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m Task 18 (cosmetic): eval 1 template: hyphenate params (1×); |
m Fix Linter errors. |
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However, a verb in Plains Apache never has an affix in each position. A typical verb might be inflected as follows:
|Šàyédíʔą̀ą̀|ši-a-yi-dí-∅-∅-ʔą̀ą̀|1SG.OBJ-PP-3OBJ-PFV-3SBJ-CLF-give
|'He gives it to me'}}
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The above example displays the zero classifier. Following is an example of a fully inflected verb with the ''ł''- classifier prefix:
|Šìgółbèèš|ši-go-∅-∅-ł-bèèš|1SG.OBJ-NUM-IPFV-3SBJ-CLF-boil
|'They two are boiling me'}}
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Like other Southern Athabaskan languages, Plains Apache has strongly head-final tendencies, with a predominant word order of [[Subject–object–verb|subject-object-verb]] and [[postpositions]] rather than prepositions. This is illustrated in the following example sentences:
|Dèènáá kóó ʔíłbééš
|dèènáá kóó ʔí-ł-bééš
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|'The man boils water'}}
|Séé míídžǫ́ʔdą́ʔ dàyìɣínííł
|séé mi-džǫ́ʔ-dą́ʔ dà-yi-ɣí-ø-ø-nííł
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However, due to the morphological complexity of Plains Apache verb inflection, it is often possible for a sentence to consist of a single verb, e.g.
|Dàdį̀į̀mą̀ą̀s
|da-di-∅-į̀į̀d-∅-mą̀ą̀s
|