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Open Educational Resources for South Asian Language Instruction
Language: Malayalam
Malayalam: A University Course and Reference Grammar by Rodney F. Moag is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License. This work is normally printed in two volumes (the second volume beginning with Lesson 17), but it is presented here in a single document. Created in cooperation with the Center for Open Educational Resources and Language Learning. Last updated: April 2018 Rodney F. Moag Professor Emeritus University of Texas at Austin
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• A Universit~ C-ourse. • and \4fe.re.nle. 6.rammar Vol. 1 -
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Malayalam: A University Course and Reference Grammar . Fourth Edition
Rodney F. Moag
Published by The Center for Asian Studies The University of Texas at Austin
Spring,2002
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments ..................................................... , ....................................................... i Preface ............................................................................................................................. .iii The Book and How to Use It .............................................................................................. '.vii Malayalam Script ................................................................... , ......................................... xv LESSON ONE .................................................................................................................... 1 LESSON ONE CONVERSATION: What is Your Name? .................................................... 3 LESSON ONE GRAMMAR NOTES .................................................................................... 6 1.1. How to Use Grammatical Explanations ............................................................. 6 1.2. The Order of Elements Within the Sentence ...................................................... 6 1.3. Equative Sentences ........................................................................................... 6 1.4. Copula Deletion in Short Sentences Giving Names ............................................ .7 1.5. The Quotative or Citation Particle raj) 7 1.6. Social Dimensions of the Personal Pronouns ....................................................... 8 LESSON TW0 ................................................................................................................... 11 LESSON TWO CONVERSATION: Mr. Thomas' Office ....................................................... 15 LESSON TWO GRAMMAR NOTES .................................................................................... 19 2.1. The Locative Case of Nouns .............................................................................. 19 2.2. Spelling Changes in Adding Vowel-Initial Suffixes .......................................... 20 2.3. -b3J as a Marker for Yes-No Questions ............................................................... 21 2.4. Verbal Cues for the Near-Far Distinction ......................................................... 22 2.5 Changing the Order of Sentence Elements for Emphasis ...................................... 23 2.6 Spelling and Pronunciation Changes when Joining -2 o ....................................... 25 LESSON THREE ................................................................................................................ 26 LESSON THREE CONVERSATION: Is James Here? (Lending and Borrowing) .................... 28 LESSON THREE GRAMMAR NOTES ................................................................................. 35 3.1 Existive/Locative Sentences with 2 ~ ............................................................. 35 3.2 "One of Your" Possessive Phrases ....................................................................... 37 3.3 Possessive Sentences: Alienable versus Inalienable Possession ............................ 37 3.4 The Polite Command and Citation Forms of Verbs .............................................. 39 3.5 Impersonal Expressions for Health and Welfare ................................................ 39 3.6 Coordinate Conjunctions " ... and ... and" ............................................................. 40 LESSON FOUR. ................................................................................................................. 39 LESSON FOUR CONVERSATION: Going to the Teashop .................................................. 41 LESSON FOUR GRAMMAR NOTES .................................................................................. 47 4.1 Wishes and Desires the Indirect Form ~OJ 6Tn o ........................... : ...................... 47 4.2. Likes and Desires Indirect Sentences with g;Q n33' s OJ J 6TD .....................................48 4.3 Differing Responses to Yes-No Questions According to the Verb ......................... .49 4.4 The Dative For Indirect Objects ........................................................................ .50 4.5 Differences in the Dative Ending ...................................................................... .50 4.6 Two Kinds of "Giving" ....................................................................................... .52 LESSON FIVE .................................................................................................................. .53 LESSON FIVE CONVERSATION: Will Krishnan Go to the Movies? ................................ .55 LESSON FIVE GRAMMAR NOTES ................................................................................... .59 5.1 The Simple Present Tense ................................................................................. .59 5.2 The Gerund and the Infinitive of Purpose ........................................................... 60 5.3 More Possessive with 2 ~ ................................................................................ 61 5.4 Changing the Order of Elements in the Sentence for Emphasis ............................ 61
an .........................................................
