noun as adverb
Michael McCafferty
mmccaffe at indiana.edu
Fri Nov 2 18:03:03 UTC 2012
Nice, John. I would agree.
Or perhaps ome pesoh is an independent statement.
Can 'in' be said before "ome pesoh," for example?
Michael
Quoting John Sullivan <idiez at me.com>:
> Piyali notequixpoyohuan,
> I have never quite understood some structures in Modern Huastecan
> Nahuatl such as the following, ?Nitlaxtlahuaz ome pesoh.? ?I?m going
> to pay two pesos.? The verb ?ixtlahua? can only take the ?tla-?
> object, which won?t allow us to specify the object. I can add the
> applicative, ?Nimitztlaxtlahuiliz.? ?I?m going to pay you.? Or
> ?Nimitztlaxtlahuiliz ome pesoh.? ?I?m going to pay you two pesos.?
> But again, the specific amount of money can?t be an object of the
> verb.
> So after going back to Andrews (2003, p. 512), I see at the
> beginning of Lesson 49, ?Xochitl ancueponqueh.? ?You(pl.) have budded
> like flowers.? So a stand alone noun can function as an adverb. So
> perhaps the two pesos in the modern example is an adverb talking
> about HOW I paid you.
> John
>
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