Verb termen : diforc'h etre ar stummoù

Endalc’h diverket Danvez ouzhpennet
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D Pajenn nevez : {{LabourAChom}} Er yezhoniezh e vez implijet an termen '''verb termen''' (saoz.: ''finite verb'') evit komz eus A '''finite verb''' is a verb...
 
Neal (kaozeal | degasadennoù)
DDiverradenn ebet eus ar c'hemm
Linenn 1:
{{LabourAChom}}
 
Er [[yezhoniezh]] e vez implijet an termen '''verb termen''' ([[saozneg|saoz.]]: [[:en:Finite verb|''finite verb'']]) evit komz eus ur [[verb]] [[Displegadur (yezhoniezh)|displeget]] evit merkañ ar [[Gour (yezhoniezh)|gour]] hag an [[Amzer (yezhoniezh)|amzer]] hervez reolennoù [[yezhadur]] ar yezh-mañ'r-yezh.
 
Implijet a c'hell bezañ verboù termen evit sevel [[islavarenn emren|islavarennoù emren]] (pe "pennlavarennoù") hag a dalvez dreze o-unan evel [[Frazenn|frazennoù]] klok hepmuiken.
A '''finite verb''' is a [[verb]] that is [[Inflection|inflected]] for [[grammatical person|person]] and for [[grammatical tense|tense]] according to the rules and categories of the languages in which it occurs. Finite verbs can form [[independent clause]]s, which can stand by their own as complete [[Sentence (linguistics)|sentence]]s.
 
In most [[Indo-European language]]s, every grammatically correct sentence or [[clause]] must contain a finite verb; sentence fragments not containing finite verbs are described as [[phrase]]s. In [[Latin language|Latin]] and some [[Romance languages]], however, there are a few words that can be used to form sentences without verbs, such as Latin ''ecce'', [[Portuguese language|Portuguese]] ''eis'', [[French language|French]] ''voici'' and ''voilà'', and [[Italian language|Italian]] ''ecco'', all of these translatable as ''here ... is'' or ''here ... are''. Some [[interjection]]s can play the same role. Even in English, a sentence like ''Thanks for your help!'' has an interjection where it could have a [[subject (grammar)|subject]] and a finite verb form (compare ''I appreciate your help!'').