On Mar 5, 2019, at 08:56, SuStel <sustel@trimboli.name> wrote:

On 3/5/2019 9:35 AM, mayqel qunen'oS wrote:
If we say:

{tlhInganpu' romuluSnganpu' chevchuqmoH qeylIS}

I don't think the sentence is meaningful. -chuq means the subject is plural and does the verb to each other. It doesn't work for the object.


But the {-moH} is important here. If the object of a {-moH}ed verb can be the subject of the action being {moH}ed, I think it could be meaningful in the same way {Qo'noS tuqmey muvchuqmoH qeylIS} is. {qeylIS} is the singular subject of {muvchuqmoH}; the {tuqmey} are the plural object of {muvchuqmoH} which makes them into the plural subject of {muvchuq}.

tlhInganpu' romuluSnganpu' je chev qeylIS
Kahless separates the Klingons and the Romulans.


That’s obviously a more sensible way to say the first meaning, but I still think the question is a valid one.