[tlhIngan Hol] And if I saw maltz today..
Steven Boozer
sboozer at uchicago.edu
Wed May 8 12:40:00 PDT 2019
Another example:
targhlIj Daje'. qaS wanI' ramqu'.
Feed your targ without incident. MKE
FYI Okrand also used {Sop} to translate “feed” in the paq’batlh:
ghoS ghoqwI' tam 'e' yItu'
yoHHa'wI' Sop ghaH
Hub'eghbe' targh
See the spy creeping,
He will feed on the weak-hearted,
See the targ, an easy prey.
__
Voragh
From: tlhIngan-Hol <tlhingan-hol-bounces at lists.kli.org> On Behalf Of SuStel
On 5/8/2019 3:12 PM, Jeffrey Clark wrote:
On May 8, 2019, at 09:34, SuStel <sustel at trimboli.name<mailto:sustel at trimboli.name>> wrote:.
Is there really all that much difference between buying him a cup of coffee and feeding him a cup of coffee? The very source of the ambiguity also makes the ambiguity not matter all that much.
Do we have confirmation that {je’} is “to provide food for” rather than the actual act of placing food in the recipient’s mouth?
Do we have any reason to think it's not?
Kruge says yIje' at one of his officers, pointing to his vicious pet on the bridge. I don't think he meant the officer was supposed to spoon-feed the thing.
qa' wIje'meH maSuv refers idiomatically to feeding the spirit. We do it by fighting, not by putting anything in the spirit's mouth. But this is an idiom, so it's dangerous to look too closely at the literal meaning.
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