All of a sudden something came to my mind.SuStel:
> Let's go back to TKD. "In its fullest form, a Klingon sentence repeats the noun."> The example is yaS legh puq 'ej yaS qIp puq.Okay. Here comes the key part, to> which I will add my own emphasis: "It is possible, however, to use pronouns> rather than nouns in the second of the joined sentences."
> A pronoun wants an antecedent. Not a postcedent. A pronoun wants to refer back> to a noun that has already been stated. So TKD gives us the example yaS legh> puq 'ej ghaH qIp ghaH. The ghaH's refer to the previous object and subject,> and what's more, the object pronoun refers to the previous object noun and the subject> pronoun refers to the previous subject noun.After reading your explanation, I understand what 'oqranD tries to say in TKD. So far so good. But doesn't 'oqranD contradict himself with the {romuluSngan Sambogh 'ej HoHbogh nejwI'}? According to TKD shouldn't it be {romuluSngan Sambogh nejwI' 'ej HoHbogh}? Or are we to understand it as an exception/special case?
I mean, I get it: you're thinking of legh 'ej qIp as a kind of compound verb. Kind of like The child [sees and hits] the officer. And we have a couple of canonical examples of doing things like that.