Possessive and genitive cases in Quickestly
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Possessive and genitive cases in Quickestly
This public article was written by [Deactivated User], and last updated on 23 Dec 2021, 17:27.
[comments] qucpossessivegenitivepossessiongrammarmorphologycaseof's
2. Derivation
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4. Orthography
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stikt miaf /stikt 'miaf/ - my arm
wanet miaf /'wanət 'miaf/ - my chair (that I own)
senk niaf /senk 'niaf/ - our house
stikt fenkaf /stikt 'fenkaf/ - the person's arm
stikti fenkuf /'stikti 'fenkuf/ - the people's arms
meik mif /mejk mif/ - my parent
wanet mif /'wanət mif/ - my chair (that I'm sitting on)
stikt smaabef /stikt 'sma:bəf/ - the robot's arm
stikti smaabif /'stikti 'sma:bif/ - the robots' arms
si wanetef /si wa'netəf/ - the top of the chair In Quickestly, there are two ways of saying "of": the possessive and genitive cases. The possessive case is only used for people, if they own the thing and can do whatever they want to it, and other people can't do things to it without the owner's permission. Otherwise, the genitive case is used. Possessors always go after the possessed noun.✎ Edit Article ✖ Delete Article
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