On Mon, May 13, 2019, 05:39 mayqel qunen'oS, <mihkoun@gmail.com> wrote:
We know, that we can place a noun marked with {-'e'} at the beginning of the sentence, the meaning then goes "as for (noun).." and the sentence continues.
The classic example is:
{qIbDaq SuvwI''e' SoH Dun law' Hoch Dun puS} you would be the greatest warrior in the galaxy
So, now, lets forget all of the above..
I want to write "the ancient cat is an alien".
The usual choice would be to write, {nov 'oH vIghro' tIQ'e'}, which actually translates to "as for the ancient cat, it's an alien".
But based on example of "you would be the greatest warrior in the galaxy", seemingly/apparently, I can write too:
{vIghro' tIQ'e', nov 'oH} as for the ancient cat, it's an alien
As we see, whether I write {nov 'oH vIghro' tIQ'e'} or {vIghro' tIQ'e', nov 'oH}, the english meaning is exactly the same.
They're not the same, though. If there are multiple ancient cats, the latter can mean "as for ancient cats, it is an alien". So, if we were asked what's the actual difference between the two, we
should say:
Both are equally correct, and the only difference between them, is (as 'oqranD once had clarified), that the {vIghro' tIQ'e', nov 'oH} is more "shakespearean".
Cite your source. -- De'vID