Attian: Difference between revisions

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===Number===
===Number===
====Several's more than one====
====Several's more than one====
*'''Atimayya ta amga ta ata, tayi atayya ta amga ta atim.''' - ''Several is more than one, but then all is more than several'', is an Attian paradox and sometimes [[w:shibboleth|shibboleth]] created by the Attian national grammarian Anathir t'Armavir. The saying plays with the fact that the Attian word for "''all''" is the same as that for "''one''", thus granting the translation: ''Several is more than one, but then one is more than several''. It also illustrates the [[w:Grammatical number|number]] inflection for nouns in Attian, where "''several''" is simply the [[w:plural number|plural]] of "''one''" and "''all''" the [[w:Collective number|collective]] form.
{{quote
|text='''Atimayya ta amga ta ata, tayi atayya ta amga ta atim.'''
|sign=Anathir t'Armavir
|source=Descriptions of the language, p. 29
|about= '''Several is more than one, but then all is more than several''' is an Attian paradox and sometimes [[w:shibboleth|shibboleth]] created by the Attian national grammarian Anathir t'Armavir. The saying plays with the fact that the Attian word for "''all''" is the same as that for "''one''", thus granting the translation: ''Several is more than one, but then one is more than several''. It also illustrates the [[w:Grammatical number|number]] inflection for nouns in Attian, where "''several''" is simply the [[w:plural number|plural]] of "''one''" and "''all''" the [[w:Collective number|collective]] form.
}}


====Singular====
====Singular====

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