- Status constructus
The status constructus or construct state is a
noun form occurring inAfro-Asiatic languages . It is particularly common inSemitic languages (such as Arabic and Hebrew),Berber languages , and in the extinctEgyptian language . It occurs when a semantically definite noun (marked by the definite article "the" in English translation) is succeeded by another noun in agenitive relation to the first.Arabic
In
Arabic grammar , the status constructus is called "al-iḍāfa" (الإضافة; lit. "addition, annexion").The construct is one of the three states of nouns in Arabic, the other two being the
status absolutus (indefinite state) and thestatus emphaticus (definite state; also called the "status determinatus"). Concretely, the three states compare like this:*"ˀummun" — "a mother"
*"ˀ(a)l-ˀummu" — "the mother"
*"ˀummu" — "the mother of"*"ˀUmmun jamilah" — "A beautiful mother"
*"ˀAl-ˀummu jamilah" — "The mother is beautiful"
*"ˀUmmu 'l-shaykhi jamilah" — "The sheikh's mother is beautiful".In
Classical Arabic , words in the status constructus do not occur with the article "al", nor do they receive an "-n" after their case marking vowel (nunation ). When the following word begins with an article, however, dialectic and colloquial Arabic do allow a word in status constructus to take the defininte articleal- , but only when the construction is expressed periphrastically; in such a case, the above example would be "al-ˀUmm mtaʿ 'l-shaikh jamillah" inLibyan Arabic for example, with "mtaʿ" meaning "belongs to" or "related to".The rules of pronouncingTa' marbuta are closely linked to whether a word is in status constructus or not. This is more prominent in dialectical Arabic where status constructus is the only situation in whichTa' marbuta is pronounced /IPA|t/. The only exception to this rule is some Bedouin varieties of Arabic which have nunation optionally. In such a caseTa' marbuta is pronounced, as part of the nunation, as IPA|t in the case on indefinite state.Other situations where status constructus is marked is in the dual (both masculine and feminine) and the sound masculine plural (Jamʿ al-mudhakkar al-salim). In both cases the final nun is dropped in status constructus.This dropping of the nun does not occur in vernacular Arabic, except in very few fossilized cases.
Hebrew
In
Hebrew grammar , the status constructus is known as "smixut" (IPA : IPA|smiˈχut) (סמיכות, lit. "contiguity").*"báyit" — "(a) house"
*"habáyit" — "the house"
*"bet" — "house-of"
*"séfer" — "(a) book"
*"bet séfer" — "(a) school" ("literally" "house(-of) book")
*"bet haséfer" — "the school" (formal; "literally" "house(-of) the book")
*"habet séfer" — "the school" (colloquial, high-grade cohesion (bet-sefer as a single lexical unit); "literally" "the house(-of) book")*"ugá" — "cake" (feminine)
*"gviná" — "cheese"
*"ugát gviná" — "cheesecake"*"dibúr" — "speech" (an example for a noun for which the "smixut"-form is identical to the regular form)
*"xófeš" — "freedom"
*"xófeš hadibúr" — "freedom of speech" ("literally" "freedom(-of) the speech")See also
*
Compound (linguistics)
*Definiteness
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