Hindustani verbs
verbs conjugate according to mood, tense, person, number, and gender. Hindustani inflection is markedly simpler in comparison to Sanskrit, from which Hindustani has inherited its verbal conjugation system. Aspect-marking participles in Hindustani mark the aspect. Gender is not distinct in the present tense of the indicative mood, but all the participle forms agree with the gender and number of the subject. Verbs agree with the gender of the subject or the object depending on whether the subject pronoun is in the dative or ergative case or the nominative case.
Overview
Verbs
In Hindustani, all verbs have a base form called the infinitive which is marked by the -nā ending of verbs. Some of the most common verbs are: ''honā, karnā, rahnā, calnā, bolnā.''Complex verbs
Hindustani is extremely rich in complex verbs formed by the combinations of noun/adjective and a verb. Complex verbs are of two types: transitive and intransitive.- The transitive verbs are obtained by combining nouns/adjectives with verbs such as karnā 'to do', lenā 'to take', denā 'to give', jītnā 'to win' etc.
- The intransitive verbs are formed with the help of verbs such as honā 'to be/happen', lagnā 'to feel', ānā 'to come' etc.
- noun + verb
- adjective + verb
- verb + verb
In the above examples, there are verbal constructions which can be grouped into two categories of complex verbs, namely, conjunct verbs and compound verbs. and are examples of conjunct verbs since in we find a noun kām 'work' and a perfective form of the verb karnā, 'do' whereas in the verbal predicate exhibits a complex construction made of two elements, namely an adjective sāf 'clean' plus a verb karnā, 'do'. The example in, on the other hand, is considered a compound verb since the predicate exhibits two or more than two verbal elements, bōl 'tell' and diyā 'gave'.
Aspects
There are three primary grammatical aspects: habitual aspect, perfective aspect and progressive aspect. Periphrastic verb forms consist of two elements, the first of these two elements is the aspect marker and the second element is the tense-mood marker. The three aspects are formed from their participle forms being used with the copula verb. However, the primary participles which mark the aspects can be modified periphrastically by adding auxiliary participles constructed from auxiliary verbs such as rahnā, ānā, jānā after the primary participle to add a nuance to the aspect.Habitual aspect
The habitual aspect is marked using the habitual participle, which is constructed by taking the verb root and suffixing -tā to it.Perfective aspect
The perfective aspect is marked using the perfective participle, which is constructed by taking the verb root and suffixing -ā to it. If the verb root ends in a vowel, then -yā is suffixed to the verb root instead.Progressive aspect
Hindustani has distinct constructions to convey progressive and continuous actions. Progressive actions are marked through the progressive aspect participle rahā used along with the verb root, while the continuous action is conveyed through the perfective adjectival participle, which is a combination of the verb's perfective participle and the perfective participle of the verb honā, which is huā. The verbs in the examples 1a and 2a below are in the progressive aspect while in 1b and 2b the verbs are in their perfective adjectival participle form.Moods
There are five grammatical moods which the three aspects can be put into. Moods in Hindustani are:- Indicative mood
- Presumptive mood
- Subjunctive mood
- * Regular subjunctive
- **Present subjunctive
- **Future subjunctive
- * Perfective subjunctive
- **Future subjunctive
- Counterfactual mood
- *Conditional
- * Past subjunctive
- Imperative mood
- * Present imperative
- * Future imperative
- When making an if-clause, the conditional mood is used in both apodosis and the protasis unlike other languages such as the ones in the Romance branch which make use of unique past-subjunctive and conditional verb forms in the apodosis and the protasis, respectively.
- The regular future subjunctive is replaced by the perfective future subjunctive when an if-clause or a relative clause is used.
Set of related verbs
- Intransitive
- # Involitional — these are actions that cannot be done intentionally.
- ##Dative — these involitional verbs require the subject to be in the dative case.
- ##Non-dative — these verbs require the subject to be in the nominative case.
- # Volitional — these are actions that can be intentionally done.
- ## Ergative — these verbs require the subject to be in the ergative case when the verb is in the perfective aspect.
- ## Non-ergative — these verbs always require the subject to be in the nominative case even when the verb is in perfective aspect.
- Transitive
- # Direct — the subject itself experiences the action but the subject and the object are not the same
- # Indirect — the subject imparts the action onto the object, the object is the experiencer of the action by the usually translated into English as "to make verb"
- # Reflexive — the verb does action on the subject itself, the doer and experiencer of the action is the same subject
- # Causative — the subject causes the action to happen
- Root vowel changeː
- * a → ā
- * u / ū → o
- * i / ī → e
- Sometimes the root vowel change accompanies the root's final consonant changeː
- * k → c
- * ṭ → r̥
- * l → Ø
- Suffixation of -ā to form the indirect or reflexive formː
- * Root vowel changeː ū/o → u; e/ai/ā/ī → i
- * Insertion of semivowel l between such vowel-terminating stems
- Suffixation of -vā to form the causative verb stem
Verb conjugations
There are four distinguished conjugation sets in Hindustani. The first person singular pronoun mãĩ, the second person singular intimate pronoun tū, the 2P plural familiar pronoun tum, and the 2P plural formal pronoun āp. The 1P plural pronoun ham and the 3P plural conjugations are the same as the conjugations of āp, and the 3P singular conjugations are the same as that of 2P singular pronoun tū. Hindi does not have 3P personal pronouns and instead the demonstrative pronouns double as the 3P personal pronouns when they lack a noun argument.There are very few irregular verbs. There are three types of irregularities that may occurː
- Irregular indicative perfect conjugationsː
- *
Subjunctive mood conjugations
can be put into two tenses: the present and future tense. The only verb that has both the present and future subjunctive conjugations is the verb honā "to be" while all the other verbs only have the future subjunctive conjugations.Present regular subjunctive
The present subjunctive conjugations for the verb honā "to be" are mentioned below. Present subjunctive conjugations of honā "to be" act as copulas that mark present subjunctive when used with aspectual participles.Future regular subjunctive
The future subjunctive forms are constructed the following way by adding the conjugational suffixes to the verb root. The future subjunctive conjugations for the regular verb bolnā "to speak" is shown below. Future subjunctive conjugations of honā "to be" and rahnā "to stay" act as copulas that mark future subjunctive when used with aspectual participles.| mood | tense | gender | ||||
| subjunctive | future | ♂ & ♀ | -ū̃ | -e | -o | -ẽ |
| subjunctive | future | ♂ & ♀ | bolū̃ | bole | bolo | bolẽ |
There are a couple of verbs with irregular future subjunctive forms, they are mentioned below. Every monosyllabic verb root such as in pīnā "to drink", jīnā "to live" and sīnā "to sew" etc. change their long vowel ī to short vowel i when conjugated into future subjunctive.
| mood | tense | gender | verb | regular stem | irregular stem | ||||
| subjunctive | future | ♂ & ♀ | lenā "to take" | le- | l- | lū̃ | le | lo | lẽ |
| subjunctive | future | ♂ & ♀ | denā "to give" | de- | d- | dū̃ | de | do | dẽ |
| subjunctive | future | ♂ & ♀ | pīnā "to drink" | pī- | pi- | piyū̃ | piye | piyo | piyẽ |