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Tjac'hå grammar: copula vs to be
the copula is krek /kʁeɡ/ and is used when the "be" verb is followed by a noun.
e.g.: Krek flej gømal. /kʁeɡ flɛj ˈgœmæl/ COP 3SGM person He is a person. the verb "to be" is rulon /ˈʁuːlon/ and is used when the "be" verb is followed by an adjective, a verb, or a location/position.
e.g.:
Rul så dvædin jøm.
/ʁul sɔ ˈdʋɑdin jœm/
be.PRES DEF apple red
The apple is red.
Tjac'hå WOTD #4:
krekon /ˈkʁeːɡon/
verb: copula
La CASTITÀ è separatezza dal mondo, isolamento, scissione, schizofrenia, autismo, solipsismo. Lo STUPRO è toccare il mondo senza esserne toccati, è rapacità, furto, invasione, ossessione, recidere il fiore del bello, avere ciò che non si può avere, possedere senza legami e senza responsabilità, aver piacere senza darne. La COPULA è “mîxis”, è mescolanza col mondo, è sedurre, attrarre, toccare ed essere toccati, dare e ricevere piacere, è responsabilità reciproca, è progetto, è dolcezza, tenerezza ed amore condivisi.
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So in linguistics, a very common feature for a language to have is the copula (or the copular verb), which essentially means “to be.” Some languages have a locative copula, meaning “to be at.”
I wonder how an emotional copula would come about naturally. Something like “to be feeling.” What kind of culture would place that much importance in emotion to spec their language into adopting such as a feature? Anyone have any ideas, if not, food for thought then.
Hengeveld, Kees (1992). Non-verbal predication: Theory, typology, diachrony. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.
Figure 7. Types of predication, i.e. copula clauses (page 27).
Here is Grac, the newest monster to be spotlighted in my novel series. Read about him in Copula (sequel to Secunda) currently posting on Tapas.
I might do a spicy drawing of him too, once we get there in the story~