SuStel:
> HIja'.

so, in the sentence:

reH bo'Degh Sopbogh vIghro''e' legh Human.

how do we distinguish, where the adverb actually is referring to ?

qunnoH jan puqloD
ghoghwIj HablI'vo' vIngeHta'


On 8 Dec 2016 10:03 pm, "SuStel" <sustel@trimboli.name> wrote:
On 12/8/2016 1:26 PM, mayqel qunenoS wrote:

nIqolay Q:
> And relative clauses can take adverbials; for
> instance, {nom lengbogh Duj} "ship that
> travels quickly" is how you say "fast ship".

ok, wait a second.. an adverb can refer to the verb of a {-bogh} thing (or clause) ?

so far I believed that an adverb can only refer to the main verb of a sentence !

lets write an example

reH bo'Degh Sopbogh vIghro''e' legh Human.
the human always sees the cat which eats the bird.

this is the only meaning I thought was possible !

is it possible in this sentence the {reH} to refer to the {Sopbogh} thus giving the meaning "the human sees the cat which always eats the bird" ?


HIja'.

--
SuStel
http://trimboli.name

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