Ujumbe: 22
Lugha: English
Alkanadi (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 18 Mei 2016 6:29:04 asubuhi
erinja:You'd need to accompany it with a noun for it to make sense at all.So we can't say Beleta without a noun, yet we can say Bonega without a noun?
Alkanadi (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 18 Mei 2016 6:34:05 asubuhi
vejktoro:Especially if the idiom hasn't quite made it to mainstream in the native tongueI think this idiom is commonly used. At least, in Canada, I hear it a lot. Maybe, outside of north american it isn't too common.
Miland (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 18 Mei 2016 7:42:36 asubuhi
Abeneezer (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 18 Mei 2016 8:42:13 asubuhi
Alkanadi:Correlatives with '-a' works like adjectives and modifies nouns. They can also stand alone at times, but they cannot work as adverbs that affects the meaning of only adjectives. How does 'Kia bonega' make sense to you? It needs a noun to follow or precede 'bonega'erinja:You'd need to accompany it with a noun for it to make sense at all.So we can't say Beleta without a noun, yet we can say Bonega without a noun?
Vestitor (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 18 Mei 2016 9:41:24 asubuhi
When you're speaking English, use English and the peculiarities that have developed in that language. Ditto if you're speaking German, French, Spanish or Czech. Esperanto isn't a half-way house container language for rendering 'versions' of foreign-language idioms and popular expressions.
Ni parolu Esperanton!
Alkanadi (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 18 Mei 2016 9:47:52 asubuhi
Vestitor:Isn't the problem (if there is one) that folk are perpetually trying to use Esperanto as a language in translation rather than converting ideas/intentions directly into existing Esperanto?Yah. I think so. Often I think of what I want to say in English and then convert it into Esperanto. I am trying to think more in Esperanto rather than translate in my head, but it takes time.
devilyoudont (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 19 Mei 2016 11:30:47 alasiri
Alkanadi:I think the issue is using "Kia beleta" I feel like I would see this in the context of a phrase like, "KIA BELETA KATO" or something meaning like "What a pretty cat!"erinja:You'd need to accompany it with a noun for it to make sense at all.So we can't say Beleta without a noun, yet we can say Bonega without a noun?
I typically don't see a-words without nouns... standing on it's own I would typically see "Bonege!" or "Cxarme!" (or Belete? I don't see this word much). I take this as being short for "Estas (adverb)" which would be a complete sentence. Hope this helps
Talisman (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 20 Mei 2016 1:31:07 alasiri
Zvoc47 (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 21 Mei 2016 8:57:24 alasiri
P.S. I chose Esperanto instead of a conlang because it would take too long to make and people wouldn't understand it, but with Esperanto, it's a language that's alive and means something in terms of feelings and dynamics.
Vestitor (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 21 Mei 2016 9:33:23 alasiri
Zvoc47:Why stop being cute? I'm writing a video game's story and it needs to have cute elements.Honestly I don't even really know what this means. "Cute elements"? What would these be exactly?