| name | kannada-syntax |
| description | Answers questions about Kannada sentence structure and syntax using D. N. Shankara Bhat's framework from Books 25 and 07. Covers: SOV word order, clause combining (converbs, participial forms), relative clauses (pre-nominal participial), embedded clauses, sentence coordination, nominal and verbal phrase structure, case marking in sentences, and how Kannada syntax differs from both Sanskrit and English. Trigger phrases: "Kannada sentence structure", "Kannada word order", "SOV", "Kannada relative clause", "ಕನ್ನಡ ವಾಕ್ಯ", "clause combining Kannada", "Kannada converb", "embedded clause Kannada", "ಕನ್ನಡ ವಾಕ್ಯಗಳ ಒಳರಚನೆ", "how do you join sentences in Kannada".
|
Kannada Syntax
You answer questions about Kannada sentence structure using D. N. Shankara
Bhat's framework from two primary sources.
Source Material — Readiness Status
| Book | Title | Status | Content |
|---|
| Book 25 | ಕನ್ನಡ ವಾಕ್ಯಗಳ ಒಳರಚನೆ | ✅ Full text, chapter pages | Kannada sentence structure (primary source) |
| Book 07 | ಕನ್ನಡ ಬರಹದ ಸೊಲ್ಲರಿಮೆ (4 vols) | ✅ Full text, chapter pages | Grammar of written Kannada — syntax in Vols 1–4 |
Book 25 is the dedicated syntax monograph. Book 07 treats syntax as part of a
full reference grammar of written Kannada.
Note: Book 25 english summary (book/en/summary.md) is only 290 lines —
a stub. For detailed syntax questions, fetch the Kannada chapter pages directly.
Core Typological Properties of Kannada Syntax
1. SOV Word Order (Verb-Final)
Kannada is a Subject-Object-Verb language. The finite verb goes at the end:
ರಾಮನು ಊಟ ಮಾಡಿದ.
rAmanu UTa mADida.
Rama food did. = "Rama ate food."
Corollary: All modifiers precede their heads:
- Adjectives before nouns: ಚಿಕ್ಕ ಹುಡುಗಿ (cikka huDugi / small girl) ✓
- *ಹುಡುಗಿ ಚಿಕ್ಕ (huDugi cikka) ✗
- Relative clauses before the noun they modify (see below)
- Postpositions (not prepositions): ಮನೆಯಲ್ಲಿ (maneyalli / in-the-house) — suffix follows
2. Clause Combining via Converbs
Kannada joins clauses using converb forms — non-finite verb forms that express
a subordinate event with the same subject as the main clause:
The co-reference constraint: When two action clauses are joined via a converb,
both must have the same subject. Violation sounds ungrammatical:
ರಾಜು ಮನೆಗೆ ಬಂದು ಊಟ ಮಾಡಿದ. ✓
rAju manege bandu UTa mADida.
Raju home came-CONV food ate. = "Raju came home and ate."
(same subject: Raju did both actions)
*ರಾಜು ಮನೆಗೆ ಬಂದು ಜಾನಕಿ ಊಟ ಮಾಡಿದಳು. ✗
(different subjects: Raju came, Janaki ate — ungrammatical with converb)
Exception: Converb joining a non-volitional (agentless) clause to an active clause
can have different participants:
ರಾಜು ಮನೆಗೆ ಬಂದು ಜಾನಕಿಗೆ ತೊಂದರೆಯಾಯಿತು. ✓
(Raju came home and [it] caused trouble for Janaki — one is action, one is event)
3. Pre-Nominal Relative Clauses
Unlike English (where relative clauses follow the noun: "the girl who came"),
Kannada uses a participial form before the noun:
ಬಂದ ಹುಡುಗಿ / banda huDugi / "came-PART girl" = "the girl who came"
ಓದುವ ಹುಡುಗ / ODuva huDuga / "reads-PART boy" = "the boy who reads"
The participial suffixes:
- -da (past participial): ಮಾಡಿದ (mADida) = "the one who did"
- -uva (present participial): ಮಾಡುವ (mADuva) = "the one who does"
- -ada (negative participial): ಮಾಡದ (mADada) = "the one who didn't do"
4. Verbal Noun Chains
Verbs become nouns, then take case suffixes to express purpose, means, location of activity:
ಓದು → ಓದುವ → ಓದುವುದು → ಓದುವುದಕ್ಕೆ
ODu → ODuva → ODuvudu → ODuvudakke
read read-PART reading(N) for-reading
The verbal noun (-uvudu form) can appear in any nominal case slot:
- Nominative: ಓದುವುದು ಒಳ್ಳೆಯದು = "Reading is good"
- Dative: ಓದುವುದಕ್ಕೆ ಬಂದ = "came for reading"
- Locative: ಓದುವುದರಲ್ಲಿ ಖುಷಿ = "joy in reading"
5. Sentence-Final Particles and Mood
Kannada sentence type (declarative, interrogative, imperative) is marked
primarily by sentence-final forms:
- Declarative: verb takes indicative finite suffix
- Yes/No question: particle -ಆ (-A) or rising intonation
- WH-question: question word in situ (not moved to front)
- Negative: verb takes negative participial + auxiliary illa or negative
finite suffix
Sentence Types and Their Structures
Simple Sentences
Subject(NOM) [Object(ACC)] Verb(finite)
ಅವನು ಊಟ ಮಾಡಿದ. = He ate (food).
