Estonian locative system

Summary

The Estonian language has six locative cases, descended from the locative cases of Proto-Finnic. They can be classified according to a three-way contrast of entering, residing in, and exiting a state, with two sets of cases: inner and outer.

System Entering Residing in Exiting
Inner -sse "into" (illative) -s "in" (inessive) -st "from (inside)" (elative)
Outer -le "(on)to" (allative) -l "on (top of) / at" (adessive) -lt "from (at/on)" (ablative)

For some nouns, there are two forms of the illative: the regular suffix -sse (e.g. keelesse), added to the genitive stem, and an alternative, short form, which is either consists of a different suffix (keel > keelde), lengthening (e.g. maja > majja, [ko:l] > [ko::li]), and/or another change in the word. The always regular -sse illative ending is a newer innovation, and can sometimes have a slightly different meaning than the old "short form" illative, the latter having the concrete locative meaning (e.g.: tuppa 'into the room'), and the former being used in other structures that require the illative (mis puutub toasse 'concerning the room...').[1]

See also edit

References edit

  • Moseley, C. (1994). Colloquial Estonian: A Complete Language Course. London: Routledge.
  • Oinas, Felix J (1966). Basic Course in Estonian. Bloomington: Indiana University.
  • Estonian Language - Estonian Institute
  • The Estonian Language Blog
  • Eesti keele käsiraamat - Käändsõna

Notes edit

  1. ^ Laakso, Johanna (2001), "The Finnic Languages", in Dahl, Östen; Koptjevskaja-Tamm, Maria (eds.), The Circum-Baltic Languages: Typology and Contact, Studies in Language Companion Series, vol. 44–45, Amsterdam: John Benjamins B.V., ISSN 0165-7763