Cebuano

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Pronunciation

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Suffix

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-g

  1. Contraction of og, after words ending in vowels.
    Nagluto kog bugas.
    I'm cooking rice.

Emilian

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Pronunciation

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Pronoun

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-g

  1. (enclitic, after a vowel) Alternative form of ge
    A-g vag edmān.I’m going there tomorrow. (imperative, plural)
    A-g pôrt di munjêgi.I bring him some apricots.
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Hungarian

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Etymology

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From Proto-Finno-Ugric *-ŋk.[1]

Suffix

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-g

  1. (frequentative suffix) Added to a stem - often an onomatopoeia - to form a verb expressing a (quickly) repeating or continuous action.
    g (to rumble, buzz, hum)
  2. (nominal-forming suffix) Added to a verb or a noun to form a noun or an adjective.
    anya (mother) + ‎-g → ‎anyag (matter)

Usage notes

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  • (frequentative suffix) Variants:
    -g is added to words ending in a vowel
    -og is added to some back-vowel words
    -ag is added to other back-vowel words
    -eg is added to unrounded front-vowel words
    -ög is added to rounded front-vowel words
  • (nominal-forming suffix) Variants:
    -g is added to words ending in a vowel
    -ag is added to back vowel words
    -eg is added to front vowel words

Derived terms

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ -g in Zaicz, Gábor (ed.). Etimológiai szótár: Magyar szavak és toldalékok eredete (‘Dictionary of Etymology: The origin of Hungarian words and affixes’). Budapest: Tinta Könyvkiadó, 2006, →ISBN.  (See also its 2nd edition.)

Ojibwe

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Suffix

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-g

  1. A suffix denoting the plural of an animate noun
  2. A suffix denoting the proximate conjunct form of an inanimate intransitive verb (vii)
  3. A suffix denoting the second-person plural imperative of an animate intransitive verb (vai)
  4. A suffix denoting the third-person singular conjunct form of an animate intransitive verb (vai) with a nasal ending
  5. A suffix denoting the second-person plural to singular or plural object imperative of a Type 3 transitive inanimate verb (vti3)
  6. A suffix denoting the third-person singular to first-person singular or second-person singular form of a transitive animate verb (vta) with an -aw or Cw ending

Usage notes

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In d-final intransitive inanimate verbs (vii), the final d merges with -g to produce -k.

See also

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Tagalog

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Pronunciation

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Ligature

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-g (Baybayin spelling ᜅ᜔)

  1. Alternative form of -ng, after words ending in ⟨n⟩.

Usage notes

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  • While it seems that only -g is only added to words ending in ⟨n⟩, that is not entirely the case. The letter n is dropped in some cases and then replaced by the separate letter ng instead of simply appending g.
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