avanu UTa mADida.
Existential Sentences
Subject(NOM) Location(LOC) ಇದ್ದಾನೆ/ಇದ್ದಾಳೆ/ಇದೆ
ಮನೆಯಲ್ಲಿ ಮಕ್ಕಳಿದ್ದಾರೆ. = Children are in the house.
Conditional Clauses
Formed with conditional verb form + main clause:
ಮಳೆ ಬಂದರೆ ನಾನು ಹೋಗಲ್ಲ. = If it rains, I won't go.
maLe bandare nAnu hOgalla.
Causative Sentences
ಅಮ್ಮ ಮಗನಿಗೆ ಊಟ ಮಾಡಿಸಿದಳು. = Mother made the son eat.
How Kannada Syntax Differs from Sanskrit
| Feature | Sanskrit | Kannada |
|---|
| Word order | Relatively free (inflectional) | SOV strict (agglutinative) |
| Relative clause | Post-nominal (ya-relative) | Pre-nominal (participial) |
| Clause combining | Participial constructions (tvā, tuṃ, sati-saptami) | Converb constraint (same-subject required) |
| Negation | Sanskrit neg particles | Morphologically marked on verb |
| Question formation | Particle position varies | Particle sentence-final |
Fetching Source Content
Book 25 chapter pages:
Base URL: https://vwulf.github.io/ettuge/kannaDa/dnsbhat/25-kannaDa-vAkyagaLa-oLaracane
| Chapter | Title | URL suffix |
|---|
| ch0 | Chapter index | /book/kn/ch0 |
| ch1 | ಮುನ್ನೋಟ (Overview) | /book/kn/ch1 |
| ch2 | ಪದಗಳ ಇಟ್ಟಳ (Word structure) | /book/kn/ch2 |
| ch3–ch11 | Sentence structure chapters | /book/kn/ch3 through /ch11 |
Book 07 (full grammar of written Kannada):
Base URL: https://vwulf.github.io/ettuge/kannaDa/dnsbhat/07-kannaDa-barahada-sollarime
- Vol 1: word structure (
/book/vol1/kn/ch0 through ch4)
- Vol 2: word-form structure (
/book/vol2/kn/ch0 through ch2)
- Vol 3: sentence structure (
/book/vol3/kn/full)
- Vol 4: pronouns and demonstratives (
/book/vol4/kn/full)
Answering Guidelines
- Primary source is Book 25 for dedicated syntax. Book 07 for grammar-in-context.
- Co-reference constraint on converbs is the most important syntactic fact to
get right — this distinguishes Kannada from both Sanskrit and English.
- Pre-nominal participials are the key relative clause pattern — always lead
with a concrete example.
- Verbal noun chains (the -uvudu forms) are uniquely productive — show the
full chain when explaining purpose/manner constructions.
- For questions about morphology (suffixes, conjugation), refer to the
kannada-morphology skill. This skill focuses on sentence-level patterns.
- English summary stub: Book 25's en/summary.md is sparse. For detailed
questions, fetch the Kannada chapter pages and read them directly.