5.5 The Negative Question Marker -~-:::i- ................................................................62 5.6 The Plural Marker for Nouns and its Spelling Changes ....................................... 63 5.7 Verbstems and the Hint of [y] W ........................................................................ 65 LESSON SIX ....................................................................................................................... 67 LESSON SIX CONVERSATION: Do You Know the Brahmin Hotel? (Directions) ............... 69 LESSON SIX GRAMMAR NOTES······························'-·······················'···· .......................... 75 6.1 The Polite Assertive Marker -cmo~~:P ............................................................. ]5 6.2 The Negative Question as a Signposting and Rhetorical Device ......................... 76 6.3 The Intentive or Potential Verb Ending .................... :......................................... 77 6.4 The Indirect Uses of cmo o 1 CQ) I cfh.. .. . ... . ... .. . .. .. ... ... ..... .. .. .. ... . . ... ... . .... ... . .... .. ... .. ..... 78 6.5 The Postpositions and their Case Requirements ................................................. 79 6.6 The Possessive Form (Case) of the Noun ............................................................. 80 6.7 More Uses of the -:xrcr Verbform ....................................................................... 83 LESSON SEVEN ................................................................................................................ 86 LESSON SEVEN CONVERSATION: Where Will I Catch the Quilon Bus? ........................ 91 LESSON SEVEN GRAMMAR NOTES ................................................................................ 95 7.1 The General Future and the Habitual Ending-~ o .............................................. 95 7.2 The Impersonal Verb cfh1 §Jcfh ....................................... :..................................... 98 7.3 Asking and Telling Time .................................................................................... 98 7.4 The Locative Requirement with Verbs of Motion ................................................ 99 7.5 The Two Part Qualifier nBJWHHH ····································································99 7.6 Spelling Changes When Joining nBJWrn.gil and ntj)ffh1 cmL ...... ,......................... 101 7.7 The Hortative "Lets" Verbform ......................................................................... 101 LESSON EIGHT ......................................................................................................-........... 103 LESSON EIGHT CONVERSATION: Hey James! (Adjective/Relative Clauses) ................. 107 LESSON EIGHT GRAMMAR NOTES ................................................................................. 113 8.1 Uses and Forms of the Accusative Form (Case) of the Noun ................................. 113 8.2 Adjective or Relative Clauses Made with Present Verbform ............................... 115 8.3 The Addressive or Associative Form of the Noun ............................................... 116 8.4 The Desiderative Form of the Verb -6TTJ o .......................................................... 118 8.5 Reported Commands with the Infinitive ........................................................... 120 8.6 Tag Questions .................................................................................................... 121 8.7 Times of the Day ............................................................................................... 124 MINILESSON A ................................................................................................................ 126 LESSON NINE .................................................................................................................. 127 LESSON NINE CONVERSATION: Sharing Saris ............................................................. 130 LESSON NINE GRAMMAR NOTES ................................................................................... 135 9.1 Making Pronouns and Noun Phrases from Adjectives ........................................... 135 9.2 The Complex Verb I
~
,\;)
2--
'-1--
xxx
Table IV· . · Cont"mued
xx xi
Table V: How to Write Consonants without the Inherent Vowel
A. For three of the consonants, the inherent vowel -CCIO is suppressed by the addition of a ' tail" as follows. 1
becomes
becomes
becomes
xxxn
Table V: ·Continued
B. For two other consonants, the inherent vpwel is suppressed through the use of a completely different character as follows.
becomes
becomes
C. For all other consonants, the inherent vowel is suppressed by the use of
the echo vowel (-'"' ), which is written at the upper right-hand corner of the consonant, as in the following examples:
v
s xxxiii
Table VI: How to Write the Common Double Consonants
v
6l3 +
~ v
v
cm
...2J + ...2J
v
s
cm
s
+
v
m
+
+
v
m
60.J + 60.J XXXlV
Table VI: Continued
-6
v
G -
v
Q] + Q]
CQ) + CQ)
If
~£5) 3J~5
ru v
7
v
ru
eJ + eJ
xxxv
+
ru
Table VIII: How to Join CQ), A.
When
~.
('),
eJ, and nJ to Preceding Consonants
is the second component of a conjunct, it is represented by
CQ)
the symbol
J , which is placed to the right of the preceding consonant,
as in CTD J v
CO) eg. B.
ffi)
CQ)
+
CTD Jo ("truth")
When either CO or () is the second component of a conjunct, that component is uniformly represented by the symbol to the left of the preceding consonant, as in
Lo..Jl CQ) o
("beloved")
+ () eg. C.
Lo..J
co
+ eg.
L , which is placed
Lo..J J ~ S cB
U:,CLJ
(for English "proctor")
When eJ is the second component of a conjunct, it is represented by the symbol as
6D
,
which is placed underneath the preceding consonant,
in~
+ eJ eg. ~ J D.
ru ("jackfruit tree")
When OJ is the second component of a conjunct, it is represented by the symbol J , which is placed to the right of the preceding consonant, as in
ffi)
ffi)
J
+
ru
ffi)Jt~ ........., I
eg. ffi)JCTm o ("one's own")
xxxvii
LESSON ONE Reference List
Classroom Expressions
o..JO®l cajj~p(q
Please say I speak/ tell. everyone
0
63crnlaj
together
o..Jocwi mmcruCTDle.JJ(gCWJ?
say Do you understand?
mm en) CTDl eJ J cwl
(I) understand.
Vocabulary
uo col
okay, fine, good
mJlCTJB
Bill
COJOJrr8
a male (Hindu) name
m16m1~J@S
your (polite)
cg o..J ci
name what? what is? (short for caj) CTm J
6TD')
my Quotative or Citation Marker (placed after the quoted element) he (inferior to speaker) who?
