Adjectival and nominal sentences I

Description

bachelors degree Egyptology (MEg II) Flowchart on Adjectival and nominal sentences I, created by Henric Gravander on 08/08/2018.
Henric Gravander
Flowchart by Henric Gravander, updated more than 1 year ago
Henric Gravander
Created by Henric Gravander over 6 years ago
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Resource summary

Flowchart nodes

  • Adjectival & nominal sentences 
  • Adjectival sentences (non verbal) -Ascribes a quality to something
  • Nominal sentences (two types) -Expresses a relationship between two nouns (X is a/an Y) 
  • Three-part (Tripartite)
  • Two-part (Bipartite)   
  • -pw functions as a link between two nouns (or noun-equivalents)
  • subject usually a pronoun
  • 1st person: subject takes the form of an INDEPENDENT PRONOUN standing in the beginning of a sentence
  • If the sentence identifies something as something the order of constituents is SUBJECT - PREDICATE
  • If the sentence qualifies something as something the order of constituents is PREDICATE - SUBJECT
  • -pw follows the the predicate and must come second
  • The predicate of a nominal sentence is a noun
  • 3rd person: "-pw" serves as a general expression for masc. and fem. sg. and pl. subjects
  • 2nd person: subject takes the form of an INDEPENDENT PRONOUN standing in the beginning of a sentence
  • Nominal sentences are strictly NON-VERBAL constructions
  • Negation of  nominal sentences 
  • n... is
  • is 2nd position clitic (must come 2nd) follows the first full word of the sentence
  • n Hs -is rn=k rA rn=k = "shit is not your name; Ra is your name"
  • irw=k -pw n irw=i -is -pw = "it is your form. My form it is not"
  • The basic construction of an adjectival sentence is adjective predicate followed by the subject
  • if the subject of adjectival sentence is a personal pronoun, the dependent pronouns are used
  • Ha -sw im=i = "he is joyous in me"
  • The word order reflects the function of the adjective. In an adjectival sentence the adjective is the predicate: it tells what the subject 'is'. It therefore precedes the subject and does not agree with it
  • A common feature of the adjectival sentence is the second position element -wy often spelled just w(y), which gives the sentence an exclamative force 'OH how good (etc.) is...'
  • nfr -w(y) -Tw aHa.t(i) m-min Hr dwA.t = "how happy you are when you stand today, O Horus of the Netherworld"
  • The adjectival sentence may be preceded by an initial particle
  • Never used as adjuncts on their own
  • Adjectival sentences profiles the qualilty expressed as  timeless' and 'eternal', withouth any suggestion that it might be somehow transatory or that it might change
  • Not negated. instead the adjective would be 'verbalized' and the familiar negations n-sDm=f for past, n sDm-n=f for present and nn sDm=f would be used 
  • mk nfr sDm n rmT = "Look, listening is good for people"
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