While I’ve used the language for a lot of years, I will confess to specific bone-headedness in terms of missing some basic concepts. While there were early challenges I worked past, there’s one I’m just starting to realize I think I’ve misunderstood for decades. It’s harder to change to understand something that you’ve misunderstood than it is to begin to understand something you more simply didn’t understand. It’s like there’s a spreadsheet with a cell for the thing you want to understand. It’s easier to spot an empty cell and fill it than it is to realize that you have corrupt data in a cell that needs replacing. Okrand explains to us about null prefixes. I’m dimly beginning to suspect that there is also at least one null suffix. My vague memory of an interview with Okrand more than a decade ago, includes times when I used the word “transitive” and Okrand corrected me to say “takes an object”. This happened repeatedly because I was stupid enough to fail to recognize my stupidity. Also, in TKD, it talks about word order as “Object Verb Subject” and uses the word “Object” quite a bit, but I can’t find an instance of him using the term “Direct Object”. I think I’ve been inserting the idea of a Direct Object into a language that doesn’t distinguish Direct Objects from other kinds of Objects. In other words, Klingon doesn’t have a Direct Object or an Indirect Object. It just has Objects. Some are supplemented in syntactical information by Type 5 suffixes, and some aren’t. This would explain the “prefix trick” and the {-moH} sentences I have despised for so many years. In other words, a noun might optionally take {-vaD} and have the same meaning in a sentence whether the {-vaD} is present or not. What I’ve been taking as a specific Direct Object might instead more simply be an unspecified kind of object, and what I think of as a Direct Object is more simply an object that perhaps takes a null Type 5 suffix, or more simply, it’s an unspecified type of object that has no possible Type 5 suffix that could be applied to it in the given sentence. So, in {be’nalwI’ vIghojmoH}, {tlhIngan Hol vIghojmoH}, and {be’nalwI’vaD tlhIngnan Hol vIghojmoH}, {be’nalwI’} is never a Direct Object. It’s just an object, and in the first sentence, the {-vaD} isn’t necessary and is unstated, and the verb prefix doesn’t indicate that it is the Direct Object of the verb. It simply agrees with its status as an Object, not explicitly identified by a Type 5 suffix. In the last sentence, the {-vaD} is present for clarity’s sake. In other words, {-vaD} is akin to a plural suffix. If you already know the noun is plural, you don’t need a plural suffix. If you know that a noun is a beneficiary, you don’t need {-vaD}. It’s not wrong to explicitly use it, but it’s just not essential. It’s a language, not a computer program. Just because you CAN use a Type 5 suffix doesn’t mean you have to. Similarly, that also explains why certain verbs don’t require {-Daq} for nouns that obviously have a locative function. Meanwhile, it makes sense that over time, verbs that commonly have locative-nouns as objects might more formally decide when to use the {-Daq} and when to not use the {-Daq} in order to more give more nuance into the nature of the use of the locative with that verb, so you can differentiate whether you are going to a river (destination) or going in a river (route, or vehicle), etc. This kind of nuance doesn’t work for other verbs because location isn’t a core part of the meaning of most verbs. Of course this idea of more generic Objects also leaves open the following possibilities for which we have no canon, but until such canon appears, this is only unverified conjecture: tlhIngan Hol’e’ be’nalwI’ vIghojmoH. tlhIngan Hol’e’ be’nalwI’vaD jIghojmoH. In that last example, the prefix indicates no object because the Type 5 suffixes already identify nouns that are objects, so there’s no need to redundantly point to them with the prefix. Also, the “prefix trick” isn’t really even a trick. If I’d understood the optional nature of Type 5 noun suffixes, then the following would already make sense: chab qanob. The prefix indicates one object, {SoH}, and positionally, there’s another object {chab}. Context tells you that {SoH} is the beneficiary, so the {-vaD} is wholly unnecessary, and {chab} doesn’t need a Type 5 Suffix to explain its grammatical relationship to the verb. I’m guessing that SuStel has been trying to explain this to me for years, but I couldn’t begin to understand that which I had misunderstood because it was an unknown unknown, as a former member of the military industrial congressional complex once put it. Or perhaps more likely, he’s about to explain how I have once again gotten it wrong, and someone will be entertained by the ensuing thread. In any case, it gives one distraction from The State Of The World at the moment, and anything that can do that is worthwhile. pItlh charghwI’ ‘utlh (ghaH, ghaH, -Daj)
Okrand explains to us about null prefixes. I’m dimly beginning to suspect that there is also at least one null suffix.
