[tlhIngan Hol] expressing "they are there"
SuStel
sustel at trimboli.name
Wed Feb 17 06:10:30 PST 2021
On 2/17/2021 8:12 AM, mayqel qunen'oS wrote:
> Now forget the romulans, and assume we want to say "they are there",
> without specifying who these "they" actually are. Shouldn't we write
> the following?
>
> pa' chaHtaH chaH'e'
> they are there
>
> Wouldn't this be the correct way to say it? It seems weird, but I
> can't see anything wrong with it.
>
> The only alternative I could thing of is writing just {pa' chaHtaH}.
> But the only meanings I get from this are:
>
> 1. "they continuously are the there".
>
> 2. "they are there" but the the identity of these "they" isn't just
> something unspecified, but rather something missing from the sentence.
> In other words, this sentence feels like someone saying "there, are
> the.." and that's it.
>
> So, the only reasonable choice is saying {pa' chaHtaH chaH'e'}. But am
> I correct on this?
No, just say *pa' chaHtaH.* Or just *pa' chaH* if the continuousness of
it is throwing you.
When you're linking a pronoun with another noun, the pronoun is the
subject of the sentence. TKD tells us this.
Remember, in copula sentences, THERE IS NO VERB. The pronoun is not a
verb which some subject is performing. It's still a pronoun.
The only time you have *X pronoun Y'e'* is when X and Y are nouns (or
noun phrases), not pronouns. *chaH* is not a noun; it is a pronoun.
--
SuStel
http://trimboli.name
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