User talk:Poswob Rare: Difference between revisions
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Masculine agent: (old) genitive case. Maiden agent: circumstantial case. Feminine agent: composite of accusative and a special marker. | Masculine agent: (old) genitive case. Maiden agent: circumstantial case. Feminine agent: composite of accusative and a special marker. | ||
If gender is explicitly marked in 1st or 2nd person, it automatically implies plural. *or*, the opposite. |
Revision as of 09:57, 21 February 2018
Editing on mobile only for the indefinite future due to recent move and high price of traditional Internet access here.
October/November 2017
The bare -a- infix that precedes all possessive suffixes is probably just ža with normal loss of /ž/ between vowels.
- make SOV words for magic spells like 40, -R, etc
The potential/habilitative "moods" should be removed from the mood section since the markers go before the person markers, making them a derivational affix or at most an inflectional affix that belongs to some other category. True mood markers in Poswa & Pabappa go *after* the person/tense marker.
Final -I diminutive can be from iʕ "among the children", thus fning as pseudo genitive.
Dec 2017
- Different words for the same body part for different genders ṿ ... for example the word for hand has three different forms and these generate different classifier suffixes. Then there are neutered morphemes that are used as padding to correct discrepancies such as a feminine noun with a masculine agent.
- Raspara divided world into fantasy kingdoms where all were future slaves.
- to "which; choosing one from many" as the root word for "which one?" Thus taba topis? "Which boy?" when there is only 1 possiuble answer (vs just tabapis "Which boy(s)"?)
Feb 2018
The six vowel setup could be seen as /a ə i u ai au əi əu/, where ai&au persist as diphthongs.f
Masculine agent: (old) genitive case. Maiden agent: circumstantial case. Feminine agent: composite of accusative and a special marker.
If gender is explicitly marked in 1st or 2nd person, it automatically implies plural. *or*, the opposite.