My vague memory of an interview with Okrand more than a decade ago, includes times when I used the word “transitive” and Okrand corrected me to say “takes an object”. This happened repeatedly because I was stupid enough to fail to recognize my stupidity.
Also, in TKD, it talks about word order as “Object Verb Subject” and uses the word “Object” quite a bit, but I can’t find an instance of him using the term “Direct Object”.
I think I’ve been inserting the idea of a Direct Object into a language that doesn’t distinguish Direct Objects from other kinds of Objects. In other words, Klingon doesn’t have a Direct Object or an Indirect Object. It just has Objects. Some are supplemented in syntactical information by Type 5 suffixes, and some aren’t.
Hey hey! You got there! Woo hoo! But don't confuse the nouns with type 5 suffixes on them as "objects." They're not. Each Klingon clause has at most one object. Those other words are just other words. The ones with type 5 suffixes I tend to call /syntactic nouns./ A linguist might call them nouns in an oblique case, though that would require a clearer understanding of what /oblique/ means to a Klingon case system than I am prepared to figure out. There are also noun-based time expressions, which don't take any kind of marking. In Klingon, the object is its own syntactic role. Just as a noun like *DujDaq* has the syntactic role of /locative/ and *yuQvo'*//has the syntactic role of /ablative,/ the object has the syntactic role of "noun the subject performs the verb on." This is purely syntactic, not semantic: being an object doesn't impart any /meaning/ to the noun or the action. This is why we can say both *puq vIghojmoH*/I teach the child/ and *QeD vIghojmoH*/I teach science:/ being the "object" doesn't have any semantic meaning, but being the "recipient" *(puq)* or "theme" *(QeD)* or whatever does.
This would explain the “prefix trick” and the {-moH} sentences I have despised for so many years. In other words, a noun might optionally take {-vaD} and have the same meaning in a sentence whether the {-vaD} is present or not.
Yes! Of course, it depends on the verb. Different verbs expect certain semantic roles as their objects and only accept words that mean certain things. We have been told explicitly that the object of *jatlh* must be the speech-event and cannot be the addressee. You can say *SoHvaD jIjatlh,* but you cannot say *SoH qajatlh.* However, we /also/ have the prefix trick, which says that you can make a verb prefix agree with an unstated indirect object if it's first- or second-person. So you /can/ say *qajatlh*/I speak to you./ It's not that *SoH* is the object of *jatlh;* it's just that the prefix is allowed to agree with an elided indirect object /instead/ of the direct object.
What I’ve been taking as a specific Direct Object might instead more simply be an unspecified kind of object, and what I think of as a Direct Object is more simply an object that perhaps takes a null Type 5 suffix, or more simply, it’s an unspecified type of object that has no possible Type 5 suffix that could be applied to it in the given sentence.
You could think of objects (and subjects) as having null-suffixes, but they wouldn't be type 5 suffixes, because subjects and objects can have the suffix *-'e'* on them. And I don't see why Klingon would have these hypothetical subject and object suffixes anywhere but type 5. I don't know if this is a helpful thing to imagine. But the general idea is correct. Klingon inflects all its various noun syntactic roles /except/ subject and object.
So, in {be’nalwI’ vIghojmoH}, {tlhIngan Hol vIghojmoH}, and {be’nalwI’vaD tlhIngnan Hol vIghojmoH}, {be’nalwI’} is never a Direct Object. It’s just an object, and in the first sentence, the {-vaD} isn’t necessary and is unstated, and the verb prefix doesn’t indicate that it is the Direct Object of the verb. It simply agrees with its status as an Object, not explicitly identified by a Type 5 suffix. In the last sentence, the {-vaD} is present for clarity’s sake.
