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how do you say "a cup of coffee" in esperanto?

aausernameaa, 2015 m. rugsėjis 9 d.

Žinutės: 11

Kalba: English

aausernameaa (Rodyti profilį) 2015 m. rugsėjis 9 d. 14:53:41

Hi, how do you say "a cup of coffee" in esperanto?
For example, in this sentence: I would like a cup of coffee.
Thanks

Vestitor (Rodyti profilį) 2015 m. rugsėjis 9 d. 14:55:33

Taso de kafo

Mi volas tason de kafo.

erinja (Rodyti profilį) 2015 m. rugsėjis 9 d. 14:56:29

Mi deziras tason da kafo - or, Mi deziras tason de kafo.

"taso da kafo" is a cup full of coffee (emphasis on quantity), "taso de kafo" is a cup containing coffee (emphasis on contents)

Vestitor (Rodyti profilį) 2015 m. rugsėjis 9 d. 14:59:44

erinja:Mi deziras tason da kafo - or, Mi deziras tason de kafo.

"taso da kafo" is a cup full of coffee (emphasis on quantity), "taso de kafo" is a cup containing coffee (emphasis on contents)
What's 'a coffee cup'?

aausernameaa (Rodyti profilį) 2015 m. rugsėjis 9 d. 15:03:38

erinja:Mi deziras tason da kafo - or, Mi deziras tason de kafo.

"taso da kafo" is a cup full of coffee (emphasis on quantity), "taso de kafo" is a cup containing coffee (emphasis on contents)
which one is correct: "Mi deziras taso de kafon" or "Mi deziras tason de kafo"?

erinja (Rodyti profilį) 2015 m. rugsėjis 9 d. 15:03:46

the cup itself? I'd call it a "kaf-taso".

"taso de kafo" would actually work in context but most people would call it a kaftaso.

Btw you misplaced the -n in your post, you might want to edit that (tason de kafo, not taso de kafon - no -n after a preposition!)

Vestitor (Rodyti profilį) 2015 m. rugsėjis 9 d. 15:10:02

Foiled again! Edited.

Kaftaso it is then. I like it better.

Miland (Rodyti profilį) 2015 m. rugsėjis 9 d. 15:12:01

vestitor:What's 'a coffee cup'?
You could have taso por kafo (I wouldn't quarrel with kaf-taso).

Tempodivalse (Rodyti profilį) 2015 m. rugsėjis 9 d. 18:08:30

(tason de kafo, not taso de kafon - no -n after a preposition!)
To be 100% clear, this is not quite accurate - you can use the accusative ending after a preposition to indicate direction toward something - e.g. Mi iras en la domon means I go into the house, vs Mi iras en la domo I am walking around inside the house. But obviously you can only meaningfully use it for that are somehow spatial - the most common ones are en, sub, sur.

As a general rule, never use the accusative after the following prepositions: de, da, al, el, pri, per, por.

erinja (Rodyti profilį) 2015 m. rugsėjis 9 d. 19:30:15

Tempodivalse:
(tason de kafo, not taso de kafon - no -n after a preposition!)
To be 100% clear, this is not quite accurate - you can use the accusative ending after a preposition to indicate direction toward something - e.g. Mi iras en la domon means I go into the house, vs Mi iras en la domo I am walking around inside the house. But obviously you can only meaningfully use it for that are somehow spatial - the most common ones are en, sub, sur.

As a general rule, never use the accusative after the following prepositions: de, da, al, el, pri, per, por.
Yeah, it's a rule of thumb and not a 100% guarantee. Obviously you are correct that there are cases where it's ok and necessary. However if you were to take the position that you should never do it, you are more likely to be correct, since it's only a very limited subset of cases when it's correct, and most beginners overuse -n after prepositions, rather than underusing it when it's necessary.

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