Anthony Appleyard:
If in speech there is a special tone to show when {X Y} means "Y which is X" and not "Y of X", it may (ask Okrand) be an idea to put a mark between the words to show this in writing
What kind of mark would you suggest ? Because placing a qaghwI' could be rather confusing. Let alone the fact that it isn't a mark, but it is a letter. qunnoq On Sep 21, 2017 10:55 AM, "Anthony Appleyard" <a.appleyard@btinternet.com> wrote:
If in speech there is a special tone to show when {X Y} means "Y which is X" and not "Y of X", it may (ask Okrand) be an idea to put a mark between the words to show this in writing, as in the book name "paq'batlh".
----Original message---- From : sustel@trimboli.name
On 9/20/2017 11:48 AM, Anthony Appleyard wrote:
Basically, if X and Y are nouns, when does "X Y" mean "X's Y", "Y of X", and when it is an apposition? In the old days I used to write "X 'oHbogh Y" for "X which is Y".
How would I translate "Maltz's captain" and "Captain Maltz" distinctively? It seems that {matlh HoD} could mean both.
Context, tone of voice, waggling of eyebrows. There is no way to tell them apart strictly through their grammar. _______________________________________________ tlhIngan-Hol mailing list tlhIngan-Hol@lists.kli.org http://lists.kli.org/listinfo.cgi/tlhingan-hol-kli.org