Verse:Irta (Old)/Judeo-Mandarin: Difference between revisions
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* The nominative is used the most often, including as prepositional objects; the Old Irish accusative and prepositional cases are lost. | * The nominative is used the most often, including as prepositional objects; the Old Irish accusative and prepositional cases are lost. | ||
* The inherited genitive is only used to mark definite objects of verbs, similarly to Hebrew ''et'', and almost never possessors. The genitive is no longer productive in head-initial compounds. | * The inherited genitive is only used to mark definite objects of verbs, similarly to Hebrew ''et'', and almost never possessors. The genitive is no longer productive in head-initial compounds. | ||
* The inherited vocative survives only for ''Zie'' 'God', and the vocative form is used only when some element comes before it: '''''oy''' Zhey | * The inherited vocative survives only for ''Zie'' 'God', and the vocative form is used only when some element comes before it: '''''oy''' Zhey!'' /oj ˈjej/ 'O God', ''(oy) '''mă-'''Zhey!'' '(fixed expression) oh my God'. To call family members, forms such as ''mă-mhoŗ!'' 'my mother!' are used. | ||
** The vocative particle ''oy'' always lenites, however, unless the following noun is an inalienably possessed noun. (It's a contraction of the Hebrew particle ''oy'' + the Gaelic vocTive particle *a (+lenition).) | ** The vocative particle ''oy'' always lenites, however, unless the following noun is an inalienably possessed noun. (It's a contraction of the Hebrew particle ''oy'' + the Gaelic vocTive particle *a (+lenition).) | ||