Probably not. The examples of adverbial {je} indicate that it's used when the verb is the same as a previous sentence but the subject or object is different. In your example the verb has changed. On Tue, Aug 15, 2017 at 6:07 AM, mayqel qunenoS <mihkoun@gmail.com> wrote:
maj.
Now, lets examine another example:
{Su'IH 'ej Suwoch je} You're beautiful and you're tall too You're beautiful and you're also tall
Is this considered a proper use of the adverbial {je} ?
qunnoq
On 14 Aug 2017 11:16 pm, "nIqolay Q" <niqolay0@gmail.com> wrote:
I don't see why not. {vIHar je} on its own would mean either "I believe it (and others believe it too)" or "I believe it (and I believe other things too)." Your example fits the latter; you believe the duck is beautiful, and also, you believe that the cat is beautiful. An example of the former ("I and others believe it") would be {'IH vIghrolIj 'e' Har wo'rIv. 'IH vIghrolIj 'e' vIHar je.}
On Mon, Aug 14, 2017 at 4:04 PM, mayqel qunenoS <mihkoun@gmail.com> wrote:
According to tkd, we can use the adverbial {je} in this way:
{qaleghpu' je} I saw you too
With the ambiguity of course being, "I and others saw you or I saw you and others".
All these are known, however I would like to ask if the following would be a correct use of {je} too:
{'IH Da'vI'lIj 'e' vIHar; 'IH vIghrolIj 'e' vIHar je} Your duck is beautiful, I believe it; your cat is beautiful, I believe it too.
qunnoq
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