You're almost there! It's not that *-vaD* is added to the last sentence for clarity. You can't say *be'nalwI' tlhIngan Hol vIghojmoH.* A Klingon clause can have no more than one object. That seems to be an ironclad rule of Klingon. The rule appears to be that if more than one noun or noun phrase /could/ be the object, then whatever noun or noun phrase is in the role of recipient (i.e., indirect object) gets put into the beneficiary noun case, marked explicitly with *-vaD.* The other noun or noun phrase becomes the object and is not marked. And the two nouns or noun phrases must go in the correct order: beneficiary before object.
In other words, {-vaD} is akin to a plural suffix. If you already know the noun is plural, you don’t need a plural suffix. If you know that a noun is a beneficiary, you don’t need {-vaD}. It’s not wrong to explicitly use it, but it’s just not essential. It’s a language, not a computer program. Just because you CAN use a Type 5 suffix doesn’t mean you have to.
It's kinda-sorta like *-vaD* is optional, but only where we know that a verb can use a recipient as its object. Can you say *HoD vInob* to mean that you give the captain something unspecified? I don't think so, any more than I think you can say /I give the captain/ in English to mean you give something to the captain. In English, the word /give/ doesn't work that way. But the word /tell/ does: /I tell the captain; I tell the captain the information./ So it is in Klingon: each verb will potentially have a different relationship with its object than others do.
Similarly, that also explains why certain verbs don’t require {-Daq} for nouns that obviously have a locative function. Meanwhile, it makes sense that over time, verbs that commonly have locative-nouns as objects might more formally decide when to use the {-Daq} and when to not use the {-Daq} in order to more give more nuance into the nature of the use of the locative with that verb, so you can differentiate whether you are going to a river (destination) or going in a river (route, or vehicle), etc. This kind of nuance doesn’t work for other verbs because location isn’t a core part of the meaning of most verbs.
Remember, though, that it's specifically the verb that imparts a locative sense to its object. *Dab* is a locative-object verb; *nob* is not. I can say *yuQDaq vIDab */I inhabit the planet,/ and I can say *yuQ vIDab*/I inhabit the planet,/ and I can say *yuQDaq vInob,* but this can only mean /I give him/her/it/them on the planet,/ and I can say *yuQ vInob,* and this can only mean /I give the planet (to someone)./ It's different for every verb.
Of course this idea of more generic Objects also leaves open the following possibilities for which we have no canon, but until such canon appears, this is only unverified conjecture:
tlhIngan Hol’e’ be’nalwI’ vIghojmoH.
tlhIngan Hol’e’ be’nalwI’vaD jIghojmoH.
In that last example, the prefix indicates no object because the Type 5 suffixes already identify nouns that are objects, so there’s no need to redundantly point to them with the prefix.
Well, no. Type 5 suffixes don't identify objects. It appears to be impossible to mark a noun with a type 5 suffix, except for *-'e',* or if it's *-Daq *on a locative-sense verb.
Also, the “prefix trick” isn’t really even a trick. If I’d understood the optional nature of Type 5 noun suffixes, then the following would already make sense:
chab qanob.
The prefix indicates one object, {SoH}, and positionally, there’s another object {chab}. Context tells you that {SoH} is the beneficiary, so the {-vaD} is wholly unnecessary, and {chab} doesn’t need a Type 5 Suffix to explain its grammatical relationship to the verb.
The prefix trick simply lets you make the prefix agree with an elided indirect object, whether or not there is an object. If the indirect object is present, you cannot use the prefix trick. *-vaD* is not dropped because of context.
I’m guessing that SuStel has been trying to explain this to me for years, but I couldn’t begin to understand that which I had misunderstood because it was an unknown unknown, as a former member of the military industrial congressional complex once put it.
You are VERY close now. You have it right that Klingon doesn't have SYNTACTIC positions called direct object and indirect object. It has the syntactic position of "object." Actually, it does sort of have a syntactic case of "indirect object": the suffix *-vaD.* When the noun indicates the semantic notion of recipient ("indirect object"), it can be marked with *-vaD* to indicate this semantic role syntactically. *-vaD* doesn't only mean "indirect object," though; it means "beneficiary." (E.g., *Qu'vaD lI' De'vam.* *Qu'vaD* is not an indirect object. Indirect object is a subset of beneficiary.)
