On Nov 23, 2018, at 9:26 AM, mayqel qunenoS <mihkoun@gmail.com> wrote:
Suppose I want to say "everyone can become an officer, even my sheep". I could write {yaS lumojlaH Hoch, vabDot yaS mojlaH DI'raqwIj}.
{Hoch} is grammatically singular. As a subject, it should call for the null prefix. Using {lu-} anyway will be understood, but it’s like saying “everyones”.
But could I just write instead, {yaS lumojlaH Hoch, vabDot DI'raqwIj} ?
“Additionally, my [sheep].” What about it? The sentence is incomplete. Can everyone be a sheep too? Can a sheep be an officer too? Either seems as likely/unlikely as the other.
Do we necessarily need to use a verb with the {vabDot} ?
If you want to be grammatically proper, you need a verb. Why would you leave it off? The Monopoly example repeats the verb: {Qo'noS romuluS je boSuqlaH. vabDot tera' Qejbogh DIvI' ram boSuqlaH.} -- ghunchu'wI'