' affix
, persistive
personal experience
pertensive
pervasive
, perfective aspect
past habitual
phasal aspect
-piplural inclusive
progressive imperfective
past imperfective
physical inferential
personal knowledge
p, plural
,,,,,,, pluperfect
, ,,, pluractional
predicate marker
,, cnproper noun/name, personal name
POprimary object
patient-orientated verb
postdirective
postelative case
, postessive case
polite register
positive
,, possessive, possessor
, possible, modal possibility
possessed
postlocative. May be equivalent to or. Compounded for,, etc. if a single morpheme, as, or, etc. if not.
, postposition, postpositional case
post-terminal aspect
,, postlative case, or 'postdirective'
cn?potential mood
predicative possessive particle
present progressive
past perfect
pragmatic particle
active perfect participle
post-terminal past
perfect participle
past perfective
past passive participle
past perfect participle
,,, passive participle, past participle
pseudo-passive
pragmatic
precedence
precative mood
, precondition
, precise, precision
predicative affix, predicative
prediction
preposition, prepositional case
preterite
previous
preventive
,, perfect
, performative
, prior, preceding
, privative case
,, pronominal base, proform
probabilitive
procomplement
product verbalizer
, progressive aspect
, prohibitive mood
, prolative case
prolonged action
proprietive case
proper-noun marker
, propositive mood
prosecutive case
, cn?prospective aspect or mood
protasis
pro-verb
, proximal demonstrative; proximate
property predication
, present tense
prescriptive
presentative
ps-pseudo: ps pseudo-antipassive, ps pseudo-passive
passing state
passé simple
undergoer
previous same agent of v.t.
previous event, same subject of v.i. ; and previous event, same subject of v.i. and v.t.
, possessum, possessed
possessor
,,,, past tense
past nominalization
past/present
potent case inflection
,,,,,, particle
,
particalizer
,,,,,,,,, participle, participial
path
,,,,, partitive case
,,,,, punctual aspect, punctiliar
, purposive case/converb
,, patient/object voice/focus/trigger
pivot form/nominal
possessive verbalizer
,, preverb
post-verbal particle
possessive suffix
,,, QPquestion word or particle
quantity marker
,, QMquestion marker
qualifier
quantifier
, quotative
quotative verb
rational gender
reflexive
relational
, root extension
realis/assertive
repeated action
relative agreement
raritive
refactive
reactive
,, realis mood
, recent, recent past
receptive
,,, reciprocal voice
,,,, reduplication, reduplicant
referential, referentive
,,,,,, reflexive
regal
regularity
regressive
relative clause marker or relativizer
relative pronoun affix
relational
relative case
e.g. relative past
relative future
relevance
relativizer
, remote: or or remote past tense, or or remote future tense; also remote past tense
, repetitive aspect
, repetitive numeral
, repeated word in repetition
, resultative
resignative
residue class
returnative
revisionary
referential-focus
relational
, resumptive marker, resumptive pronoun
respect
responsive
retrospective
reversative, reversive
reverential
reflexive/middle voice
relative marker
result nominalizer
, $
royal
recent past, =
remote past, =
reflexive-possessive
remote past continuous
remote past inferred
remote past reported
remote past
,,, reported evidential ; reportative
remote past visual
, rhetorical question
,, reflexive/reciprocal
reason
,, restrictive
roundtrip
reason voice/focus/trigger
subjective, 3f 3f subject
speaker authority
speaker-addressee authority
salient
speech-act participant
subelative case
self-benefactive
cn?, subessive case
,,,, subject case, subject agreement
, subjective, subjective speaker perspective
sceptical
sudden-discovery tense
simultaneous event, different subject
same event
second-hand
sejunct
, semelfactive aspect
special evaluative marker
,, sensory evidential mood, = +
spatial separation, separative
sequential
serial marker
subject focus
stem formation
sentence-final marker
softener
sentence focus
, sentence-final particle/suffix
s, singular
,,, singulative number, singulative nominal
subject honorific
simultaneous aspect, simultaneity
, similative
ssingular intransitive action
inverted subject
situative
,,,,, subjunctive mood
suck-teeth
same level
series marker
semblative
semeliterative
same reference
same object
sociative case
sociative causative
,,, specific, specifying
sentence particle. See usage note at particle and.
simple past, perfective past
subject prefix
speaker: speaker-proximate, demonstrative near speaker
spatial
specifier
speculative mood
speaker-anchored, speaker perspective
spotlighting
spontaneous
same referent
switch reference
, source
self-reporting pronoun
same-subject/actor/argument marker
same-subject overlap
same-subject succession
simultaneous event, same subject
,,, stative aspect, stative verb
, $
stimulative
strong
sublocative. May be equivalent to or. Compounded for,, etc. if a single morpheme, as, or, etc. if not.
, subitive.
,, sublative case, also 'subdirective'
,,, subordinator, subordinate
subsequent
subsecutive mood
substitutive
, substantivizer
successive
suggestive mood
supine
superlative
, cn?, supplicative, supplication
, superelative case
, superlocative. May be equivalent to or. Compounded for,,, etc. if a single morpheme, as, or, etc. if not.
, cn?,,,, cn?superessive case
,,, super-lative, superdirective
, suppositive, presuppositive, presumptive, suppositional, presupposition
surprise
serial verb construction
switch
symmetric
trigger
thematic
, temporal
tense/aspect
tag question
tense–aspect–mood
tense–aspect–mood plus person/number
telic aspect
contrastive emphasis
temporal case; temporal converb
temporarily
number of tens
tentative
, terminative ~ terminalis
non-subject
,,, thematic element ; theme
trajector
teknonym
tense marker: hrs, days, yrs for events hours, days, years ago
tendency
,, tense
Lehmann recommends avoiding this and specifying the tense.
, topic marker
, topicalizer
totalitative, totality
, transitive verb ; transitive case
transitional sound
trajector
, transformative case
,,,, cn?,, translative, translocativetranslative case
,,,, cn?,, translative, translocativetranslocative
, trial number
retriplication
transmutative
transnumeral
plurative number
transfer of possession
transitivizer
thematic suffix
tense
thematic vowel
truth-value focus
uninflected
unit augmented
upcoast
uncertain future
,,, cn?undergoer role
uphill, inland
upper level
uncertain mood
unified
unspecified
'unwillingness' marker
upward
upriver
usitative, for usual, customary or typical events
utilitive
undergoer voice/focus/trigger
uncertain visual
unwitnessed past
viewer
trigger
verbal adjective
intransitive animate verb
valency-increasing; valence marker
validator
Vverbal
,,,,,,, verbalizer
vespertinal
verb class marker / classifier
voluntary comitative
Vd, v.d.verb, ditransitive
vegetable gender. Some authors distinguish gender from food affix.
venitive/ventive
veridical, veridical mood
verificative
versionizer; versative
vertical classifier
Vi, v.i.verb, intransitive
vetitive / vetative mood
vialis case
intransitive inanimate verb
virtual mode
, visual evidential
, visible
verbal locative
verbal noun
verbal cyclical expansion
vocative case
volitive mood; volitional
verbal particle
Vr, v.r.verb, reflexive
verb-stem marker
Vt, v.t.verb, transitive
transitive animate verb
transitive inanimate verb
exclamatory wh- clause
interrogative pronoun, wh- agreement
wh- question
witnessed evidential
, witnessed past
?
,,, yes-no question, polar question/interrogative
-izer
zoic gender

