grammar tweak

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Rhiannon Morris 2021-05-10 15:03:35 +02:00
parent 95116e5ecb
commit 969845d758
1 changed files with 14 additions and 6 deletions

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@ -231,8 +231,7 @@ affirmative statements.)
The most common use of the _instrumental_ case is the "[theme]" of ditransitive
sentences (while the recipient is in the genitive). It is also used for 'with'
as in 'using', in distributive phrases such as `{!kallila}` 'in threes, in sets
of three, three each', for quantity expressions such as units, and quantifiers
like 'every'.
of three, three each', and quantifiers like 'every'.
[theme]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secundative_language
@ -278,10 +277,19 @@ like 'every'.
- some of the people
:::
The _essive_ case indicates a state, while the _translative_ and _exessive_
cases indicate a change of state. The translative marks the new state, and the
exessive the old. The essive and exessive are most commonly used with
comparatives (see [below](#adjectivals)).
The basic meaning of the _essive_ case is a state. It is used:
- when a noun modifies another, but with a descriptive meaning\
`{!wasalgu fadau}` "animal friend" (i.e. a friend who is an animal);
- as the object of certain verbs like __TODO what?__;
- with [comparatives](#adjectivals).
The _translative_ and _exessive_ cases indicate a change of state:
- with state-change verbs, the translative marks the new state, and the
exessive the old;
- the exessive is also used with [comparatives](#adjectivals);
- __TODO what else is the translative used with otherwise why does it exist__
__TODO: examples__