Tuesday 27 December 2011

Lesson 6 - Singular & Plural

In Trinidadian French Creole, the noun has only one form, whether singular or plural. In order to quantify (number) a noun, the number indicated is placed before the noun.


1. Yon zasyèt - One plate


2. Senk zasyèt - Five plates


3. Yon sak - One bag


4. Nèf sak - Nine bags





The Plural marker

There is no plural indefinite article in the Kwéyòl language, and nouns do not have have endings which indicate plurality . In spite of this, there are some rules to consider when speaking of plurality in the Kwéyòl language.

1) When a noun appears alone without the singular indefinite article, or a quantitative number this represents a collective.

Flè - flowers.

Yon flè - A flower.




2) When speaking of a specific plural number, the number is placed before the noun in order to quantify it.

Yon pyébwa - A/one tree.

Kat pyébwa - four trees.


The plural is generally indicated by the plural marker () which is placed before the noun with the definite article being placed after the noun. is NOT AN ARTICLE. Remember, Kwéyòl nouns do not have plural endings; there is only one form of the noun.

Trinidadian French Creole
French
English
tjè-a
les coeurs
the hearts
bato-a
les bateaux
the boats
liv-la
les livres
the books
bag-la
les bagues
the rings
kann-nan
les cannes à sucre
the (sugar) canes
pen-an
les pains
the (loaves of) bread
fanm-lan
les femmes
the women
nonm-lan
les hommes
the men


The maker is prefixed to the noun and indicates the collective. As we see in the examples above, the word endings of Creole nouns remain the same in the singular and plural.

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