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Illative case
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In grammar, the illative case (/ˈɪlətɪv/; abbreviated ILL; from Latin: illatus "brought in") is a grammatical case used in the Finnish, Estonian, Lithuanian, Latvian, Hungarian and Vepsian languages. It is one of the locative cases, and has the basic meaning of "into (the inside of)". An example from Hungarian is a házba ('into the house', with a ház meaning 'the house'). An example from Estonian is majasse and majja ('into the house'), formed from maja ('house'). An example from Finnish is taloon ('into the house'), formed from talo ('a house'), another from Lithuanian is laivan ('into the boat') formed from laivas ('boat'), and from Latvian laivā ('into the boat') formed from laiva ('boat').
In Finnish
[edit]The case is formed by adding -hVn, where 'V' represents the last vowel, and then removing the 'h' if a simple long vowel would result. For example, talo + Vn becomes taloon with a simple long 'oo'; cf. maa + hVn becomes maahan, without the elision of 'h'. This unusually complex way of adding a suffix can be explained by its reconstructed origin: a voiced palatal fricative. (Modern Finnish has lost palatalization and fricatives other than 'h' or 's'.) In some dialects spoken in Ostrobothnia, notably South Ostrobothnia, the 'h' is not removed; one says talohon. Some dialects of Finland Proper and Kymenlaakso also have a similar feature.[1] In some instances -seen is added, e.g. huone (room) and Lontoo (London) thus huoneeseen and Lontooseen respectively.
The other locative cases in Finnish, Estonian and Hungarian are:
- Inessive case ("(to be) in")
- Elative case ("out of")
- Adessive case ("(to be) on")
- Allative case ("onto")
- Ablative case ("from, off")
In Lithuanian
[edit]The illative case, denoting direction of movement, is now less common in the standard language but is common in the spoken language, especially in certain dialects. Its singular form, heard more often than the plural, appears in books, newspapers, etc. Most Lithuanian nouns can take the illative ending, indicating that from the descriptive point of view the illative still can be treated as a case in Lithuanian. Since the beginning of the 20th century it isn't included in the lists of standard Lithuanian cases in most grammar books and textbooks, and the prepositional construction į+accusative is more frequently used today to denote direction. The illative case was used extensively in older Lithuanian; the first Lithuanian grammar book, by Daniel Klein, mentions both illative and į+accusative but calls the usage of the illative "more elegant". Later, it has often appeared in the written texts of the authors who grew up in Dzūkija or Eastern Aukštaitija, such as Vincas Krėvė-Mickevičius.
The illative case in Lithuanian has its own endings, which are different for each declension paradigm, although quite regular, compared with some other Lithuanian cases. An ending of the illative always ends with -n in the singular, and -sna is the final part of an ending of the illative in the plural.
Certain fixed phrases in the standard language are illatives, such as patraukti atsakomybėn ("to arraign"), dešinėn! ("turn right"), vardan ("for the sake of" or "in the name of", e.g., in the name of the political party "Vardan Lietuvos", "For Lithuania").
| Nominative | Illative | Gloss | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Singular | Plural | Singular | Plural | ||
| masc. | karas | karai | karan | karuosna | war(s) |
| lokys | lokiai | lokin | lokiuosna | bear(s) | |
| akmuo | akmenys | akmenin | akmenysna | stone(s) | |
| fem. | upė | upės | upėn | upėsna | river(s) |
| jūra | jūros | jūron | jūrosna | sea(s) | |
| obelis | obelys | obelin | obelysna | apple tree(s) | |
In Tungusic languages
[edit]Tungusic languages have a rich case system, and as shown below the allative is among them:[2]
| Case | Vowel stem | Plosive stem | Nasal stem |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nominative | bira | dət | oron |
| Accusative | bira-βa | dət-pe | oron-mo |
| Indefinite accusative | bira-ja | dət-je | oron-o |
| Dative–locative | bira-dū | dət-tū | oron-dū |
| Allative | bira-tki | dət-tiki | oron-ti |
| Illative | bira-lā | dət-[tu]lə̄ | oron-dulā |
| Prolative | bira-lī | dət-[tu]lī | oron-dulī |
| Allative-locative | bira-kla | dət-iklə | oron-ikla |
| Elative | bira-duk | dət-tuk | oron-duk |
| Ablative | bira-git | dət-kit | oron-njít |
| Instrumental | bira t | dət-it | oron-di |
Further reading
[edit]- Karlsson, Fred (2018). Finnish - A Comprehensive Grammar. London and New York: Routledge. ISBN 978-1-138-82104-0.
