2013-06-13

Time 2: Time Markers

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Telling The Time

Following on from the "When?" post, apart from using suffixes to tell when an activity is occurring, Klingon uses other markers to mark a specific time - such as today, yesterday, tomorrow, soon, now, never and so on.

DaHjajtoday
wa'Hu'yesterday
wa'leStomorrow
tughsoon
DaHnow
notnever

These words always come in the sentence before the object-verb-subject part, in effect in the place where the word ghorgh When? would be if the sentence was phrased as a question.

So, for example, taking one sentence

Hegh tlhInganThe Klingon dies

we can construct

ghorgh Hegh tlhInganWhen did the Klingon die?/
When will the Klingon die?
DaHjaj Hegh tlhInganThe Klingon dies (or died) today
wa'Hu' Hegh tlhInganThe Klingon died yesterday
wa'leS Hegh tlhInganThe Klingon dies tomorrow
tugh Hegh tlhInganThe Klingon will die soon
DaH Hegh tlhInganThe Klingon dies now
not Hegh tlhInganThe Klingon will never die!

Note how in each case the time marker words occupy the location in the sentence where ghorgh goes.

You can use these time markers to further refine sentences featuring subordinate clauses and verbs with suffixes -DI' when, as soon as, -pa' before and -taHvIS while, during, as long as and -pu' perfective, -ta' accomplished, done, -taH continuous and -lI' in progress as described in the previous lessons.

wa'Hu' Dargh lutlhutlhDI' tar lutlhutlhpu'Yesterday, when they drank the tea, they drank a poison
wa'leS maHeghpa' yIja'Tell him tomorrow, before we die
wa'Hu' Doy'DI' ghu tugh QongchoH ghuYesterday, when the baby grew tired it soon fell asleep
wa'leS pawDI' parmaqqaywI' De' wIghajTomorrow, when my beloved arrives, we will have the knowledge
not 'oy' bechmo' be'vetlh, 'oy' bechDI' be' maw'choH be'Because that woman had never suffered pain, when the woman did suffer pain, she went crazy

Next: more of these time markers, and a look at some numbers.

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