51b93698201ee60e4fb105b4c108750ba6c91c35
Conlangs/IAL.md
| ... | ... | @@ -82,10 +82,15 @@ Important thing to notice is that while the natural translation suggests a usage |
| 82 | 82 | ## Particles |
| 83 | 83 | Particles are small fuction words used for various things, they usually end with -e but in contrary to verbs, it's not a hard rule. Here's a list of most common particles: |
| 84 | 84 | |
| 85 | -- ne - negation particle: "Ako saya domo" - I am at home; "Ako ne saya domo" - I am not at home |
|
| 86 | -- ge - perfective particle: "Ako ina domo" - I am going home; "Ako ge ina domo" - I went home, I have gone home; |
|
| 87 | -- bei - wish particle, imperative: "Bei (kimi) ina domo!" - Go to home! |
|
| 88 | -- date - quotation particle, subjunctive: "Ako kona date kimi saya domo" - I know you are at home; "Ako kena date moka neko" - I can eat a cat. |
|
| 85 | +- **ne** - negation particle: |
|
| 86 | + - "Ako saya domo" - I am at home; "Ako ne saya domo" - I am not at home |
|
| 87 | +- **ge** - perfective particle: |
|
| 88 | + - "Ako ina domo" - I am going home; "Ako ge ina domo" - I went home, I have gone home; |
|
| 89 | +- **bei** - wish particle, imperative: |
|
| 90 | + - "Bei (kimi) ina domo!" - Go to home! |
|
| 91 | +- **date** - quotation particle, subjunctive: |
|
| 92 | + - "Ako kona date kimi saya domo" - I know you are at home; |
|
| 93 | + - "Ako kena date moka neko" - I can eat a cat. |
|
| 89 | 94 | |
| 90 | 95 | ## Adjectives and adverbs |
| 91 | 96 | ## Suffixes |