- Anhava, Jaakko (2015). "Criteria For Case Forms in Finnish and Hungarian Grammars". journal.fi. Helsinki: Finnish Scholarly Journals Online.
References
[edit]- ^ "Jälkitavujen vokaalien välinen h". sokl.uef.fi (in Finnish). Archived from the original on 2021-10-08. Retrieved 2021-12-25.
- ^ Vovin, Alexander (2010-04-06). "Tungusic Languages". In Brown, Keith (ed.). Concise Encyclopedia of Languages of the World. Elsevier. pp. 143–145. ISBN 978-0-08-087775-4.
External links
[edit]- Hungarian illative case from www.HungarianReference.com
Illative case
View on GrokipediaOverview
Definition and Function
The illative case is a grammatical case used in certain languages to mark motion into the interior of an entity, often corresponding to English prepositions such as "into."[1] This case belongs to the broader category of locative cases, emphasizing dynamic directionality rather than mere position.[2] Its primary functions encompass indicating the direction of movement, particularly entering an enclosed space or interior; expressing beneficiary or purpose relations, as in actions performed "for the sake of" a recipient; and denoting temporal extent, such as the endpoint of a duration ("until").[2] For example, in Finnish, the form taloon conveys "into the house," illustrating its role in spatial direction (with further details in language-specific usage).[1] Syntactically, the illative case typically attaches as a suffix to nouns, pronouns, or postpositions to encode these relations within a clause.[1] In case-marking languages, it adheres to agreement rules, requiring adjectives, determiners, and other modifiers to inflect in the same case as the head noun for concord.[6] The illative case is clearly distinguished from the locative case, which denotes static location within an interior without implying motion, and the ablative case, which signals departure or motion away from a source.[2] This tripartite distinction among directional and positional cases helps structure spatial and relational expressions in affected languages.[1] While most prominent in Uralic languages, similar cases appear in some Baltic and Tungusic languages.Etymology and Historical Development
The term "illative" originates from Late Latin illativus, derived from the past participle illatus of the verb inferre ("to bring in" or "to carry into"), originally denoting inference in logic but adapted in grammar to describe a case expressing motion or direction into an interior space. This terminology entered grammatical usage in the late 19th century during comparative linguistics, particularly during the systematic study of Uralic languages, building on earlier work by scholars such as Matthias Castrén, who applied classical case labels to non-Indo-European systems to highlight functional parallels with Latin and Greek directional cases.[7][8] In Proto-Uralic, no distinct illative case is securely reconstructed; instead, the proto-language is thought to have possessed a basic set of 6–8 cases, including a dative or lative suffix -n that encoded goal-oriented functions and later contributed to illative developments in descendant branches. This suffix likely evolved through mergers with locative (-na) and ablative (-ta) elements, as directional oppositions emerged via the grammaticalization of postpositional phrases in early Finno-Ugric stages, reflecting a broader typological shift toward richer spatial case inventories. Key reconstructions, such as those proposed by Juha Janhunen, posit that Proto-Uralic -n marked a general "toward" relation, with illative specialization arising post-Proto-Uralic around 2000–1000 BCE amid areal expansions.[9][8] Within Proto-Finnic (ca. 100–200 CE), the illative underwent significant innovation, developing the suffix -hen from an earlier Finno-Volgaic form -sin, where -s- represented a lative marker and -in a dative residue, distinguishing it from partitive (-ta) and static locative (-ssa) uses to encode internal motion ("into"). This shift involved analogical leveling with primary cases and vowel harmony adjustments, creating a tripartite internal locative system (elative, inessive, illative) by the Common Finnic period. Contact with Indo-European languages, especially Baltic dialects featuring their own illative (e.g., Lithuanian -in), likely reinforced this elaboration through areal convergence, though the morphological core remained Uralic-internal, as evidenced by comparative analyses of case syncretism.[9][10][11] Key milestones in the recognition of the illative include descriptions in early Finnish grammars from the 17th century onward, adapting Latin-inspired categories to Finnish inflection. Comparative work advanced in the late 18th century with János Sajnovics's Demonstratio Idioma Ungarorum et Lapponum Idem Esse (1770), which systematically compared case suffixes across Hungarian, Sámi, and Finnish, identifying shared directional markers like illative equivalents as evidence of Uralic relatedness and influencing subsequent reconstructions.[12]Usage in Uralic Languages
