On 3/18/2019 3:36 PM, mayqel qunen'oS wrote:
charghwI:
There might be a better approach to the entire effort.
I wish there was, but what would that be ?
Suppose you wanted to write, a long passage with regards to the process of learning a foreign language. Starting from how often one should study, how one should study, the things one should avoid, etc..
How would you approach it, without using the -lu' ?
The only choices I can think of, are saying {vay'} and/or {ghojwI'}, and using them interchangeably. But I would avoid the - lu', if not for any other reason, at least in order to avoid hitting the simultaneous -laH/lu' obstacle.
Would you approach this differently ?
I'd probably use imperatives. If it's a book of instruction, instead of saying *naDev wot lo'nISlu'*/one needs to use a verb here,/ just say *naDev wot yIlo'*/use a verb here!/ If, on the other hand, you're writing a scholarly paper on how people go about learning languages, then I'd pepper my manuscript with *ghojwI'*/student/, *jatlhwI'*/speaker/, or whoever it is who is learning. *naDev wot lo' jatlhwI'*/the speaker uses a verb here./ Then your *-laH* problem doesn't even exist. -- SuStel http://trimboli.name