Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Quenya Lesson 6 -- Verbs, Wishing and Imperative Tenses; Pronouns for Verbs

< Lesson 5    
Present:
Lihan Taifun (teaching)
AelKennyr Rhiano
Shawn Daysleeper


Addition from last week #1:
There are also examples of "nai" used with the present tense. That would express a wish for something right now, rather than in the future.
     "Nai Eru lye mánata."      May Eru be blessing you.
     "Nai amanya onnalya"     May your child (be) blessed.

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Addition from last week #2:
The word for "maybe" is cé (sometimes spelled ce; always pronounced “ke”).
     Nolë caruva ta.        Nolë will do that.
     Cé Nolë caruva ta.   Maybe Nolë will do that.

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Imperative
The form for giving commands.

     Add to basic verbs. Leave A-stem verbs unchanged.
     Use á (do it!) or áva (don't!)
          Á tulë!                               Come here!
          Á matë ta!                        Eat that!
          Áva matë ta!                    Don't eat that!
          Á hlarë ómai Hínion.     Hear the Voices of your Children.  (from the Invocation at Olwë's healing ritual)
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Pronoun Endings for Verbs

Tolkien changed his scheme of pronouns frequently. This is taken from a late-1960's source, and is Ardalambion's favorite.

A pronoun for the subject of the verb can (but does not need to be) attached to the end of the verb. Stand-alone pronouns do exist.

     -nyë, -n                     I
     -lyë, -l                        you (one person, formal/polite)
     -tyë                             you (one person, informal/familiar)
     -ldë                             you (a group)
     -s, (rarely -së)           he/she/it (/genderless singular “they”)
     -ltë (variant: -ntë)  they (plural)

These are used only if the subject of the verb is not explicitly stated. Use the “short” form if no other ending will be added; otherwise use the “long” form. The plural pronouns (such as –ldë and –ltë) do not need the -r plural ending on the verb.

     lassë lanta    a leaf falls    lanta
     lantas            it falls           lanta- -s (it)
     lassi lantar   leaves fall    lanta- -r (verb plural)
     lantaltë         they fall       lanta- -lte (they)

The pronoun endings -n, -l, -s, -t could also refer to the object of the verb. The subject-pronoun would go first, then the object pronoun.  (-t would be “them”, plural)
     Hantanyel     I thank you.

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Students would like more practice. Next time I teach this class, I will include more exercises. Next week will be review and practice.

> Review Summary    

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