In Finnic Languages
The illative case in Finnish is formed by attaching specific suffixes to the noun stem, guided by the stem's phonological structure and vowel harmony principles. The primary suffix is -Vn, where V duplicates the stem's final short vowel, leading to vowel lengthening in words ending in a single vowel, as in talo "house" → taloon "into the house". For stems ending in long vowels or diphthongs, the suffix -hVn is added, inserting an h before the vowel-n sequence to avoid consonant clusters, exemplified by työ "work" → työhön "into the work". Certain stems, such as those ending in -nen or old words with -i/-si, use the suffix -seen, as in nainen "woman" → naiseen "into the woman" or käsi "hand" → käteeseen "into the hand". Vowel harmony dictates the quality of the suffix vowel: back harmony applies to stems with a, o, u (e.g., -oon, -uun), front harmony to those with ä, ö, y (e.g., -ään, -yyn), while neutral vowels e and i permit either set.[13][14] In Estonian, a closely related Finnic language, the illative case employs suffixes like -sse for most nouns to denote movement into an interior or toward a goal, as in maja "house" → majasse "into the house". For monosyllabic stems or specific types ending in long vowels, the suffix -hse appears, such as töö "work" → töösse "into the work", though Estonian has largely lost the vowel harmony system present in Finnish, resulting in less variation in suffix vowels. The language features both long and short illative forms; the long form (-sse) is standard for singular direction into, while the short form (-se or additive -i) occurs in plural or terminative contexts, like riik "country" → riiki "to the country" (additive sense). The partitive case (-d, -t) is used for partial or indefinite objects with atelic verbs, distinct from the illative's directional function.[15][11] Idiomatic expressions in Finnic languages frequently leverage the illative for non-spatial meanings, particularly temporal duration or limits, as in Finnish kesään "until summer" from kesä "summer", or joulukuuhun "until December". Such uses extend to figurative motion, like the idiomatic rakastuin häneen "I fell in love with him/her", implying emotional entry. The illative pairs with motion verbs like mennä "to go" for internal destinations but is avoided with verbs implying external or surface-oriented approach, such as asettua "to settle" or laittaa "to place", which favor the allative case to denote onto rather than into.[13] Dialectal variations in Finnish illative formation highlight regional differences, with Eastern dialects (e.g., Savonian and southeastern) often employing short illative forms without full vowel lengthening, such as talohon instead of standard taloon, reflecting simpler stem adjustments influenced by Karelian contacts. Western dialects, conversely, consistently use the long forms with doubled vowels or -hVn, preserving the standard morphology more rigidly across stem types.[16]In Other Uralic Languages
In Hungarian, the illative case primarily expresses movement into or toward the interior of a location and is marked by the vowel-harmonic suffixes -ba or -be.[17] For example, the noun ház ("house") takes the form házba ("into the house").[17] These suffixes are prosodically bound and exhibit internal sandhi, such as vowel harmony, distinguishing them from postpositions, though certain defective postpositions like bennem ("in me") can convey similar illative meanings with pronominal arguments.[17] In Northern Sami, the illative case denotes motion toward or into an entity, or toward a recipient, and features suffixes that vary by stem type and number.[18] Singular forms include -i for vowel-stem nouns (e.g., gussa "cow" → gussii "to the cow") and -ii for consonant-stem nouns (e.g., nisson "woman" → nissonii "to the woman"), while plural forms use -ide or -iidda (e.g., nissoniidda "to the women").[18] The case interacts with the dual number system, where dual illatives often parallel singular patterns but incorporate dual-specific stem adjustments, as seen in dialects like Ofoten and Sør-Troms.[19] In Erzya Mordvin, the illative case signals a goal or target landmark, typically marked by -s in the indefinite declension (e.g., kudo "house" → kudos "into the house") and showing allomorphs like -ms in certain contexts.[20] It frequently conveys specific spatial targets (e.g., 75 instances in analyzed Erzya data) or paths toward them, but in the definite declension, it converges with dative functions, where the dative suffix -nt' often replaces illative for goal expressions except in definite plurals.