1
Lesson One
2 v
~6TD
is
coJ2?,·ITT
a male name
cmoruDo
she (inferior to speaker)
Cil 6TD1
a female name
CCIOG~Gn..D
he (respected)
0
~ CTD J Cil en) CTD J
cB
Mr. Thomas
v
g;Q CTD
this (thing)
nB! mJ) '.)?
g;Q cm
What is this?
QJ'.)b(ffi
mango
v
CCIOCTD
that (thing)
CLJ'8 0
banana v
CLJ 1CTD CTD cfTi o
book
ffi.Ji&
book, notebook
~CLJm
pen
~
Cil (JC)
cfTi~
table
CTDCO
chair
Reading Practice v
Note
how~
6TD joins to the following items.
m16m3Do
ml 6m3 ~ J
cmoruDo
cmo ru ~ J
COJCilITT
(Q'.)Cilffi'.)6TD
COJ2?,m
co J 2?, m J
g;Qcm
g;QCIDJ6ffi
nq)rrm
nq) mJ) '.) 6ffi
6ffi
6ffi v
6ffi
Lesson One
3
v
v
~co
~COJ6TD
G CTD J Cil rn5 mJ J ~
G CU) J Cil CT\J CT\J J 0 J 6TD
v
v
v
v
v
cNO G GG n._() o
JCT8
6lU> 6Til3 [X)
CITTO rucB
cmoGG:GrLD o
v
o.GJ CTQ)
COJ~m
g;Q(O)
a: muo
cm a: cru co
m6TD1
v
o.Q)ITT) v
w l m5 ®cm o cmoru[X)
~co
7. Pronunciation Practice: A
Practice the alveolar sounds in the following words. The tip of your tongue should touch the roof of your mouth behind the teeth as in the "nd" sound in English "Sunday."
ng)wCT8o
my
CITTO ru 6J CT8 0
his
(OJCil6)CT80
Raman's
coJ~wCT8o
Rajan's
1 CT8 ()
ffi) '.) () @
sir's
Lesson One
6 A
Practice the dental clusters in the following items. Make sure the tip of the tongue touches the back of the teeth. 'what what is this
C. Practice distinguishing between the dental and alveolar sotmds as the above items are
spoken aloud. If you hear a dental sound, respond by saying nJ ~ ("tooth").
If the
word has a non-dental (alveolar) sound, respond with @. ~ ("not, no").
LESSON ONE GRAMMAR NOTES
1.1. How to Use Grammatical Explanations Remember not to devote too much time to studying and learning the grammar, even if you find it irresistibly fascinating; the real focus of your efforts should always be the. language itself. If you find the grammar sections unpleasant or inscrutable, focus on the examples rather than the explanations. Grammar must be an aid, never an obstacle, to learning. In this interest, every effort has been made to minimize the technical jargon in the grammar notes. Where technical terms are unavoidable, I have tried to keep them as simple and straightforward as possible.
1.2. The Order of Elements Within the Sentence The normal order for the Malayalam sentence is Subject, Object (or complement), Verb. The most basic rule is that the verb must appear at the end of the sentence. This rule is exhibited in all sentences found in this lesson's conversation and exercises.
1.3. Equative Sentences The type of sentences found in this lesson is called "equative," or "equational"; that is, they make a statement of the type X = Y. The verb in such sentences functions like an equals sign, and is often called a copula or copular verb. Remember that the Malayalam sentence
Lesson One
7
seems a strange equation from our point of view, since the equals sign appears on the right-hand side, rather than in the middle as in English. For example,
II
cmo ru CT8
(l) J
~mJ
6TD'
11
is
most literally rendered, "he Rajan is." In equative sentences; the second element is not strictly an object, but a complement or predicate nominative. Sentences with objects, i.e. those with action verbs instead of copula verbs, are introduced in Lesson Five. A third type of sentence, the existive sentence, is introduced in Lesson Three.
1.4. Copula Deletion in Short Sentences Giving Names In general, the verb is the most basic and necessary element in the Malayalam sentence.
Ordinarily, it must be retained even when everything else is dropped off. Notable exceptions are sentences that give a person's name or identify an object. These verbless sentences are more colloquial and less formal in nature.
1.
A B.
n4)@ CT8 o n4)@CT8o
~ o..J c5 Cll J m CT8
n4) cm J 6TD.
~o..Jc5 CllJmcrB.
"My name is Raman."
2.
A.
B.
cmocm affilM
6)6)eJ~L6TlJo1 COIQ) 6TD. 6)6)eJ~L6TlJ01.
"That's the library."
In literature and in oral narrative, verbless sentences are sometimes used to introduce
relevant details--either to set the scene or to give information about a character, place, or subject already introduced.
