Nahónda: Difference between revisions

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Male/Female Speech Marking: Begin tabular presentation
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! Male
! Male
! Female
! Female
! Function
|-
|-
! Ablative
! Mild Assertive
| to approach
| yeló
| Minhast ''hān'' "to come"
| ye
|
|-
|-
! Comitative
! Emphatic Assertive
| to accompany
| n/a
| Minhast ''saħpan'' "to walk"
| =kšó
|
|-
|-
! Instrumental
! Request
| to use
| =ye
| Minhast ''sespir'' "hand"
| =na
|
|-
|-
! Locative
! Informal Interrogative
| to sit down
| colspan="2" style="text-align:middle" | =he
| Minhast ''saššian'' "to sit"
|
|-
|-
! Perlative
! Formal Interrogative
| to ford a river, stream, or other body of water
| colspan="2" style="text-align:center" |=huwo
|  
|-
|  
! Dubitative
| =so
| =se
|}
|}


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Yeló (men) ye (women) mark mild assertions. Kštó (women only according to most sources) marks strong assertion. Yo (men) and ye (women) mark neutral commands, yetȟó (men) and nitȟó (women) mark familiar, and ye (both men and women) and na mark requests. He is used by both genders to mark direct questions, but men also use hųwó in more formal situations. So (men) and se (women) mark dubitative questions (where the person being asked is not assumed to know the answer).
yeló (men) ye (women) mark mild assertions. Kštó (women only according to most sources) marks strong assertion. Yo (men) and ye (women) mark neutral commands, yetȟó (men) and nitȟó (women) mark familiar, and ye (both men and women) and na mark requests. He is used by both genders to mark direct questions, but men also use hųwó in more formal situations. So (men) and se (women) mark dubitative questions (where the person being asked is not assumed to know the answer).
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