Or perhaps more likely, he’s about to explain how I have once again gotten it wrong, and someone will be entertained by the ensuing thread. In any case, it gives one distraction from The State Of The World at the moment, and anything that can do that is worthwhile.
I think you've gotten over the conceptual hurdle. Now it's just a matter of avoiding the stones along the track. -- SuStel http://trimboli.name
Thanks. This helps a lot. The remaining thing that I wonder is that, given the right context and given the fluidity between beneficiary {-vaD} and indirect-object-grammatically-indicated-in-Object-position that is common to Klingon, I could see a conversation like: {nuqDaq nuH?} {vInob.} {‘Iv Danob?} {HoD vInob.} I agree that under normal circumstances that {nob} would not have an indirect object in the grammatically-object position with no noun suffix, but all the reasons to shortcut the indirect object in that position in other cases apply here because of the obvious context of the thread. I also agree that the entire conversation is grammatically flawed, but easily understandable, all because of the context threaded through it. The question is, does this ability to put an otherwise {-vaD}worthy noun in the Object position rely wholly on the specifics of common usage of the verb, the way that special locative-related verbs use {-Daq}worthy nouns as unmarked Objects, or is it more context flexible and vocabulary independent, as is suggested by the prefix trick. I doubt we have enough evidence to be sure, one way or the other. Meanwhile, I doubt many people would have difficulty understanding the above conversation. Then again, I doubt that we’ll ever see {QeD’e’ puqloDwI’ vIghojmoH}, even though that makes more sense to me than the canon-proven, correct {puqloDwI’vaD QeD vIghojmoH}. The language doesn’t have to make sense according to my arbitrary ideas or proclivities. A student of English would have a LOT of suggestions about how English SHOULD work, but doesn’t, given that we park in the driveway and drive on the parkway, but we don’t park on the driveway or drive there, and we don’t drive in the parkway or park there. Language is an arbitrary agreement among speakers of the language, or among regulating authorities, when such authorities exist. The French and Turkish speakers have such authorities. English doesn’t. Klingon does. -charghwI’, retired.
On Aug 19, 2021, at 3:48 PM, SuStel <sustel@trimboli.name> wrote:
Okrand explains to us about null prefixes. I’m dimly beginning to suspect that there is also at least one null suffix.
My vague memory of an interview with Okrand more than a decade ago, includes times when I used the word “transitive” and Okrand corrected me to say “takes an object”. This happened repeatedly because I was stupid enough to fail to recognize my stupidity.
Also, in TKD, it talks about word order as “Object Verb Subject” and uses the word “Object” quite a bit, but I can’t find an instance of him using the term “Direct Object”.
I think I’ve been inserting the idea of a Direct Object into a language that doesn’t distinguish Direct Objects from other kinds of Objects. In other words, Klingon doesn’t have a Direct Object or an Indirect Object. It just has Objects. Some are supplemented in syntactical information by Type 5 suffixes, and some aren’t. Hey hey! You got there! Woo hoo!
But don't confuse the nouns with type 5 suffixes on them as "objects." They're not. Each Klingon clause has at most one object. Those other words are just other words. The ones with type 5 suffixes I tend to call syntactic nouns. A linguist might call them nouns in an oblique case, though that would require a clearer understanding of what oblique means to a Klingon case system than I am prepared to figure out. There are also noun-based time expressions, which don't take any kind of marking.
In Klingon, the object is its own syntactic role. Just as a noun like DujDaq has the syntactic role of locative and yuQvo' has the syntactic role of ablative, the object has the syntactic role of "noun the subject performs the verb on." This is purely syntactic, not semantic: being an object doesn't impart any meaning to the noun or the action. This is why we can say both puq vIghojmoH I teach the child and QeD vIghojmoH I teach science: being the "object" doesn't have any semantic meaning, but being the "recipient" (puq) or "theme" (QeD) or whatever does.
This would explain the “prefix trick” and the {-moH} sentences I have despised for so many years. In other words, a noun might optionally take {-vaD} and have the same meaning in a sentence whether the {-vaD} is present or not. Yes!