1.5. The Quotative or Citation Particle
nm m)
Sentences that give a person's name have another special feature besides that of copula deletion in informal speech. When the copula is used, the name stated must be followed by the particle
nq)®. nm® is a marker indicating
that something is being quoted or cited from
another, usually earlier, situation. In later lessons you will find it used as a marker for
Lesson One
8
reported quotes, thoughts, feelings, and the like. In writing it is always joined to the preceding word.
1.6. Social Dimensions of the Personal Pronouns
Personal pronouns are of three types. First-person pronouns refer to the person speaking: oneself or the group for whom one is speaking. Second-person pronouns refer to the person(s) with whom one is conversing. Third-person pronouns refer to persons talked about. A fairly comprehensive discussion of the personal pronouns appears below. Second Person Pronouns: Malayalam has several words meaning "you." The particular pronoun that a given speaker selects depends on that person's relationship with the individual addressed. This lesson uses the term family relationship.
ml 6ITT3 Do
mlcmoDo,
which indicates a somewhat formal, non-
is quite polite and may be used safely in any situation
without fear of insulting anyone .. Two other words are in common use. The term
ml is used only
in addressing someone who is clearly younger and of lower social standing. Adults use
ml to address children,
~nvariably
both inside the family and without. It is a non-reciprocal term,
that is, it can be used from parent to child, but not from child to parent. The term
@'.)ITT
is
generally used between persons of the same age who have no kinship ties, such as school or college classmates. Other words for "you" come in subsequent lessons and are fully covered in Appendix A at the back of the book. Because the words for "you" are loaded, Malayalis prefer other ways to address those with whom they interact. Within the family, kinship terms are used to address all those who are superior to oneself in age. Whereas English-speakers use kinship terms only for mother, father, grandparents, aunts, and uncles, Malayalis also use kinship terms to address older siblings. Lesson Three introduces the separate Malayalam words for older brother, older sister, younger brother, and younger sister. These terms are not restricted to the nuclear family as in English; in Malayali culture all cousins are also considered brothers and sisters.
Siblings
younger than oneself are not normally addressed by kinship terms, but are ·spoken to by name or with
ml.
In addition, proper names are commonly used in addressing persons outside the
family in order to avoid the issue of relative status. Mary reach the office today?"
Thus one might ask Mary, "When did
Lesson One
9
Third-Person Pronouns: Malayalam has three words for "he" and two for "she." The
czno OJ cW
pronoun
is used for males who are socially inferior, in age or social status, or for v
equals with whom one has a close personal relationship. CT3TO G cg G n...0 o, on the other hand, is a pronoun used for socially superior males. In referring to persons of truly high
station~-top
level personages in religious, governmental, or other institutions, as well as movie v
czno G cg G n...O
0
is always used.
A third masculine pronoun,
cmo CQ) '.)()o
then
oW G 8:::J J [>o
when?
v
g;QOn
today v
cmocm
that day on which day?
Adverbs of Manner: this way, like this
Cffi06Ufl6)ffi
that way, like that which way?, how?
Vocabulary
ffi)
J c6'
ffi) J
() 1@ CT8 ()
you (respectful), gentleman, sir your (respectful), gentleman's
~nJJlm5
office
g;Qrulws
here
13
Lesson Two
cmQ) G 6Tn J?
is? are? (question form of cmQ) 6TTI)
n..DOJrc3
a male (Muslim) name
cmo@cm
yes
fil2 rul 6) s cmm Ei)(lD
right here
-@CITTl
in, among
cmQ) n..0 I nu1CTJ8
in the office
g;QCQ)JUo
he (equal, close by)
g;QCQ)J6)~ mmrr0'nule.JJGCQ)J?
Do you know I recognize him? no
a formal greeting (literally "I bow to you," also
m OJ m) Gcm)
ruls
house, home, native place
o.girul@s
where
cmJuauaice
Trichur, a town in central Kerala
G~Je.Jl
job, work
GTmJcr8
I
one (indefinite article) doctor -~o
also, too this (adjective) a male (Hindu) name Cochin, an important port city in central Kerala teacher
-63'.)
question marker
Lesson Two
14
Reading Practice A Note how - g;Q CTJ8 joins to the following words.
ruls
rul31CT58
dhGCTDCO
cm GCTD CO CQ)1CTJ8
GQJUd
GQJ Ud CQ)1CTJ8
ccnicm
cmocml@B
ccniruccr
cmo ru co1CT58
mlbm1Do
mlbm1~1CT58
v
. rucmlCTJB
rucm COIQ) CLO I m5
COIQ) CLO I ffi)1CT58
ruruc8
ru ru co1CT58
n...J 2m5cm cfh o
n...J 2m5cmcfhCITTm1 CT58
GcfhCO~o
Gcfh CO ~ CITTm1CTJ8 B. Note how - ~ o joins to the following words.
