De'vID;
Note the part that says {lengtaHvIS... 'ej charghtaSvIS}.
maj. this answers my question, and shows that the {'ej} is indeed able to join two "parts of a sentence" (I don't know how else to call them). and -correct me if I'm wrong-, according to this canon example we could write too: {qaleghmeH 'ej qa'uchmeH, jIlengta'} for "in order to see you and in order to hold you, I traveled". Also, we could write {qaleghDI' 'ej qa'uchDI' jIQuchchoH} for "as soon as I saw you and as soon as I held you, I became happy" however, this does contradict the "strict description" of {'ej}, that "it is used to join sentences". Unless of course, what I've been calling "parts of a sentence" are considered to be true sentences.. qunnoH jan puqloD On Tue, Nov 15, 2016 at 12:32 PM, De'vID <de.vid.jonpin@gmail.com> wrote:
On 15 November 2016 at 11:26, mayqel qunenoS <mihkoun@gmail.com> wrote:
Can we write:
{jIyIttaHvIS 'ej jISoptaHvIS, vIghro' vIgho'} ?
From SkyBox card 1: {tlhIngan wo' Degh 'oH Deghvam'e'. tlhIngan Dujmey law'qu' SommeyDaq batlh cha'lu'. juHqo' Qo'noSvo' loghDaq lengtaHvIS tlhInganpu' 'ej qo'mey Sar charghtaHvIS chaH Dat tlhIngan may'Duj luleghDI' neH qIb nganpu' buQpu' may'Duj 'ej ghIjpu' 'oH. nIteb ghIjpu' je Deghvam.} "This marking represents the Klingon Empire and has been emblazoned upon the hulls of countless Klingon Starships. During the aggressive expansion of the Klingon people from their homeworld of Kronos into space, this symbol grew to become as feared throughout the galaxy as the menacing profiles of their battlecruisers."
Note the part that says {lengtaHvIS... 'ej charghtaSvIS}.
-- De'vID _______________________________________________ tlhIngan-Hol mailing list tlhIngan-Hol@lists.kli.org http://lists.kli.org/listinfo.cgi/tlhingan-hol-kli.org