[20] This syncretism highlights a broader semantic overlap between directional and recipient roles in Mordvinic languages.[21] In Mari, the illative is marked by suffixes like -š (e.g., šinʒa "village" → šinʒaš "into the village"). Across non-Finnic Uralic branches, the illative case exhibits varied evolutions: in Permian languages like Komi and Udmurt, it is retained as a distinct form (e.g., Komi illative -ö/-ӧ) but shows functional mergers with approximative or dative cases in some dialects, reducing its pure directional specificity.[22] In Ob-Ugric languages such as Khanty and Mansi, the illative persists within rich case inventories (up to 20+ cases in Khanty dialects) and commonly co-occurs with possessive suffixes to mark inalienable possession or directed motion relative to a possessor (e.g., Khanty luw-ǝw "into our house," combining illative with 1PL possessive -ǝw).[23] These developments trace back to Proto-Uralic directional markers but diverge through branch-specific agglutinative innovations.[24]Usage in Non-Uralic Languages
In Baltic Languages
In Baltic languages, the illative case exhibits a limited and archaic presence, most notably in Lithuanian, where it survives as a vestige of earlier directional morphology, while in Latvian it has largely disappeared in favor of prepositional constructions.[25][5] Historically, the Proto-Baltic illative derived from the Indo-European accusativus directivus combined with a local postposition *-ā́, encoding movement toward a goal and often merging with accusative forms in contexts involving motion verbs.[25] This construction is reconstructed as *-ā́ added to the accusative stem, with traces preserved in adverbial forms like Lithuanian yrà 'is, are' from *ī-r-ā́ and čià 'here' from *tj-ā́.[25] In Old Lithuanian texts from the 16th century onward, the illative appears in both singular and plural, such as the plural form debesisa 'into heaven(s)', formed by adding *-ā́ to the accusative stem.[25] A related innovation in Lithuanian involved reanalysis of the accusative singular ending *-n with *-ā́, yielding a postpositional suffix -na, as in miškúosna 'into the forests'.[25] In modern Lithuanian, the illative has been largely supplanted by the preposition į combined with the accusative case to express 'into', though it persists in fixed expressions, poetic usage, and archaic revivals for stylistic effect.[5] Dialectal survivals are evident in the Aukštaitian dialects, particularly in eastern varieties north of the Raguva-Ukmergė-Molėtai-Salakas line, where apocope has led to neutralization of inessive and illative plural forms, such as píevos used for both 'in the fields' (inessive) and 'into the fields' (illative).[25] In contrast, Latvian shows greater loss of the illative under external influences, with only singular forms attested in Old Latvian texts using endings like -an or -en, but no dedicated illative case in the modern standard language, where prepositions such as uz or iekš dominate directional expressions.[26] This divergence reflects Lithuanian's relatively stronger retention of Indo-European case distinctions compared to Latvian, which experienced more substantial restructuring due to prolonged contact with Germanic and Slavic languages.[25]In Tungusic Languages
In Tungusic languages, a directional case often functioning analogously to the illative—expressing movement into or towards a location or beneficiary—is marked by suffixes such as -de, -du, or -di, adapted according to vowel harmony rules characteristic of the family's structure.[27] This suffix alternates based on the stem's final vowel, with front-vowel stems taking -di and back-vowel stems -de or -du, ensuring phonological assimilation across morphemes.[27] In Manchu, a southern Tungusic language, the dative (illative-like) employs the form -de, which frequently merges with the dative suffix -i to convey "towards" or goal-oriented motion, as in bithe-de "to the book" from bithe "book." This combination reflects the language's simplified case system compared to northern relatives, where -de or -du primarily signals entry or purpose without additional layering in core uses.[28] Functional extensions of the illative appear prominently in Nanai, where it denotes spatial inclusion, such as "inside" a container, alongside abstract benefaction meanings like "for the sake of" or "to the benefit of" someone. For example, Nanai təŋgə-du "to the house" can imply entry into the space, while benefactive uses extend to actions performed on behalf of the marked noun. These expansions highlight the case's versatility in southern Tungusic dialects.[29] Across the Tungusic family, illative suffixes exhibit consistent harmony with the vowel systems inherited from Proto-Tungusic, where labial and palatal features propagate through affixes to maintain euphony. In certain dialects, such as those of Even and Negidal, partial merger occurs with the prolative case, blending "through/along" paths with inward motion, reducing distinctiveness in verbal contexts involving traversal into areas.[30]Comparisons and Examples