Gcfhuarum
GcfhCJd0Jffi2 o
cmorum
cmo rum 2o
co J 2'?im
COJ2'?iffi2o
GQJUd
GQJCJdCQ)2 o
a:i6ID1
. a:i6IDlCQ)20
dhGCTDCO
cfh GCTD CO CQ) 2o
ccniruc8
cmo ru co 2o
ccniruDo
cmo ru ~ 2o
n...J 2m5cm cfh o
n...J2rn5cmcfhru2 o
Lesson Two
15
Conversation
coJmm3: cruJol@m3o cDIQ)oJJlmJ ~rul@SCQ)JG6TDJ? n...0 ml c3: crno @cm , ~ rul 6J s curm 6J cm . - - - -cDIQ) oJJI CTUl cu3- --n...0mlc3:
~CQ)J6)~ mmrn)crule.JJGCQ)J?
COJmm3: ~~n...O ml c3:
~ cci5 Gcm J men) cru Jo J ITT).
Gcm J mCTU, ~cm
coJmmJ6TD. v
v
GcmJmCTU: mmCTUc6rnJco o. coJmm3: mmmJc6rnJco o, cruJol@cr8o ruls oB)OJl@SCQ)J? c cmJmmJ: · oB)@m3o rul s crnJwCJdicol e.JJ. coJmm3: ml6IT13~]6JS G~Je.Jl nB)CTrnJITT5? GcmJmmJ: 6TmJm3 b3CO] CUJJcfhSOJITT5. coJmm3: ml6ITD~]o CWJcfhSOJG6TDJ?
6TmJffi]o b3CO]
v
CUJJcmSOJ. n...0mlc3: GcmJmmJ, ~ro cruJcB cDIQ)coJITT5? ccmJmmJ: ~@ GcmCJdrum3 CTUJo Jm5.
~CQ)J ~]6JS
ruls
6J cm J-S:jl CQ)l eJ J m5. GcmCJdOJCT8: mmmJc6rnJCOo. n...0mlc3: Gcm Ud ru m3 :
n...0 ml c3:
mmmJc6rnJCOo, ml6ITD~]@S G~Je.Jl nB)CTmJITT5? 6Tm J m3 b3 col o o 1--S:J cB cDIQ) ITT). b3 J , crno cci5
Ud co1.
Lesson Two
16
Exercises
1.
Respond to questions from the teacher or from classmates by giving your own home town or state. Models: A. Teacher:
ml 6rn1~J6) S of1 S o.ffi rul 6) S CQ) J 6ffi?
o.ffi 6)CT80 ru"l S ml CTDlOl CQ)l e.J J Gffi. Teacher: ml 6rn1 ~J 6) S ru"l S ro::Jl c&:i J ~ (f) J CQ)1CTJ8 Student: COlO 6) (Q) , ro::Jl c&:i J ~ (f) J CQ)1e.J J 6ffi. Student:
B.
2.
cm'Q) ~ 6TD J ?
Form answers to questions from the instructor or from classmates by giving the occupation of the person designated.
Remember, English words can be used where
Malayalam job titles are unknown. Models: A. Instructor: COlO CQ) J ~J 6) S ~ ~ J e.Jl
o.ffi CTm J 6ffi? Student: COlO CQ) J ()() CW J ah S 0 J 6ffi. B. Instructor: COlO ru c8 0 0 "l ~ c8 cm'Q) ~ 6TD J? Student: COlO 6) (Q) , 0 0 "l ~ c8 cm'Q) 6ffi.
3.
Read the following sentences and make sure you understand the meaning. Then practice them orally by repeating after the instructor.
2.
cmorucoi o oo"l~c8 cm'Q)~ 6TDJ? cm'Q) CLJ i m) cm d3, o o.m rul 6) s CQ) J 6ffi?
3.
cmo ru CT8
g;Q ~ 8::::P ()()
4.
ru"l 3l CTJ8
cm'Q) co 1GIB'?
s.
cmoG'~Gn...Dmm16)CT8o ~~Je.Jl
6.
cmo® OJe.JCQ)J ~ cmmlCTJB CLJo(Q)i.
i.
cm JCJC) c..ra ico1e.J J 6ffi. nq)CTmJGffi?
6) dJ-i J ~1 CQ) 10 (Q) Jera c..ra i co10 ~ dJ-i co ~mm1CTJ8 s. cmo ru co1CTJ8 cm'Q) co J 6ffi cw J c£h s ccr? 7.
cm'Q) 6ffi.
Lesson Two
4.
17
Match the following English sentences in Colunm I with their Malayalam equivalents in Column II. v
v
l.
Is Mr. Keshavan your teacher?
l.·
cmorut>o b3CT!l CWJc8-iSOJ6TD.
2.
Where is your office?
2.
Gc&iuaruCTB cruJccl' m16Zjl3~l@S · o ol-i!oJG 6TD J?
3.
He is a doctor.
3.
m 16Zjl3 ~J 6) s rul s 6) c8JJ~l CQ)l e.JJG 6TD J?
4.
