anaa
Appearance
See also: Appendix:Variations of "anaa"
Cebuano
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]- naa — colloquial, short form
- anaay, naay — with indefinite subject
Etymology
[edit]From the same root as kana (“that”). Compare similar formations in adia, ania, atua, and aduna.
Pronunciation
[edit]Verb
[edit]anaa (Badlit spelling ᜀᜈᜀ)
- (dated) there exists (near the listener)
- there be, there is (without referencing where)
- to be present
- (followed by sa) to be in; be located at
- naa sa may pultahan ang yawi ― the key is located by the door
- to have, possess
- naay kalagot si Juan ― Juan is angry (lit. Juan has anger)
Usage notes
[edit]- If the subject is indefinite, the indefinite marker -y is suffixed; otherwise, the bare form is used.
- anaay tawo ― there is someone (indefinite subject)
- anaa siya ― he is present (definite subject)
- In colloquial language, anaa (naa) has met more frequent usage than all the other existential verbs: aduna, adia, ania, and atua, to mean "there is; to be in; to have." This is similar to the semantics of adto in certain dialects, see there for more.
- ania ang yawi ― the key is here (standard)
- anaa dinhi ang yawi ― the key is here (common)
Derived terms
[edit]See also
[edit]Cebuano demonstrative pronouns
Direct* | Indirect* | Oblique | Locative | Allative | Existential** | Interjection** | Manner** | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Full | Short | Full | Short | Full | Short | Full | Short | Full | Short | ||||
Near speaker*** | karí kirí |
ri | niari niiri |
ari iri |
kan-ari† kan-iri† |
dirí | ngarí | adia | dia | diará | dará | ingon ari | Ø |
Near speaker and listener*** | kaní kiní |
ni | niani niini |
ani ini |
kan-ani† kan-ini† |
dinhi | nganhi | ania | nia | niará | Ø | ingon ani | ing-ani in-ani |
Near listener | kanâ | nà | nianà | anà | kan-anà† | dinhà dirâ |
nganhà ngarâ |
anaa | naa | naará | nará | ingon anà | ing-anà in-anà |
Remote | kadto kató |
to | niadto niato |
adto ato |
kan-adto† | didto | ngadto | atua | tua | tuará | turá | ingon adto ingon ato |
ing-ato in-ato |
†Archaic *When the demonstrative is used as a predicate, the full form must be used. Short forms never start sentences. **Full and short forms used interchangeably. Full forms may be more formal, while short forms may be more colloquial. ***These two series may be conflated in colloquial Cebuano. |
Teop
[edit]Pronoun
[edit]anaa
- me (first-person pronoun, objective case, singular)