-in- as clause introducer
John F. Schwaller
schwallr at mrs.umn.edu
Tue Jul 6 13:42:17 UTC 2004
Andrews does touch on -tin as a clause introducer. In the Second edition
he writes:
"2. Adjunctors (adjoined-clause introducers)
in = the, a/an, who, that, when, if, etc. [The adjunctor par
excellence. The translation into English is whatever the English context
requires. The use of -in- to indicate adjoined units is almost always
option; adjunction (or subordination) rarely has to be explicitly stated in
Nahuatl. The -in- may indicate that only a single item is subordinate or
that a multi-itemed sequence is.] " p. 40
John F. Schwaller
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schwallr at mrs.umn.edu
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