Is this a mango?
4. g;Q
5.
She is a doctor.
5.
cm
Q:JJ 6Zjl3 JCQ) JG 6TDJ?
ml 6Zjl3 ~J@S CCIQ)o...Olcn5 cajJOJl@s CCIQ)6ffi'? v
6.
Is your home in Cochin?
6.
cmoGGGCLD o 63CT!l CU) '.) ce;' s
7. cmQ)
7. whose book?
() '.) EiTD.
ruls
8.
that chair
8. ~cm ool~c8?
9.
which teacher?
9.
CCIQ)CT!l@S o..Jlm)cmce-, o?
10. cmQ) c8-i Gcru CT!
10. that house
Prepare written Malayalam responses at home to the following questions.
5.
1.
m16Zjl3~J@S 6rulce"1 g;Q'D GQ:JCJaCQ)le.JJG6ffiJ?
2.
m16Zjl3~J@S ool~c8 CCIQ)CTJJ6ffi'?
3.
g;Q'D
4.
cmo ru eel' m 16Zjl3 ~J 6) s cmQ) CTJ J 6TD?
5.
ml 6Zjl3 Do b3CTJl cwJce;'soJG GmJ?
Gmua CQ)lCTJB Go..J mCQ)lG 6TTS J?
6. ml6Zjl30o CCIQ)CTJl@S ool~oJ6ffi'?
7. Gce-, ua ru CT8 cru Jo1 @CT8 o rul s aj) rul 6) s CQ) J EiTD? 8. cmo ru CTJ1
cW
cmQ) CTJ J 6TD Gcm J men) cru J eel'?
9. ..2.Jl c&nJ GCf) J aj) rul 6) S CQ) J 6ffi'? 10.
ml 6Zjl3 ~J@S G~Je.Jl cajJOJl@SCQ)J 6ffi'?
18
Lesson Two
6.
Practice introducing various class members to the instructor and to each other as per the model found in the conversation. Remember always to use Cmll GGG o_D o or Cmll OJ
c8
when referring to the instructor.
7. A.
Rewrite the following sentences adding - ~ o to the underlined words. Model: EiTmJm 63C02 CWJahSOJm). '-'
'-'
6Tm8ffi2 o 63C02 CWJcfhSOJ6m. 1.
o.qi@m3o Go..Jc5 COJmm3 o-O)CTDJm).
2.
cnnol@mo
3.
mlbGB~l@s ruls cmJuaCJdicole.JJG6TDJ?
4.
m16D"l1~16)S o..JZcrUCTDcfho g;QOJl@SCQ)Jm).
5.
((ffiJ
6.
((ffi)co) m16D"l1~1@S ~o..JmCillJG6mJ?
7.
G~ G o_D o
CCl0 nJJlm5 g;Qrul@s(Q)JG 6TDJ?
nB) 6) m) 0 OJI §1eJ8 m).
m16D"13~]6)S 6D.J]& GCTlCJdCillle.JJ~6TDJ?
B. Separate the two individual words in each of the items below.
g;Q rul 6) S CQ) 8 G6m J COJCTlffiJm) '-'
'-'
ffi)J086m
CCIQ)C086m
o..JZcrUcmcmmJm)
6) c£h 8~1CQ)1eJ8 m)
ool~oJm) o.qi rul 6) s
CQ) J
cwuaCJdicole.JJ
8. Pronunciation Practice: In Lesson One we praticed speaking and recognizining the difference between dental
sounds (made with the tongue touching the teeth) and those made with the tongue touching the roof of the mouth behind the teeth (alveolar sounds). We now focus on the distinction between dental and retroflex sounds.
19
Lesson Two
A. Practice the dental. Repeat the following words after the instructor and make sure your tongue touches the back of your upper teeth. v
g;Q (Q)
' this (thing) v
(\ffiJ (Q)
that (thing)
cmo wcm
yes
1
v
n_J ffi) (Q) c:£h
book
0
g;Q 6) (Q) mJ) :J
What is it?
B. Identify and practice the items in the reference list containing dental sounds.
C. Repeat the following items containing retroflex sounds. Make sure that your tongue is curled backwards with the tip touching the roof of the back of the mouth (the hard palate).
g;Qrul@s
here
omrulws
where?
CW:J~Sc-6'
doctor
ru'ls
house, home he (equal to speaker, at a distance) she (inferior to speaker)
D. Identify and practice the items in the reference list containing retroflex sounds.
LESSON TWO GRAMMAR NOTES
2.1. The Locative Case of Nouns In English, location is expressed by phrases made up of a noun and a preposition. The
noun denotes the place, while the preposition that proceeds it indicates location and/ or direction relative to the place:
we say "in the house," "on the street," "at home," etc. In
Malayalam the various realtionships between each noun and the other elements in the sentence are commonly expressed by endings attached to the nouns. These endings, technically called
20
Lesson Two
"case markers," serve the same function as our English prepositions.