Of course, it depends on the verb. Different verbs expect certain semantic roles as their objects and only accept words that mean certain things. We have been told explicitly that the object of jatlh must be the speech-event and cannot be the addressee. You can say SoHvaD jIjatlh, but you cannot say SoH qajatlh. However, we also have the prefix trick, which says that you can make a verb prefix agree with an unstated indirect object if it's first- or second-person. So you can say qajatlh I speak to you. It's not that SoH is the object of jatlh; it's just that the prefix is allowed to agree with an elided indirect object instead of the direct object.
What I’ve been taking as a specific Direct Object might instead more simply be an unspecified kind of object, and what I think of as a Direct Object is more simply an object that perhaps takes a null Type 5 suffix, or more simply, it’s an unspecified type of object that has no possible Type 5 suffix that could be applied to it in the given sentence. You could think of objects (and subjects) as having null-suffixes, but they wouldn't be type 5 suffixes, because subjects and objects can have the suffix -'e' on them. And I don't see why Klingon would have these hypothetical subject and object suffixes anywhere but type 5. I don't know if this is a helpful thing to imagine.
But the general idea is correct. Klingon inflects all its various noun syntactic roles except subject and object.
So, in {be’nalwI’ vIghojmoH}, {tlhIngan Hol vIghojmoH}, and {be’nalwI’vaD tlhIngnan Hol vIghojmoH}, {be’nalwI’} is never a Direct Object. It’s just an object, and in the first sentence, the {-vaD} isn’t necessary and is unstated, and the verb prefix doesn’t indicate that it is the Direct Object of the verb. It simply agrees with its status as an Object, not explicitly identified by a Type 5 suffix. In the last sentence, the {-vaD} is present for clarity’s sake. You're almost there! It's not that -vaD is added to the last sentence for clarity. You can't say be'nalwI' tlhIngan Hol vIghojmoH. A Klingon clause can have no more than one object. That seems to be an ironclad rule of Klingon. The rule appears to be that if more than one noun or noun phrase could be the object, then whatever noun or noun phrase is in the role of recipient (i.e., indirect object) gets put into the beneficiary noun case, marked explicitly with -vaD. The other noun or noun phrase becomes the object and is not marked. And the two nouns or noun phrases must go in the correct order: beneficiary before object.
In other words, {-vaD} is akin to a plural suffix. If you already know the noun is plural, you don’t need a plural suffix. If you know that a noun is a beneficiary, you don’t need {-vaD}. It’s not wrong to explicitly use it, but it’s just not essential. It’s a language, not a computer program. Just because you CAN use a Type 5 suffix doesn’t mean you have to. It's kinda-sorta like -vaD is optional, but only where we know that a verb can use a recipient as its object. Can you say HoD vInob to mean that you give the captain something unspecified? I don't think so, any more than I think you can say I give the captain in English to mean you give something to the captain. In English, the word give doesn't work that way. But the word tell does: I tell the captain; I tell the captain the information. So it is in Klingon: each verb will potentially have a different relationship with its object than others do.
Similarly, that also explains why certain verbs don’t require {-Daq} for nouns that obviously have a locative function. Meanwhile, it makes sense that over time, verbs that commonly have locative-nouns as objects might more formally decide when to use the {-Daq} and when to not use the {-Daq} in order to more give more nuance into the nature of the use of the locative with that verb, so you can differentiate whether you are going to a river (destination) or going in a river (route, or vehicle), etc. This kind of nuance doesn’t work for other verbs because location isn’t a core part of the meaning of most verbs. Remember, though, that it's specifically the verb that imparts a locative sense to its object. Dab is a locative-object verb; nob is not. I can say yuQDaq vIDab I inhabit the planet, and I can say yuQ vIDab I inhabit the planet, and I can say yuQDaq vInob, but this can only mean I give him/her/it/them on the planet, and I can say yuQ vInob, and this can only mean I give the planet (to someone). It's different for every verb.
Of course this idea of more generic Objects also leaves open the following possibilities for which we have no canon, but until such canon appears, this is only unverified conjecture:
tlhIngan Hol’e’ be’nalwI’ vIghojmoH.
tlhIngan Hol’e’ be’nalwI’vaD jIghojmoH.
