Celabrian: Difference between revisions

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There are three levels of definiteness in Celabrian:
There are three levels of definiteness in Celabrian:
*Definite: Something known to both speaker and listener, that may have been previously mentioned or that is uniquely specified. Equivalent to English "the" in "I saw '''the''' car."
*Definite: Something specific that is known to both the speaker and listener, that has been previously mentioned, or that is uniquely specified. Equivalent to English "the" in "I saw '''the''' car."
*Semidefinite: Something specific that is identifiable by the speaker but not the listener. Equivalent to English "a" in "I saw '''a''' car."
*Semidefinite: Something specific that is identifiable by the speaker but not the listener or that has not been previously mentioned. Equivalent to English "a" in "I saw '''a''' car."
*Indefinite: Refers non-specifically to a member of a class. Equivalent to English "a" in "I need '''a''' car."  
*Indefinite: Refers non-specifically to a member of a class. Equivalent to English "a" in "I need '''a''' car."  
Nouns unmarked for definiteness are semidefinite by default. The definite article is ''-<u>ə</u>n'' (added before case endings).
Nouns unmarked for definiteness are semidefinite by default. The definite article is ''-<u>ə</u>n'' (added before case endings).
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! Definite
! Definite
| Something known to both speaker and listener, that may have been previously mentioned or that is uniquely specified. || rowspan="2" | – || colspan="3" | -<u>ə</u>n
| Something specific that is known to both speaker and listener, that has been previously mentioned, or that is uniquely specified. || rowspan="2" | – || colspan="3" | -<u>ə</u>n
|-
|-
! Semidefinite
! Semidefinite
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