Complementizer

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A complementizer is a word that starts a clause, like 󱛁󱚺 (ꝡa) or 󱚰󱛋󱚺 () or 󱛁󱚴󱛋 (ꝡë).

In Toaq, main clauses start with a complementizers in falling tone, whereas subordinate clauses start with complementizer in glottal tone. The complementizers are:

Toaq complementizers
Type Main clause Subclause Meaning
Declarative or wh-question 󱛁󱚺 (ꝡa) 󱛁󱚺󱛋 (ꝡä) "that"
Yes-no question 󱚰󱚺 (ma) 󱚰󱛋󱚺 () "whether"
Degree question 󱚷󱚹󱛍󱛃 (tıo) 󱚷󱛋󱚹󱛍󱛃 (tïo) "how (much)"
Restrictive relative clause 󱛁󱚴󱛋 (ꝡë) "which"
Non-restrictive relative clause 󱚾󱛋󱚲 () "which"
Property / lambda clause 󱚼󱛋󱚺 () "λ"

Null complementizers

English doesn't really have an equivalent of 󱛁󱚺 (ꝡa): you can't say something like *That I like this book. in the main clause. But in Toaq, it's perfectly normal to say 󱛁󱚺 󱚿󱛃 󱚾󱛊󱚹 󱚵󱛊󱚹 󱛘󱛄󱚲󱛍󱚴󱛙 󱛕 (Ꝡa cho jí ní kue.) The word 󱛁󱚺 (ꝡa) acts as a sentence fence.

Conversely, English allows for a "null complementizer" in a subclause: instead of I know that you like this book, you can say I know you like this book. In Toaq, this is not allowed: you must say 󱚶󱚲󱛍󱚺 󱚾󱛊󱚹 󱛔 󱛁󱚺󱛋 󱚿󱛃 󱚺󱛊󱚲󱛂 󱚵󱛊󱚹 󱛘󱛄󱚲󱛍󱚴󱛙 (Dua jí, ꝡä cho súq ní kue). Only the declarative main-clause complementizer 󱛁󱚺 (ꝡa) is optional.