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    <div class="moz-cite-prefix">On 7/7/2019 4:31 PM, De'vID wrote:<br>
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cite="mid:CA+7zAmNd6xUDyVVZVfscKRgjN2NbjpUM88rvNPbqMvX22CSMpA@mail.gmail.com">
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          <div dir="ltr" class="gmail_attr">On Fri, 5 Jul 2019 at 21:24,
            SuStel <<a href="mailto:sustel@trimboli.name"
              moz-do-not-send="true">sustel@trimboli.name</a>> wrote:<br>
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              <div class="gmail-m_-6446536602498626120moz-cite-prefix">On
                7/5/2019 1:14 PM, De'vID wrote:<br>
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                  <div dir="ltr" class="gmail_attr">On Fri, 5 Jul 2019
                    at 17:15, mayqel qunen'oS <<a
                      href="mailto:mihkoun@gmail.com" target="_blank"
                      moz-do-not-send="true">mihkoun@gmail.com</a>>
                    wrote:</div>
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                        <p dir="ltr"
                          style="margin-top:0px;margin-bottom:0px">There's
                          something, which feels strange seeing/reading
                          the {ghaHlu'}, but I can't find what it
                          actually is.</p>
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                <div>I think this is impossible, because {-lu'} works
                  with the pronominal prefixes, and pronouns never take
                  prefixes. </div>
              </blockquote>
              <p>Prefixes aren't inherent to the job that <b>-lu'</b>
                plays. Using <b>-lu'</b> simply makes you use <i>different</i>
                prefixes.</p>
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          <div>If something never takes prefixes to begin with, how can
            it ever take different prefixes?</div>
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    <p>I'm speaking here of how <b>-lu'</b> works generally, not how <b>-lu'</b>
      works on pronouns. You said that <b>-lu'</b> "works with"
      prefixes, but <b>-lu'</b> doesn't work with prefixes any more
      than any non-<b>lu'</b> verb. It just uses <i>different</i>
      prefixes. So citing some required functional link between <b>-lu'</b>
      and verbs to show that prefixless pronouns can't use <b>-lu'</b>
      doesn't make any sense.<br>
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    <p><br>
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cite="mid:CA+7zAmNd6xUDyVVZVfscKRgjN2NbjpUM88rvNPbqMvX22CSMpA@mail.gmail.com">
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          <div> That's the problem I have with trying to interpret
            something like {ghaHlu'}.<br>
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    <p><br>
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    <p><b>ghaHlu'</b> is meaningless all by itself, just as <b>ghaHtaH</b>
      is meaningless all by itself. Pronouns do not carry the "to be"
      meaning by themselves; it is only their juxtaposition with nouns
      that makes the "to be" meaning come out.<br>
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    <p><br>
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cite="mid:CA+7zAmNd6xUDyVVZVfscKRgjN2NbjpUM88rvNPbqMvX22CSMpA@mail.gmail.com">
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              <p>The sentence <b>Daqawlu'taH</b><i> you will be
                  remembered</i> is simply a pronoun-elided version of <b>SoH
                  Daqawlu'taH.</b> The prefix doesn't make the
                indefinite subject work; it simply agrees in a different
                way than sentences with subjects. All the <b>-lu'</b>
                really means is "no subject here."</p>
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          <div>I don't see what this has to do with pronouns. We know
            how {-lu'} works with (normal) verbs. <br>
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    <p>We clearly don't all know, since Lieven claimed that <b>-lu'</b>
      "reverse the object-subject." My point is to show that the subject
      and object aren't "in" the prefix; the prefix simply agrees with
      them. The subject and/or object may be an elided pronoun, and the
      only way we know what they are is by the prefix, but the prefix is
      still not the source of the subject and object of the sentence, it
      just agrees with them.</p>
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    <p><br>
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cite="mid:CA+7zAmNd6xUDyVVZVfscKRgjN2NbjpUM88rvNPbqMvX22CSMpA@mail.gmail.com">
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              <p>I can't see any problem with using <b>-lu'</b> with
                the third-person pronouns. First- and second-person
                pronoun "to be" sentences use the pronoun itself as the
                subject; third-person "to be" sentences can take
                third-person nouns as their subjects. <b>verengan
                  ghaHlu'chugh, qurlu'ba'</b><i> If one is a Ferengi,
                  one is obviously greedy.</i> This is just the
                no-subject equivalent to <b>verengan ghaHchugh vay''e',
                  qurba' vay'vetlh.</b></p>
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        But you do see a problem with using {-lu'} with {jIH} and
        {SoH}. "I, who am indefinite, am..." would be a weird thing to
        say (outside of maybe a philosophical work).
        <div><br>
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        <div>I think this extends to {ghaHlu'} as well. I read {ghaHlu'}
          as something self-contradictory, like "he or she, who is
          indefinite, is...". I understand your interpretation, but I
          don't see any reason to think third-person works any
          differently than first- or second-person.</div>
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    <p><b>ghaHlu'</b> doesn't work by itself. <b>ghaH</b> can't act
      like a verb all by itself. <b>ghaH</b> is not a complete
      sentence. But there's no semantic reason why <b>SuvwI' ghaHlu'</b><i>
        one is a warrior</i> couldn't work. <b>SuvwI'</b> is being
      linked by identity to an indefinite entity.</p>
    <p>As for why it's different than first- or second-person, consider
      why you can't say <b>tlhIngan jIH HoD'e'.</b> The <noun>
      <pronoun> <topic>'e' formula only works for
      third-person pronouns. TKD explains: "If the subject is a noun, it
      follows the third-person pronoun..." With first- or second-person
      sentences, the subject is the pronoun, not a noun. <b>-lu'</b>
      replaces a subject noun with an indefinite subject. So it only
      works where there already is a subject noun to replace. That's the
      topic noun in a third-person "to be" sentence.</p>
    <p>That's why it works differently in the first or second person.<br>
    </p>
    <p><br>
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    <pre class="moz-signature" cols="72">-- 
SuStel
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="http://trimboli.name">http://trimboli.name</a></pre>
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