1.1 Mohican Details

Big Concept: Introduction to Statement Verbs

There are two verbs introduced in this lesson, “feel good” and “survive until morning”. In Mohican, a verb is a word which tells about an action, a feeling, a state of being, a perception, etc. Verbs come in many different forms which indicate who is doing the action, what the action is being done to, why it is taking place, and so on. We will learn all about verbs gradually as they are introduced in the lessons.

The actor

In every Mohican sentence, it is important to know who is doing the action, who is doing the feeling or perceiving, or who is in a given state of being. This doer of the verb is called the actor or the subject. There is always a spoken flag or marker on every verb that indicates the actor. Sometimes the flag comes at the beginning of the verb (a prefix), sometimes at the end (a suffix), and sometimes at both the beginning and the end (a prefix and suffix). Prefixes and suffixes are colour coded here for easy identification.

Putting Statement Mode (indicative) verbs together

The verbs in this unit are in the Statement Mode (indicative) used to make simple observations or descriptions of what is going on. As an introduction to how these verbs are put together, let's consider the verb stem /the'taneenaa-/ “have a cold” (an easy and consistent verb with nothing terribly unusual going on). Verbs come in different classifications based on what sound is heard at the end of the stem: in this case, we are looking at an aa-stem. Verbs are usually found in dictionaries in the naakmã form (she or he), so the dictionary would list the word as the'taneenaw “she or he has a cold”. As more verbs and stem classifications are introduced, any noteworthy changes from the patterns shown here will be noted.

The patterns for prefixes and suffixes for actors are:

With a prefix only


With a suffix only


With a prefix and suffix


/onamanithee/: “feel good”

The words that indicate someone is “feeling physically well” are based off of the stem /onamanithee-/. This is a regular ee-stem verb. Here is the list of forms in the Statement Mode (indicative).

Regular Mode / Indicative

Notes

/wãapanaxeen/: “survive until the morning”

The stem for this verb is /wãapanaxeen-/. There are no separate stem-shapes. This is a regular n-stem verb. Here is the list of forms in the Statement Mode (indicative).

Regular Mode / Indicative

Notes