In that last example, the prefix indicates no object because the Type 5 suffixes already identify nouns that are objects, so there’s no need to redundantly point to them with the prefix. Well, no. Type 5 suffixes don't identify objects. It appears to be impossible to mark a noun with a type 5 suffix, except for -'e', or if it's -Daq on a locative-sense verb.
Also, the “prefix trick” isn’t really even a trick. If I’d understood the optional nature of Type 5 noun suffixes, then the following would already make sense:
chab qanob.
The prefix indicates one object, {SoH}, and positionally, there’s another object {chab}. Context tells you that {SoH} is the beneficiary, so the {-vaD} is wholly unnecessary, and {chab} doesn’t need a Type 5 Suffix to explain its grammatical relationship to the verb. The prefix trick simply lets you make the prefix agree with an elided indirect object, whether or not there is an object. If the indirect object is present, you cannot use the prefix trick. -vaD is not dropped because of context.
I’m guessing that SuStel has been trying to explain this to me for years, but I couldn’t begin to understand that which I had misunderstood because it was an unknown unknown, as a former member of the military industrial congressional complex once put it. You are VERY close now. You have it right that Klingon doesn't have SYNTACTIC positions called direct object and indirect object. It has the syntactic position of "object." Actually, it does sort of have a syntactic case of "indirect object": the suffix -vaD. When the noun indicates the semantic notion of recipient ("indirect object"), it can be marked with -vaD to indicate this semantic role syntactically. -vaD doesn't only mean "indirect object," though; it means "beneficiary." (E.g., Qu'vaD lI' De'vam. Qu'vaD is not an indirect object. Indirect object is a subset of beneficiary.)
Or perhaps more likely, he’s about to explain how I have once again gotten it wrong, and someone will be entertained by the ensuing thread. In any case, it gives one distraction from The State Of The World at the moment, and anything that can do that is worthwhile. I think you've gotten over the conceptual hurdle. Now it's just a matter of avoiding the stones along the track.
-- SuStel http://trimboli.name _______________________________________________ tlhIngan-Hol mailing list tlhIngan-Hol@lists.kli.org http://lists.kli.org/listinfo.cgi/tlhingan-hol-kli.org
On 8/22/2021 10:59 AM, Will Martin wrote:
Thanks. This helps a lot.
The remaining thing that I wonder is that, given the right context and given the fluidity between beneficiary {-vaD} and indirect-object-grammatically-indicated-in-Object-position that is common to Klingon, I could see a conversation like:
{nuqDaq nuH?}
{vInob.}
{‘Iv Danob?}
{HoD vInob.}
I agree that under normal circumstances that {nob} would not have an indirect object in the grammatically-object position with no noun suffix, but all the reasons to shortcut the indirect object in that position in other cases apply here because of the obvious context of the thread. I also agree that the entire conversation is grammatically flawed, but easily understandable, all because of the context threaded through it.
