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Voksigid (was: Thoughts on numerical language)
(I have cross-posted to lojban and engelang)
And Rosta (Work2Home) wrote:
Can you give more examples?
The Voksigid page is at
http://www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/3141/voksigid.html
but unfortunately it is less than helpful with practical examples.
I cannot remember the correct Patient tag, but I think
it is ref. Definitely tor is Agent and tum is Recipient.
So given the verb dona = give, we can make the nouns
donator = giver, donaref = gift, donatum = recipient of gift.
The tag for stative subjects is len, so given homo = to be
human, then homolen = human being. (This is why "homotor"
is legal but semantically perverse: what is the agent
in the event of someone being human? We don't make ourselves
human, nor does anyone else particularly make us human.)
A trivial PS grammar of Voksigid:
S = Verb
S = S PP
PP = Prep Noun
Noun = Verb-Tag
Tag = Prep
So to use nouns, they must be preceded with prepositions which
specify their case; these prepositions are isomorphic to the tags,
but precede rather than follow and are independent verbs, not
suffixes.
Thus a tentative Voksigid sentence:
dona tor homolen ref eskriberef tum amator
Gives AGT is:human-ST PAT writes-PAT DAT loves-AGT
The human being gives the written work to the lover.
AGT = agent, PAT = patient, DAT = recipient, ST = thing in state.
And of course we can say:
Dona tor donator ref donaref tum donatum
which I leave up to y'all to figure out.
--
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