Thursday, June 13, 2013

Pronouns as Separate Words

 « Pronouns - "We" «        Course Index         » Possessive Pronouns - Part 2 »   
 
Quenya pronouns can be separate words, just like English pronouns.   Pronouns as separate words suggest more emphasis than pronoun endings.   These pronouns can be used for either the subject or the object of a verb.
     Hantanyel         I thank you.
     Ni hanta lyë      I (personally) thank you.
     Hantan lyë      I thank (especially) you.

Extra Material for the Geeks:
Remember that if a verb has only one pronoun ending, that ending refers to the subject of the verb.  So "Ni hantal" would, expanded July 17, 2013: if it meant anything, mean "You thank me".




     ni             I, me               (sometimes nyë for object "me")
     vet           we, us (2 people)(includes hearer)
     met          we, us (2 people)(excludes hearer)
     vë             we, us (more than 2)(includes hearer)
                 we, us (more than 2)(excludes hearer)
     lyë            you (one person, formal/polite)
     tyë            you (one person, informal/familiar)
     let             you (2 people, formal/polite)
     tyet          you (2 people, informal/familiar)
                   you (a group, more than 2)
 
For "it," Quenya makes a distinction here between living and non-living things.   Plants count as "living."  As far as I know, this set of pronouns is the only place in Quenya where this distinction between “living” and “non-living” shows up.

                 he, him/she, her/it (living)/genderless singular
               alternate form for it (living)
     sa             it (non-living)
corrected July 18, 2013:
                 they, them (2)
                 they, them  (living, more than 2)
     tai, ta      they, them (non-living, more than 2)

Quenya has two more specialized pronouns: 
     hyë, hé    he/she "the other one"

Tolkien gives two examples:
He [së] struck him [hyë] and he [hyë] fled.”  
Melin apa la .     “I love him but not him

These sentences are much clearer in Quenya than in English, because Quenya is distinguishing between the two people. 

     added July 17, 2013:
     hya    it "the other one"
  If you are comparing two non-living things, the “other one” is hya.
Merin sa apa la hya.     “I want it but not it.

     mo           someone, anyone
One [mo] does not simply walk into Mordor.”
Colloquial English often uses “you” in situations like this. But of course Boromir wasn't talking about whether you specifically could do it; he was talking about anyone.
Extra Material for the Geeks:

Most of these separate-word pronouns can also be spelled with long (accented) vowels.


Any of these pronouns can take case endings.
ni             me
nin           for me (dative) 
nissë        on me (locative)
nillo         away from me (ablative)
ninna      toward me (allative) 
ninen      caused by me (instrumental)



Always use the simple, singular form of the case ending, even with dual or plural pronouns.
             usven           for us (dative) 
vessë        on us (locative) 
vello         away from us (ablative
venna      toward us (allative) 
venen      caused by us (instrumental)


Instead of genitive ("of") case endings, use the possessive pronouns.

Emphatic Pronouns


These is a set of even more emphatic pronouns.
     Hantanyel             I thank you.
     Ni hanta lyë          I (personally) thank you.
     Inyë hanta lyë      (Who would have thought it, even) I thank you.

     inyë                I, me
     engwë            we, us (2 people)(includes hearer)
     emmë             we, us (2 people)(excludes hearer)
     elvë               we, us (more than 2)(includes hearer) 
     el               we, us (more than 2)(excludes hearer)
     elyë                you (one person, formal/polite)
     etyë                you (one person, informal/familiar)
     estë                 you (2 people)
     eldë                 you (a group, more than 2)
     es, esë             he/she/it /genderless singular
     ettë                  they (2)
     eltë                  they (more than 2)



Again, these pronouns can take case endings, just like the ordinary pronouns.

 Practice - Your Turn

I continue to take examples from you, the readers.  Post an example in the Comments, or email it to me {lihan_taifun (at) yahoo (dot) com} and I will post it in Comments for you.

 « Pronouns - "We" «        Course Index         » Possessive Pronouns - Part 2 »  

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