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Re: SVO vs SOV and A lot of other questions

From:Christian Thalmann <cinga@...>
Date:Monday, October 13, 2003, 20:11
--- In conlang@yahoogroups.com, Costentin Cornomorus <elemtilas@Y...>
wrote:

> > Well, Old English and German and similar > > languages certainly switch > > between moving the verb to the second position > > in normal clauses and > > having the verb in the final position in > > relative clauses, which is > > similar, so I don't imagine there's anything > > wrong with it. > > Kerno switches for emphasis: > > Gouezei me lâ bo. (normal) > saw I the cow > > Gouezei lâ bo, il ieo. (subject emphasis) > saw the cow the I > > Lâ bo, gouezei-al ieo. (object emphasis) > the cow saw-her I
Jovian marks case in the article, so it can switch around too. The nominative pronoun is optional, so using it already counts as emphasis. - Do ei bouve un appel. [do e vowv @n 'app@l] {give:1s he:DAT cow a:ACC apple} (unmarked) - Eo do ei bouve un appel. [e@ do e vowv @n 'app@l] {I give:1s he:DAT cow a:ACC apple} (subj marked) - Un appel do ei bouve. [@n 'appel do e vowv] {a:ACC apple give:1s he:DAT cow} (d. obj marked) - Ei bouve do un appel. [e vowv do @n 'appel] {he:DAT cow give:1s a:ACC apple} (ind. obj marked) In Obrenje (gosh, how long has it been?), things are a bit syntax-sensitive. Subjects can't come before the verb in the same clause, so unmarked phrases before the verb are taken to be predicative case objects. |U| and |i| are case prepositions, not articles. Definiteness is marked as a noun inflection, e.g. |mugi| ['mu:gi] "a cow, cows" vs. |mugie| [mM'gi:] "the cow, the cows". - Powze u mej i mugie. [powZ M mej i mM'gi:] {give:1 PRE fruit OBJ cow:the} (unmarked: "I give a fruit to the cow") - Mej powze i mugie. [mej powZ i mM'gi:] {fruit give:1 OBJ cow:the} (Here the predicative object is fronted, but doesn't necessarily carry emphasis; rather, it is incorporated into the verb action: "I fruit-give the cow.") - U mej powze i mugie. [M mej powZ i mM'gi:] {PRE fruit give:1 OBJ cow:the} (The redundant predicative case preposition is given here, drawing emphasis onto the predicative object.) - I mugie powze u mej. [i mM'gi: powZ M mej] {OBJ cow:the give:1 PRE fruit} (Objective object marked.) - Zae, powze u mej i mugie. [za: powZ M mej i mM'gi:] {I // give:1 PRE fruit OBJ cow:the} (Subject marked. Since a subject phrase must not precede its verb in the same clause, the subject |zae| "I" has to be mentioned in a separate "declaration clause" (delimited by the comma) and picked up again by a pronoun or a verb ending (as it is the case here).) Unlike usual noun phrases, personal pronouns are inflected for case, and can be moved around the verb pretty freely. They're even allowed to stack before the verb; something which more elaborate noun objects cannot do. This allows us to use the declaration clause mechanics for objects as well: - Mej, e powze i mugie. [mej e powZ i mM'gi:] {fruit // it:PRE give:1 OBJ cow:the} - Mugie, je powze u mej. [mM'gi: j@ powZ M mej] {cow:the // he:OBJ give:1 PRE fruit} - Mugie, mej je powze. [mM'gi: mej j@ powZ] {cow:the // fruit he:OBJ give:1} "The cow, I fruit-give him." - E je powze. [e j@ powZ] {it:PRE he:OBJ give:1} "I give it to him." Etc, etc...
> > > Also, from the verb "to like" I derived 2 > > > adjectives, liked and > > > likable. Is there such a major difference in > > > these two, that it is > > > reconmendable to make two adjective forms for > > > all my words, one of them expressing "able?" > > > > From my English-bias, I'd say yes, but that > > might just be a bias brought on by English :) > > Sure. Spanish doesn't have a verb that means > "like" (gustarse means "please"), so can't form > such derivatives. Kerno has placer-si, and is > used like gustarse and please in English.
Jovian, being a derived language, has the luxury of coming with two built-in derivations for those two adjectives: |aware| [@'va:r] "to love" has |awadu| [@'va:d] "loved" and |awaevel| [@'vajv@l] "lovable"; from Latin amâre, amâtus, amâbilis, respectively. Obrenje has active and passive participles for all tenses, so from the verb |naq-| you can form |naqqe| [naN:] "liking", |naqse| [naNS] "being liked", |neqqe| [nEN:] "going to like", |neqse| [nENS] "going to be liked", |noqqe| [nON:] "having liked", and |noqse| [nONS] "having been liked". It is customary to use the future passive form (going to be liked) in the sense of "likable, destined to be liked". -- Christian Thalmann