I honestly don't think the concept of "indirect or direct object in object position" applies to all verbs. We know of a couple where it does (like *ja'*), and it generally can with anything to do with *-moH,* but I don't think it can be applied across the board. I don't think *vInob* can mean /I gave (something unspecified) to him./ The reason it works for verbs with *-moH* is because these verbs have multiple entities acting on multiple entities. If we have the sentence *Ha'DIbaH vISop* /I eat the meat,/ we have an agent *(jIH)* and a patient *(Ha'DIbaH).* With no other noun roles in the sentence, the patient is expressed as a subject (it goes after the verb) and the patient is expressed as an object (it goes before the verb). If we now look at the sentence *jIH muSopmoH vutwI'*/The cook makes me eat,/ we see different semantics. We still have an agent (*jIH:* I'm still eating the meat), but we no longer have a patient (nothing is being described as eaten). Instead we have a causer. The apparent rules of Klingon say that if we have a causer, it is expressed as a subject and any agent or patient or theme or recipient (or maybe other semantic roles) is expressed as an object. This is the same rule that makes the *tlhIngan *in *Quch tlhIngan* /The Klingon is happy /jump to the object position in *tlhIngan QuchmoH tI'rIlngan*/The Trill makes the Klingon happy./ And if we have the sentence *Ha'DIbaH SopmoH vutwI'*/The cook makes (someone) eat the meat,/ we have the same causer *(vutwI')* and a patient (*Ha'DIbaH:* the meat is having something done to it), and by the same rule, we make the causer the subject and the patient the object. Then we have the case of *jIHvaD Ha'DIbaH SopmoH vutwI'*/The cook makes me eat the meat./ Same causer *(vutwI'),* same agent *(jIH),* same patient *(Ha'DIbaH),* only now there's no room for both the agent and the patient in object position. You can only have one object. So the rule says to express the agent as an indirect object, and to do that you mark the agent with *-vaD* and stick it before the object. Then the patient becomes the object. And that's pretty much it. There are other possible semantic roles, but they follow this pattern. For instance, *HumanvaD QoQ 'IjmoH tlhIngan*/The Klingon made the Human listen to the music./ We still have a causer *(tlhIngan),* but now we have an experiencer instead of an agent *(Human:* an agent deliberately, not mindlessly, performs an action; an experiencer experiences sensory or emotional input) and a theme instead of a patient (*QoQ:* a patient undergoes the action and changes its state; a theme undergoes an action and does not change its state), and the rule has experiencers become indirect objects and themes become objects. But Klingon does not actually seem interested in the differences between agents and experiencers and so on, so these variations aren't really all that important to understanding how words are assigned to the syntax of Klingon.
The question is, does this ability to put an otherwise {-vaD}worthy noun in the Object position rely wholly on the specifics of common usage of the verb, the way that special locative-related verbs use {-Daq}worthy nouns as unmarked Objects, or is it more context flexible and vocabulary independent, as is suggested by the prefix trick.
Yes, I think so, except when the verb has *-moH* on it, which changes the semantics of the sentence.
I doubt we have enough evidence to be sure, one way or the other. Meanwhile, I doubt many people would have difficulty understanding the above conversation.
Thee understand I, even this sentence grammatical not be. Unuseful are you're distinction.
Then again, I doubt that we’ll ever see {QeD’e’ puqloDwI’ vIghojmoH}, even though that makes more sense to me than the canon-proven, correct {puqloDwI’vaD QeD vIghojmoH}.
The language doesn’t have to make sense according to my arbitrary ideas or proclivities. A student of English would have a LOT of suggestions about how English SHOULD work, but doesn’t, given that we park in the driveway and drive on the parkway, but we don’t park on the driveway or drive there, and we don’t drive in the parkway or park there.
And I'll go and explain to them exactly why we drive on the parkway and park on the driveway. A parkway is so called because it is lined by trees to make it park-like. A driveway is so called because the word came into use back in a time when the only people who had vehicles lived in houses set back from the road, and the path the vehicle used to get from the road to the house was called the /drive/ or the /driveway./ As vehicles became more available to the common man, who lived on smaller properties, the path for the vehicle shortened until it was basically just one car-length, and if you didn't have a building dedicated to storing your vehicle, you parked it on that path, which was still called a driveway. So no, switching them is /not/ the way English should work. Most of English, even the spelling, makes a lot of sense if you learn where it comes from. It's not /easy,/ but there are reasons for it. By the way, we /do/ park /on/ the driveway as well as /in/ it. We do in my area, anyway. On the other hand, parking /in/ and /on/ a parking lot refer to the same thing but have different connotations: one refers to the the act of putting the car there, while the other refers to the presence of the car there.
Language is an arbitrary agreement among speakers of the language, or among regulating authorities, when such authorities exist. The French and Turkish speakers have such authorities. English doesn’t. Klingon does.
Natural language is not arbitrary, language evolves in environments that shape that evolution. Arbitrary is when language authorities or creators legislate language change according to their whims and possibly even ignorance of the reasons things are the way they are. Speakers generally do not arbitrarily agree on their language; they /acquire/ the language or /learn/ it as a thing that exists. -- SuStel http://trimboli.name
participants (2)
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SuStel -
Will Martin