On Fri, Oct 11, 2002 at 12:51:00PM +1000, Nick Nicholas wrote: [...] > Allow me to equivocate. > > (1) Humans impose patterns on grammars. If you've been told that CAhA > is a tense as much as pu and fa'a; if you've seen that every single > other tense has NAI; if you see no logical reason why you wouldn't > say CAhA NAI, then of course you'll say CAhA NAI. I did. But CAhA *isn't* actually the same as all other tenses. And neither is fa'a the same as pu. You can't say "puzifa'abaca'apu". ca'a *must* be at the end of the string of words in simple-tense-modal. There are rules about where all the different tense-type words can go as well. VA and ZA and ZE'A can't take NAI either. I don't think this was something which was simply forgotten. But it is nonimportant anyway: it's better to have an imperfect language than no language at all. Stability is neccesary. -- Jordan DeLong - fracture@allusion.net lu zo'o loi censa bakni cu terzba le zaltapla poi xagrai li'u sei la mark. tuen. cusku
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