Kinship

It is common to abbreviate grammatical morphemes but to translate lexical morphemes. However, kin relations commonly have no precise translation, and in such cases they are often glossed with anthropological abbreviations. Most of these are transparently derived from English; an exception is 'Z' for 'sister'. A set of basic abbreviations is provided for nuclear kin terms ; additional terms may be used by some authors, but because the concept of e.g. 'aunt' or 'cousin' may be overly general or may differ between communities, sequences of basic terms are often used for greater precision. There are two competing sets of conventions, of one-letter and two-letter abbreviations:
1-Letter Gloss2-Letter GlossMeaningEquivalent sequence of nuclear relations
AAuaunt= MZ or FZ / MoSi or FaSi
BBrbrother
CChchild= S or D / So or Da
Cucousin= MZD, MZS, MBD, MBS, FZD, FZS, FBD, FBS
= MoSiDa, MoSiSo, MoBrDa, MoBrSo, FaSiDa, FaSiSo, FaBrDa, FaBrSo
DDadaughter
e, Eo, elelder/older
Egoegoego
exexex-
FFafather
Ffemale kin-
GGrgrand-e.g. GF = PF ; GS = CS
e.g. GrFa = PaFa ; GrSo = ChSo
Gengeneration
HHuhusband
LALa-in-lawe.g. BLA = WB or HB or ZH / BrLa = WiBr or HuBr or SiHu
MMomother
Mmale kin-
Nenephew= BrSo or SiSo
Niniece= BrDa or SiDa
PPaparent= M or F / Mo or Fa
SSoson
SI, GSbsibling= B or Z / Br or Si
SP, ESpspouse= H or W / Hu or Wi
ststep--
UUnuncle= MB or FZ / MoBr or FaBr
WWiwife
y, Yy, yoyounger
ZSisister
male speaking
female speaking
μmale ego
φfemale ego
parallel
++cross
ososopposite sex is her brother and her brata
sssssame sex cf. os above

These are concatenated, e.g. MFZS = MoFaSiSo 'mother's father's sister's son', yBWF = yBrWiFa 'younger brother's wife's father'. 'Elder/older' and 'younger' may affix the entire string, e.g. oFaBrSo, MBDy or a specific element, e.g. MFeZS 'mother's father's elder sister's son', HMeB 'husband's mother's elder brother'.
'Gen' indicates the generation relative to the ego, with ∅ for the same generation. E.g. Gen∅Ch ; ♂Gen+1F ; Gen−2M.
'Cross' and 'parallel' indicate a change or lack of change in gender of siblings in the chain of relations. Parallel aunts and uncles are MoSi and FaBr; cross-aunts and uncles are FaSi and MoBr. Cross-cousins and parallel cousins are children of the same. Parallel niece and nephew are children of a man's brother or woman's sister; cross-niece and nephew are the opposite. 'Elder' and 'younger' occurs before these markers: o∥Cu, y+Cu, and the gender of the ego comes at the very beginning, e.g. ♂o∥CuF, ♀y+CuM.

Literature


  • Payne, Thomas E. 1997. Describing Morphosyntax.
  • Summary of case forms: