[tlhIngan Hol] Difference between "all X" and "all of X"

Steven Boozer sboozer at uchicago.edu
Fri Jun 21 08:16:07 PDT 2019


FYI I found one example of the {Hoch} modifying a NOUN+NOUN phrase :

   QaptaHvIS So'wI', Hoch jagh Dujmey DaQotlh. 
   Disable all enemy ships while cloaked. (MKE)

{Hoch jagh Dujmey} "all enemy ships" NOT  *{jagh Hoch Dujmey}.

Can anyone think of another example?

~ Voragh


-----------------------------------Original Message-----------------------------------
From: mayqel qunen'oS

SuStel:
> Once again your noun-scoping defies my senses.
> I would say this Hoch vIghro' mutmey all species of cat.

I too, like much more the solution of {Hoch vIghro' mutmey}, which you suggest.

And in the past, I've though of placing the {Hoch} in the first position of a N-N-N construction, but here is another thing that confuses me.

At the {Hoch vIghro' mutmey}, doesn't the {Hoch} *have* to act *only* on the {vIghro'} ? Doesn't the meaning *have* to be "the species of each cat" ?

I think, something similar has been discussed in the past, but I still have trouble understanding whether the {Hoch} can act "simultaneously" on both the nouns that follow it, or whether it *has* to act only on the noun that is immediately next to it.

~ m. qunen'oS
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