Location is shown in
Malayalam by attaching the ending -g:Q CITTl (meaning "in," "on," "at," etc. with a singular noun, and sometimes "among" with a plural noun). A list of nouns in their locative forms appears in Reading Practice A of this lesson.
2.2 Spelling Changes in Adding Vowel-Initial Suffixes No suffix in Malayalam may stand alone; it must always be attached to a word, the one exception being when they are set off artificially (as in these lessons), in order to explain them to foreigners. endings.
Certain rules of Malayalam spelling must be observed when adding these
These conventions are summarized below.
They are few in number, fairly
straightforward, and applicable to all cases in which a vowel-initial element is joined to the preceding element. These include the addition of other vowel-initial suffixes to nouns, as well as the frequent practice of writing common combinations of words together as a single unit. These very basic spelling conventions will become second-nature as students are exposed to more and more written Malayalam, but at this time, an explanation of the system will be useful. The most basic rule of Malayalam script is that all non-initial vowels within a graphic word, i.e. any unit bounded by a space on either side, must be carried by a consonant symbol. In other words, only dependent vowel symbols may appear within a graphic word. The sole exception occurs when a word begins with a vowel. When a Malayalam word ends in a consonant, therefore, the initial vowel of the ending is attached to it, so that the result is a single syllable. Witness:
CTDJCJC3UdlC01CITTl
"in Trichur," cn5&:il~1CTJ8, "in school," etc.
(Note the change from half consonants to full consonants in adding case endings to these words.) When the final element is the anusvara (- o ), this changes to
CTmD
(double
CTD) with the CLJl C"ru@cfri o v
addition of the locative, or other vowel-initial case endings. For example, ("book") becomes
CLJl cn5CTDcfriCTmD1 CITTl ("in the book").
Note that this change does not occur v
when words ending in - o are written in combination with copular verbs, such as CffiQ) 61T) . It follows from the above rule that two vowels may never occur within a graphic word without an intervening consonant. Therefore, when a Malayalam word ends in a vowel, an extra consonant must be added, serving both as a joining device and as a carrier for the initial vowel of the suffix. The consonant
CQ)
is the joining device for most vowels:
cfri G: cru CO
21
Lesson Two ("chair") becomes cfuGffi)(QCQ)lcITTl ("in /oo the chair"), 6)c:6JJ~1
("Cochin") becomes
6)c:6JJ~lwlm8 ("in/at Cochin"), and ..2.JlcfroJJG(J)J ("Chicago") becomes ..2.JlcfroJJG CJ)
J
Wl cITTl
("in/ at Chicago").
The prime exception to the above occurs when a word ends in the echo vowel represented by the crescenf appearing above and to the right of a final consonant. The echo vowel drops and is replaced by the initial vowel of the suffix or of the word being joined. This initial vowel is then written along with the last consonant of the first word. Thus we have
cmo cm ("that") becoming cmo cml cITTl ("in that") and 6TlJJ c:eITT ("notebook") becoming 6TlJJ cfroJ1 cITTl ("in the book"). Students should again refer to the list of various locative forms in Reading Practice A. Note that when a suffix or a separate word is joined to a word ending in an echo vowel, the total number of syllables is reduced by one. For example, the four syllables in
cmo cm
cmQ) 6rr) reduce to three when writing or speaking the combined form
cmo cm J 6rr).
2.3. -630 as a Marker for Yes-No Questions There are basically two types of questions in Malayalam:
information questions and
yes-no questions. Information questions contain a question word (what, who, why, when, etc.) and require an answer that provides specific information. Such information, not presently held by the questioner, is requested to fill that particular gap in the premise or proposition under whi.Ch the questioner is operating at the time. We have discussed three question words so far:
cmQ)c-5 ("who?"), o.G)mD ("what?"), and o.G)OJl@S ("where?").
Note also that the
adverb trios in this lesson's Reference List, as well as the demonstrative pronouns and adjectives in the Lesson Three Reference List, all contain a question word as their third member. These are used to request specific information not. The question word in this type of question usually appears right before the verb in Malayalam, with nothing in between. Yes-no questions, on the other hand, contain no question word as such, and expect an answer that signifies only that the proposition contained in the question is valid or not valid. For instance, the question expressed in Example 1 below might be restated, "Your home is in Chicago--is that true or not true?"
22
Lesson Two
"Is your home in Chicago?"
In English, often the only cue we have as to whether a proposition is a statement or a question is the difference between a falling or a rising intonation in speech, or the difference between a period or a question mark in writing. In Malayalam, the verbal question marker - 63:) is added.to the verb. In terms of spelling, the addition of this ending follows the rules just v
set forth in Grammar Note 2.2. The short form of cGlQ) 6TD cannot take - 63:), however. Thus, the sentence ~cm CJa co1 CQ):)? depends entirely on a rising or falling intonation to signal whether it is a question or a statement.
