Although not used in general linguistics theory, the term preverb is used in Caucasian (including all three families: Northwest Caucasian, Northeast Caucasian and Kartvelian), Caddoan, Athabaskan, and Algonquian linguistics to describe certain elements prefixed to verbs. In the context of Indo-European languages, the term is usually used for separable verb.
Theoretically, any prefix could be called a preverbal element. However, in practice, the term preverb applies more narrowly in those families and refers to a prefixed element that is normally outside the premise of verbal morphology like locations of noun elements or, less often, noun elements themselves.
nibaa | he/she sleeps | has no preverb |
ninibaamin | we sleep | likewise, with pronominal prefix |
gii'-nibaa | he/she slept | has past tense preverb |
ningii'-nibaamin | we slept | likewise, with pronominal prefix |
gii'-maajii-nibaa | he/she started to sleep | has past preverb, and a lexical preverb |
ningii'-maajii-nibaamin | we started to sleep | likewise, with pronominal prefix |
In Munsee grammar, some words can come between a preverb and its verb.
See also prenoun in such languages.
Preverbs are directly attached to the beginning of the verb compound:
Note in those two examples that the meaning of the future tense is achieved only by adding the preverb; no other grammatical change occurs. In these examples, preverbs have directional meanings:
Again, note that only the preverbs are changed to convey the meaning of various directional meanings.
Preverbs add directional meanings not only to the verbs of motion but also to any other kind of verbs. Compare the examples of the verb :
As can be seen from the examples, the preverb changes according to the indirect object (the person for (to) whom the verb is being done).
Many verbs have a common root. For example, "end" and "stay" have the same verb root, . The meanings of the verbs are distinguished by their preverbs and other elements of the verb compound:
As is clear, the verbs are identical in the present tense but differ in the future tense by their preverbs.
Some Persian preverbs, referred to as "pīš fi'l" or "pīšvand e fi'l", are:
Pre-verbs can modify the procedure attribute of the verbs and the infinitives, but they do not change their objective attribute:
The Pre-verb is normally positioned ahead of the verb. If the verb is composed of two separable components, the pre-verb is positioned ahead of the second component. The Pre-verb can be positioned at the end of the sentence, owing to versification requirements:
از کارِ خير عزمِ تو هرگز نگشت باز
هرگز زِ راه بازنگشتهست هيچ تير
Manuchehri (11th - 12th Century AD)
Some examples:
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