Conjunction: Difference between revisions

22 bytes added ,  19:28, 28 March 2022
m
no edit summary
(Created page with "A '''conjunction''' is a word that combines two constituents (grammatical units) into one. For example, {{t|ru}} “and”, {{t|ra}} “either/or”, and {{t|roı}} “togeth...")
 
mNo edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
A '''conjunction''' is a word that combines two constituents (grammatical units) into one.
A '''conjunction''' is a [[particle]] that combines two constituents (grammatical units) into one.


For example, {{t|ru}} “and”, {{t|ra}} “either/or”, and {{t|roı}} “together with” are all conjunctions.
For example, {{t|ru}} “and”, {{t|ra}} “either/or”, and {{t|roı}} “together with” are all conjunctions.
Line 13: Line 13:


=== On combining statements ===
=== On combining statements ===
To say “I work and you rest”, you might try {{t|Gủaı jí ru sẻa súq}}. But this is incorrect: {{t|jí ru sẻa}} is a [[noun phrase]] meaning “that which is me and rests”. (It's the {{tone|2}} tone-conjugation of the verb phrase {{t|jỉ ru sẻa}}.)
To say “I work and you rest”, you might try {{t|Gủaı jí ru sẻa súq}}. But this is incorrect: {{t|jí ru sẻa}} is a [[noun phrase]] meaning “that which is me and rests”. (It's the {{tone|2}} tone-conjugation of the conjoined [[verb phrase]] {{t|jỉ ru sẻa}}.)


Statements are correctly combined by placing the statement-terminator particle {{t|na}} in front of the conjunction.
Statements are correctly combined by placing the statement-terminator particle {{t|na}} in front of the conjunction.