Note that the verb, copular or otherwise, may
sometimes be deleted so that the question marker - 63:) attaches directly to the end of a word or phrase being questioned. Witness: ~cg (ID:)? ("this one?" I "this?"), also
6) cEh:) ~1
CQ)l-
cg eJ:)? ("in Cochin?"), etc. Note that the question marker -63:) may be attached to the quotative particle v
raj)CTD. In such cases the real question being asked is, "Did you say ... ?". Witness:
"His name is Raman."
"Did you say Raman?"
2.4. Verbal Cues for the Near-Far Distinction
You can see from the demonstrative pronouns and adjectives for "this" (~ M) and "that" (CiffilM) in the Lesson One Vocabulary that Malayalam has a "near-far" distinction similar to that of English. You may note from this lesson's Reference List that the same distinction also operates in adverbs of place, time, and manner. The distinction itself needs ro explanation since it will coincide with the intuitions you have already developed through English, but Malayalam is more systematic in that the initial sound of the word marks clearly whether the word indicates the "near" or the "far" alternative.
The sound
~
means "near",
23
Lesson Two
while
cmo
signifies "far," or rather, "not near," in terms of space, time, or whatever dimension
is in focus. In Malayalam this distinction is also used witl\ third person personal pronolll1S. Thus,
though the COmmOn form Of the pronoun begins With
cmo-
I
thereby indicating that the refe,rent
is not particularly near, it also has a "near" counterpart be~g with g;Q-. These special
g;Q- forms are only used when the person referred to is an active or passive party to the conversation.
In Lesson One, therefore,
cmo ru CT8' cmo ru ()()
and
cmo G~ G ~ 0
were used to
inquire about persons in the same room, but not involved in the present conversation, whereas in Lesson Two the near form g;QOJ()Q is used because the person indicated is listening. These "near" forms are used, as you have seen, in introducing people to each other and also in formal speeches of introduction, commendation, and the like.
All other occasions take the normal
"far" forms of the pronouns.
2.5. Changing the Order of Sentence Elements for Emphasis
Some students may have noticed that the eighth sentence in Exercise Three, reproduced below as Example 4, does not exhibit the customary order of elements, i.e. Subject, Object, Verb. Whenever a speaker changes the cardinal order in a sentence in Malayalam, he or she does so in order to emphasize or draw attention to a particular element in the sentence. It is possible to v
emphasize any item in the sentence by moving the copular verb cmQ) 6TD to the position immediately after the item to be stressed. Example 1 below follows the normal order and gives no emphasis, while Example 2 emphasizes the subject, "he," and Example 3 emphasizes the object/predicate, "Raman." The discourse function of this reordering is often to close off other alternatives. Thus Example 2 says that he--not someone else one may have mistakenly thought--is Raman, and Example 3 suggests that he is Raman, rather than Bill, or whoever else one may have taken him to be. In English we usually convey this kind of emphasis by simply stressing the item when speaking. i.
cmo ru m5 co 8 rn m5 "He is Raman"
cmQ) 6TD.
Lesson Two
24
"It's he (not someone else), who is Raman." Cll J a:icr8 cmQ) m)
3.
cmo ru ITT' .
"He is Raman (and not Keshavan or whoever you thought he might be)."
Note that reordering for emphasis may occur with both types of questions. Examples 4 v
and 5 show reordered information questions with v
mru6)m rul~lc&i::i o.
n_J ca;'c: nS'.l c:tml cm1 ml Q) l mJ nm ml c6u1 6T1J ::i ffiil roB c: n_J ::i cfri 6TT) 0 am rul s l m) cfri l () ~ n_J 6TT) 0 nm s l c6ln 6TT) 0. A: am
James: A:
cm
m:i ::i ~ IJll ~ •
nm rm ::i roB c.ra~l.
6rn)
6)6) ru cBi l c: rm~ o n_l CJ rnmn ::> roB
::i CT8 c: n_J ::i cfri 6) 3
n_ll@rm&::>6TD::> o.
iJl cm1.
•
108 ..
Lesson 8
Exercises
1.
Substitute the correct form of the words provided keeping the frame sentence constant.
Model: nqim1c&1 63. mCJI!lDo ~ruc8c&1 ~b@l] . A II nqim1~ & ~ cruoo16'm ~o1 cm1 ~·" B. /1 mCJI!l26's rn3&1~1ara n.Jo18::::J1&2cm cruocB ~m). cmm1c:&1 c~o1.cmzcrn>."
3. A. Substitute the accusative of the person words in the sentence provided.
~cmoDo
~
CD6m1 ccrnuarum
~ru6'mo ~~.!l.Iam
~ru~26's
~ ~CJI!l
cruoc-8 (U)OcfhSc-8
Lesson 8
109
3. B. Substitute the addressive of the person words provided in the frame sentence.
~(lji)Q
6) ~CQ)l
~mz~CT8