640
edits
Line 1,012: | Line 1,012: | ||
Kämpya distinguishes alienable and inalienable possession. In both cases, possessors are marked with the cliticised case marker /ja/, and come before the noun they possess. But inalienable possessors are in Tone Class 2 e.g. | Kämpya distinguishes alienable and inalienable possession. In both cases, possessors are marked with the cliticised case marker /ja/, and come before the noun they possess. But inalienable possessors are in Tone Class 2 e.g. | ||
/dò̰k= | /dò̰k=jí bâṵn/ | ||
dog=GEN.INALIENABLE bone | dog=GEN.INALIENABLE bone | ||
Line 1,020: | Line 1,020: | ||
While alienable possessors are in Tone Class 1 e.g. | While alienable possessors are in Tone Class 1 e.g. | ||
/dô̰k= | /dô̰k=jì bâṵn/ | ||
dog=GEN.ALIENABLE bone | dog=GEN.ALIENABLE bone | ||
Line 1,030: | Line 1,030: | ||
/dô̰k= | /dô̰k=jì dà̰ bâṵn/ | ||
dog=GEN.ALIENABLE this bone | dog=GEN.ALIENABLE this bone | ||
This bone of the dog's (literally "the dog's this bone"). | This bone of the dog's (literally "the dog's this bone"). | ||
===Relative Clauses=== | ===Relative Clauses=== |
edits