ORDER OF THE SENTENCE
[(neg. adj.)-V-(part./<compl.>)]-EC-[adj]-IC-S -OEP-OSP
NOMINAL SYNTAGME
The order of the noun syntagme is
Core-Direct Complement-Article-Indirect Complement-Relative
The last element of the syntagme is the one that receives the inflectional endings, except for the article, which is not inflected (it only does so as a relative pronoun).
[ixat [mabre] [nël]] e <gitkaters ëir de nяdes>
In classical Kirdaian proper names are accompanied by an article. Later, due to the influence of the Symbaian, the names will begin to go alone.
COORDINATED CLAUSES
Coordinators in Kirdaian are late. Before, coordination occurred with adjacent elements with similar cases. Later, conjunctions or paratactic particles were added. The first was ist (copulative "and") and appeared after the Christianization of the Kirdaian people. It comes from the adverb яster ("more"). It is placed between the coordinated elements.
SUBORDINATED CLAUSES
The conjunction and particles usually go after the nuclear verb of the subordinate clause, but, from the Christian Kirdaian, they can go anywhere, as long as it is adjacent to some element of the subordinate clause that it opens. At this stage, it usually comes after the second element of the subordinate clause, inherited from the Greek, Symbaian and Tharcaian. Due to the influence of Greek and Latin, the hypotactic verb is usually in the subjunctive. After after the dissolution of the alliance with Symbay, the Kirdaian gradually replaced subordinating conjunctions of relatives with relative pronouns (influence of Latin).
ANTIPASIVE VOICE
The antipassive voice is constructed periphrastically, with the auxiliary art and the participle in the antipassive voice. In classical Kirdaian there was the antipassive complement. This was established later, under the influence of the Symbaian, from the instrumental case.
PREPOSITIONAL SYNTAME
In classical Kirdaian, these forms were prepositions but, in later stages, under the influence of Symbaian, they became postpositions.