Thanks, that answers it. 2016-10-06 16:07 GMT+02:00 SuStel <sustel@trimboli.name>:
On 10/6/2016 10:03 AM, André Müller wrote:
Hm, why only for first and second person? I don't have my KGT at hand right now, but I think in those situations where a third person object is actually marked on the verb by a prefix, the prefix trick (aka dative shift) should be possible, shouldn't it?
Cf.: Situation: The soldiers will give you (e.g. their prisoner) to the emperor. {ghaHvaD SoH nInob.} = They give you to him. {SoH lunob.} = They give him you.
Y'all seem to have excluded this variant. Did Okrand explicitly rule this out or state that the prefix trick only works for 1st and 2nd person? Or was it an assumption?
"When the indirect object (in this case, the hearer) is first or second person, the pronominal prefix which normally indicates first or second person object may be used."
-- SuStel http://trimboli.name
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