On 8/9/2017 10:15 AM, mayqel qunenoS wrote:
There are some prefixes which have multiple meanings. For example: {vI-} for "I-he/she/it/them".

But there are other prefixes, which have only one meaning. For example {jI-} for "I-none", {cho-} for "you-me".

Using the prefixes which have only one meaning, could we write:

{jIghItlhwI'} for "I who write"
{chobejwI'} for "you who watches me" ?

And I'm saying "using the prefixes which have only one meaning", because obviously if we used prefixes which have multiple meanings, the result would be ambiguous.

This is an old, old theory.

No -wI' has ever been canonically observed with any prefix, ever. I believe it is never done. My thinking is that the job of the prefix is to agree with the subject and object, whether stated or elided, not to set them. As such, it is not as closely associated with the verb as suffixes (it doesn't change the verb's meaning the way suffixes do), and so the suffixes take priority. -wI' turns the verb into a noun, and you can't add prefixes to nouns..

-- 
SuStel
http://trimboli.name