On 7/31/2017 8:38 AM, mayqel qunenoS wrote:
SuStel:
jatlhqu'meH tlhIngan Hol naQ law' Quenya naQ puS
SuStel let me ask you.. At this sentence, the {jatlhqu'meH tlhIngan Hol} is a {meH}ed noun, something like {QongmeH Duj} ?
Or does it mean "in order that klingon speaks a lot..", which sounds somewhat strange ?
Or is it rather "in order that he/they speaks/speak a lot, klingon is more complete than quenya" ?
My intention was is the last one, though remember, *-qu'* doesn't only mean /a lot,/ it also (and perhaps primarily) intensifies the element it's attached to. I intended the intensification. /For SPEAKING (as opposed to something else) Klingon is more complete than Quenya./ The something else is described in the next sentence: *mu' mung qun je HaDmeH*/for studying word origin and history./ If you interpreted *jatlhqu'meH tlhIngan Hol* as a *-meH*'d noun (I did not intend that), you'd still get more less the same meaning. /Klingon for SPEAKING (as opposed to something else) is more complete than Quenya./ The *-qu'* wouldn't mean quite what I wanted, though, since I wasn't comparing Klingon for speaking with Klingon for studying word origins; I was comparing Klingon versus Quenya for speaking and Klingon versus Quenya for word origins. -- SuStel http://trimboli.name