On Fri, Dec 16, 2016 at 7:31 AM, mayqel qunenoS <mihkoun@gmail.com> wrote:
qurgh:
Where is the rule that they can't be part of a noun-noun construction, I must have missed it?
SuStel wrote this a few days ago, at the "who shall call them from the twilight ?" thread.
I hadn't read it. Looking back, he merely said it was unknown whether they can be used in that way. TKD says that the "word fits into the sentence in the position that would be occupied by the answer". To me this means, if the answer is {tIn SuStel Duj}, and the missing information I want is {SuStel}, then the way to ask the question would be {tIn 'Iv Duj}. The same would seem to make sense for {nuq}. If the answer is {Hab SoSlI' Quch} and the missing information is {Quch} then the question would be {Hab SoSlI' nuq?}. I don't believe this works for every situation though. I found {nuq Dargh DaneH} in the archive as an attempt to say "What type of tea do you want?". I don't think that works, since the answer to {nuq Dargh DaneH} would be something like {Duj Dargh DaneH} - "I want the ship's tea" with {nuq} filling the space of the owner/possessor of the tea, not the type/brand of tea. For that you probably do need to switch to something like {Dargh Segh DaneHbogh yIngu'}. qurgh