third person singular
Frances Karttunen
karttu at nantucket.net
Wed Aug 23 02:06:02 UTC 2000
----------
>From: Rmedinagarcia at aol.com
>To: <nahuat-l at server2.umt.edu>
>Subject: third person singular
>Date: Tue, Aug 22, 2000, 9:10 PM
>
> Hello,
> This is my first posting. I am trying to learn Nahuatl from
> Horcasita's Nahuatl Practico. How do you differentiate gender for the
> third person singular: yehuatl? Is it implied that the gender is always male?
> Ricardo
Better yet! There is no grammatical distinction between masculine and
feminine. If it's REALLY important, one must say so. Otherwise, Nahuatl
prvides a gender-free context.
There ARE distinctions made grammatically between human and nonhuman (te:-
versus tla-) and animate versus inanimate (only animate entities--as Nahuas
perceive them, sometimes differently than we might--have distinct plural
forms).
As for third-person singular subject and object, they are determinable as
he/him, she/her, or it only by external context. For plural, English is
more like Nahuatl than Spanish is: just they/them.
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