Relation to Other Directional Cases
The illative case primarily encodes movement into the interior of a landmark, distinguishing it from the allative, which signals motion toward an external surface or goal; the elative, which denotes emergence from an interior; and the inessive, which expresses static position within a location.[31] These distinctions form part of a broader spatial semantic system where the illative represents a cofinal mode of directionality, often selected by motion verbs to indicate endpoint attainment inside a reference object.[31] Syncretism between the illative and other directional cases appears in various Uralic languages. In Hungarian, the illative suffix (-ba/-be) is distinct from the allative (-ra/-re), though in colloquial speech it sometimes overlaps with inessive functions (-ban/-ben).[32] In Finnish, the illative remains distinct from the allative (-lle), but in some Sami varieties like Northern Sami, illative forms (e.g., -ii) exhibit homophony with certain possessive or locative endings in specific paradigms, leading to contextual ambiguity resolved by syntax.[33] In theoretical frameworks, the illative plays a key role in spatial semantics, particularly within Talmy's motion event typology, where Uralic languages as satellite-framed systems encode path information (such as ingressive motion via illative) in non-verbal elements like case suffixes, contrasting with verb-framed languages that incorporate path into the verb root. Implicational hierarchies in case systems further position the illative as dependent on the presence of static cases like the inessive, with goal-oriented cases (illative) implying source cases (elative) in richer inventories, ensuring logical sequencing from location to directed motion.[34] Cross-family comparisons highlight the Uralic ternary system for internal spatial relations—comprising the inessive (static interior), illative (into interior), and elative (out of interior)—as more elaborated than the binary directional patterns in Tungusic languages, where dative-locative syncretism often reduces distinctions to general "to" (dative/allative-like) versus "from" (ablative/elative-like), without a dedicated interior ternary set.[35][36] This contrast underscores Uralic's finer-grained encoding of interior path dynamics compared to Tungusic's broader merger of locative and goal functions.[10]Cross-Linguistic Examples
The illative case, indicating movement into or toward the interior of something, manifests in various forms across languages, often with suffixes that adapt to the phonological structure of the noun. In Finnish, a Uralic language, the sentence Menen taloon illustrates this usage, where taloon (from talo 'house') employs the illative ending -Vn to denote entering the house, translating to "I go into the house."[13] Similarly, in Hungarian, another Uralic language, A házba megyek uses the illative suffix -ba on ház ('house') to express "I go into the house," emphasizing internal direction.[37] In Lithuanian, a Baltic language, the illative has largely been supplanted by the preposition į plus the accusative case in modern usage, as in Einu į namą ("I go into the house," with namą from namas 'house'), but archaic forms like naman preserve the synthetic illative suffix -an for the same meaning.[38] This shift highlights a historical transition from inflectional to prepositional marking of illation. In Evenki, a Tungusic language, directional motion into is typically conveyed via the allative case, which overlaps semantically with illative functions; for instance, Bi abade uses the form abade (from aba 'father') with the allative/illative ending -de in Bi abade eː ("I go to father"), indicating approach toward or into a relational interior space.[28] These examples reveal both convergences and divergences: Uralic languages like Finnish and Hungarian favor vowel harmony in illative suffixes for seamless integration, while Lithuanian's archaic form reflects Indo-European roots, and Evenki's allative extension demonstrates functional overlap in Altaic case systems. The following table compares the illative (or equivalent) forms for "house" across these languages, including glosses for clarity:| Language | Nominative Form | Illative/Equivalent Form | Gloss |
|---|---|---|---|
| Finnish | talo | taloon | house-ILL |
| Lithuanian | namas | naman (archaic) | house-ILL |
| Hungarian | ház | házba | house-ILL |
| Evenki | d'u | d'u-la | house-ALL (into) |
