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"nun" plus the past tense

貼文者: karibdo, 2009年8月27日

訊息: 7

語言: English

karibdo (顯示個人資料) 2009年8月27日上午2:58:51

In the second lesson of "La Zagreba metodo", the following sentence appears: "Mi nun kuiris ĝin". Can someone tell me, what does "nun" mean when used together with the past tense?

RiotNrrd (顯示個人資料) 2009年8月27日上午4:21:18

I would interpret it as "I just now cooked it."

ceigered (顯示個人資料) 2009年8月27日上午4:44:27

karibdo:In the second lesson of "La Zagreba metodo", the following sentence appears: "Mi nun kuiris ĝin". Can someone tell me, what does "nun" mean when used together with the past tense?
I now have cooked it. /I've now cooked it/I've cooked it now/I've just finished cooking it etc.

Think of it in terms of 'now have (done something).'

tommjames (顯示個人資料) 2009年8月27日上午8:05:34

Nun can be used in the past tense to refer to the present as it existed in the past, as explained in PMEG.

Whether or not that's what's going on in your example I don't know, but the above may be useful to you anyway.

Miland (顯示個人資料) 2009年8月27日上午8:20:00

The context is that Ana has visited her friend Marko, who hands her a cup of coffee and says Jen la kafo, ĝi estas ankoraŭ varma. Mi nun kuiris ĝin. It looks as though the interpretations of RiotNrrd or ceigered ('I've just made it') are correct here.

karibdo (顯示個人資料) 2009年8月27日下午4:41:46

Thanks for the replies! Is this the most common way of expressing the "just verbed" pattern? Are there other ways? Also, could someone point me to the grammar pages where these sorts of forms are explained?

Pharoah (顯示個人資料) 2009年8月27日下午5:04:29

karibdo:Thanks for the replies! Is this the most common way of expressing the "just verbed" pattern? Are there other ways? Also, could someone point me to the grammar pages where these sorts of forms are explained?
Well, the most common way I've seen is to use the word ĵus, as in "Mi ĵus kuiris ĝin". I'll leave your other questions to more competent esperantists ridulo.gif.

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