On 4/10/2019 12:48 PM, Ed Bailey wrote:
It seems this behavior is seen in Klingon verbs like *meQ*, where *-moH* is sometimes dropped. Perhaps this happens due to your out-of-universe explanation, but an in-universe explanation would be the desire for brevity, combined with pragmatics.
Wait, who determined that *-moH* is sometimes dropped from *meQ,* and how did they determine it? I recognize that *meQ* is first defined and used for us as /burn /and is used several times with the subject being the thing that is on fire, and that KGT used it transitively with the thing on fire as the object, but how do you go from that to saying the mechanism behind this is a dropped *-moH? *How do you know it isn't just that the subject and object of the verb are flexible in the same way that English /burn/ is? (Which is probably the reason why the usage changed.) Or some other explanation I haven't thought of?
I'd cite this as an example of the deliberate disuse of pragmatics: resolving ambiguity by following a strict usage rule rather than choosing the most likely possibility as the speaker's intent.
You can't just declare that anything that seems wrong, but that you can manage to understand anyway, is done intentionally and to be accepted. I can usually understand Bingon, but I'm not going to call it acceptable language variation. You can hypothesize something like this, but it's just speculation, especially if you simply label every Englishism you see in this way. -- SuStel http://trimboli.name