Melo (also known as Malo) is an Afro-Asiatic language spoken in the Gamo Gofa Zone of the Southern Nations, Nationalities, and People's Region in Ethiopia.
There are eight cases in Malo.
Nominative case has <nowiki><i> and <a> for masculine and feminine markers respectively.</nowiki>
However, if there is a vowel at the end of the noun, the masculine came marker<nowiki><i> will change to <y>.</nowiki>
Examples,
Nominative feminine case takes the marker <a> with definite marker <t>.
Examples,
Proper nouns also take the nominative case marker <nowiki><i> and <a>.</nowiki>
Examples,
The marker <-a> is for masculine nouns.
Example,
The maker <-o> is for feminine nouns. It is attached to the definite marker âÂÂtâÂÂ.
Example,
<nowiki>*</nowiki>Proper nouns are not inflected for the accusative case marker.
Masculine Nominative and Accusative Case Markers stay the same for the plural nouns which are <nowiki><i> and <a> respectively.</nowiki>
Nominative and Accusative Case Marker is always to be definite. Indefinite nouns do not take Nominative and Accusative Case.
Dative Case Markers are <nowiki><s> and <as>.</nowiki>
Examples,
Genitive Case uses two different ways to express.
1. ÃÂ ÃÂ ÃÂ Possessive Pronoun before Possessed Noun.
2. àààThird person possessive pronoun marker âÂÂpaâÂÂ
1. ÃÂ ÃÂ ÃÂ Possessive pronoun:
Examples,
Deka afila â Deka's cloth
Ta afila â my cloth
E afila â his cloth
2. àààHere âÂÂpaâ refers to ownership. In third person possessive pronouns are replaced with pa.
Examples,
iz-a pa inda-t-o kad-e-z â She loved her mother.
Instrumental case markers are <r> and <ar>.
Examples,
Commutative case markers are <r> and -<ar> with âÂÂwolaâÂÂ.
Here, the word âÂÂwolaâ means together.
Examples,
Ablative case markers are <nowiki><p> and <ap>.</nowiki>
It depicts the place of departure and a source the noun comes from.
Examples,