I'm not really sure what a {-be'} or a {-qu'} would mean following {-Qo'} or one of the type 9 suffixes, but if you feel that doing so can improve a communication you are trying to do, try it out and see if others can understand what you are trying to say. Jeremy ________________________________ From: tlhIngan-Hol <tlhingan-hol-bounces@lists.kli.org> on behalf of demonchaux.aurelie <demonchaux.aurelie@gmail.com> Sent: Wednesday, February 14, 2018 12:03 PM To: tlhingan-hol@kli.org Subject: [tlhIngan Hol] Rovers and -Qo' Hello tlhIngan Hol jatlhwI'pu :) I was wondering something about rovers: can -Qo’ be followed by -be’ and/or -qu’? (Not -Ha’ obviously) 1. Rovers [...] do not have a fixed position in relation to the other suffixes following a verb but, instead, can come just about anywhere except following a type 9 suffix. Their position is determined by the meaning intended (TKD 4.3) 2. Unlike -be’ the position of -Qo’ does not change: it occurs last, unless followed by a type 9 suffix. (TKD 4.3.) Does the 2nd statement intend to exclude just the type 1 to 8 suffixes from following -Qo’, or does it also ban other rovers (-be’ and -qu’) from coming after --Qo’? Because it could be interesting, if it is allowed, to express various degrees of refusal through it: leghQo’ : he refuses to see him (?) leghQo’qu' : he *absolutely* refuses to see him (?) leghQo’be’ : he does not refuse to see him (?) leghQo’be’qu’ : he really does not refuse to see him (perhaps it means he is eager to see him, and for this meaning we could use leghqangqu’) (?) leghQo’qu’be’ : he does not refuse categorically to see him Has this already been discussed somewhere else? What do you think? ghItlhjaj Envoyé depuis mon smartphone Samsung Galaxy.