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Talk:Al Mastizu/Grammar/Verbs: Difference between revisions

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(Created page with "* I'm not quite sure I understand the Arabic perfective fully. I've had a go, but I'm assuming it's far from correct * I'm "saying" in this that /far/ is an irregular verb, with ...")
 
(→‎Word Order: new section)
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* The Hispanic verb endings are quite far from their origins. Can we put emphasis in the phonology to reduce this massive gap?
* The Hispanic verb endings are quite far from their origins. Can we put emphasis in the phonology to reduce this massive gap?
*--[[User:Sam.stutter|Sam.stutter]] 09:08, 30 June 2011 (PDT)
*--[[User:Sam.stutter|Sam.stutter]] 09:08, 30 June 2011 (PDT)
== Word Order ==
I would suggest a SVO word order for this language. SVO is the first kind of sentence structure we learned about in my class on Modern Standard Arabic, English uses it, and I believe Spanish does too (though I cannot say for certain as I only had it in elementary school, and was hardly a true class on foreign language).
We also learned about VSO sentences in Arabic. English sort of does this in question words sometimes, though it uses auxiliaries in these constructions ('''''Did''' he do it?'', '''''Will''' he go home?''). Perhaps we can use VSO in questions. [[User:Linguifex|Linguifex]] 14:44, 30 June 2011 (PDT)

Revision as of 14:44, 30 June 2011

  • I'm not quite sure I understand the Arabic perfective fully. I've had a go, but I'm assuming it's far from correct
  • I'm "saying" in this that /far/ is an irregular verb, with some kind of stem change that alters the initial consonant. I don't know how plausible this is, I just used it to try and get it to match
  • The Hispanic verb endings are quite far from their origins. Can we put emphasis in the phonology to reduce this massive gap?
  • --Sam.stutter 09:08, 30 June 2011 (PDT)

Word Order

I would suggest a SVO word order for this language. SVO is the first kind of sentence structure we learned about in my class on Modern Standard Arabic, English uses it, and I believe Spanish does too (though I cannot say for certain as I only had it in elementary school, and was hardly a true class on foreign language).

We also learned about VSO sentences in Arabic. English sort of does this in question words sometimes, though it uses auxiliaries in these constructions (Did he do it?, Will he go home?). Perhaps we can use VSO in questions. Linguifex 14:44, 30 June 2011 (PDT)