Seuna pronouns: Difference between revisions

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|align=center|they them
|align=center|they them
|align=center|'''wa'''
|align=center|'''wa'''
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{| border=1
|align=center|it
|align=center|it
|align=center|'''to'''
|align=center|'''to'''
|align=center|they
|align=center|they
|align=center|'''ton'''
|align=center|'''ton'''
|}
|-
 
'''to''' and '''ton''' is for the category non-human. The ONLY exception to this is in folk tales where certain animals are given the power of speach. Then these animals can use the eight human pronouns.
 
{| border=1
|align=center|you and me
|align=center|you and me
|align=center|'''myu'''
|align=center|'''myu'''
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|align=center|'''myun'''
|align=center|'''myun'''
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'''to''' and '''ton''' is for the category non-human. The ONLY exception to this is in folk tales where certain animals are given the power of speach. Then these animals can use the eight human pronouns.


'''myu''' is a dual number pronoun meaning "me and you".  
'''myu''' is a dual number pronoun meaning "me and you".  

Revision as of 11:11, 5 November 2008

the ten pronouns

I, me mi we, us mia
you yu you(pl) yua
he/she, him/her na they them wa
it to they ton
you and me myu we myun

to and ton is for the category non-human. The ONLY exception to this is in folk tales where certain animals are given the power of speach. Then these animals can use the eight human pronouns.

myu is a dual number pronoun meaning "me and you". myun is the first person inclusive plural pronoun. It means "me and you and somebody else" or "me and you and other people" That "somebody else"/"other people" could be from the me-group the you-group or from elsewhere.

the reflexive pronoun

There is also the reflexive pronoun swe

This pronoun can never be used as a subject. However the following compounds can be.

I myself swemi we ourselves swemia
you yourself sweyu you yourself sweyua
he/she him/her/self swena they themselves swewa
we ourselves swemyu we ourselves swemyun
it itself sweto they themselves sweton

pronouns and role tags

The pronouns take all the role tags that normal nouns take (except the "-s" tag).

As with regular adjectives, the genitive pronouns come after the nouns they qualify.

hendori kaunu swege.

hend -o -r -i kaunu swege
put on -3s -ACT -PAST coat "own"

'He put on his (own) coat.'

When the regular third person possessive pronouns are used, they are understood as not being coreferential with the subject.

hendori kaunu nage.

hend -o -r -i kaunu nage
put on -3s -ACT -PAST coat "his"

'He put on his (someone else's) coat.'

other examples

sukoro cata swewa = he\she likes talking about himself/herself

sukoro swecata = he\she likes to talk to himself/herself

Index

  1. Introduction to Seuna
  2. Seuna : Chapter 1
  3. Seuna word shape
  4. The script of Seuna
  5. Seuna sentence structure
  6. Seuna pronouns
  7. Seuna nouns
  8. Seuna verbs (1)
  9. Seuna adjectives
  10. Seuna demonstratives
  11. Seuna verbs (2)
  12. Asking a question in Seuna
  13. Seuna relative clauses
  14. Seuna verbs (3)
  15. Methods for deriving words in Seuna
  16. List of all Seuna derivational affixes
  17. Numbers in Seuna
  18. Naming people in Seuna
  19. The Seuna calendar
  20. Seuna units