To Wink
od Lynchie, 03. avgust 2010
Sporočila: 7
Jezik: English
Lynchie (Prikaži profil) 03. avgust 2010 12:22:15
![ridulo.gif](/images/smileys/ridulo.gif)
Miland (Prikaži profil) 03. avgust 2010 12:29:22
Lynchie (Prikaži profil) 03. avgust 2010 12:41:10
![ridulo.gif](/images/smileys/ridulo.gif)
Akwino (Prikaži profil) 03. avgust 2010 23:19:18
Lynchie:Purely out of interest, but is there an Esperanto word or term for "wink", as in "I winked at her/him.".? thanks
![okulumo.gif](/images/smileys/okulumo.gif)
biguglydave (Prikaži profil) 04. avgust 2010 03:07:06
Mi palpebrumas - I winked (no object - intransitive).
Mi palpebrumigi - I "made eyelids at" (winked at) her (object = her - transitive).
This just seemed a little more specific than the "okul-" root. Good luck.
darkweasel (Prikaži profil) 04. avgust 2010 06:32:15
biguglydave:Benson has "palpebrumi" and "palpebrumigi" from palpebro = eyelid.Strange. Logically the second one would be "to make someone wink" if your first definition is right.
Mi palpebrumas - I winked (no object - intransitive).
Mi palpebrumigi - I "made eyelids at" (winked at) her (object = her - transitive).
This just seemed a little more specific than the "okul-" root. Good luck.
biguglydave (Prikaži profil) 04. avgust 2010 07:15:22
darkweasel:Strange. Logically the second one would be "to make someone wink" if your first definition is right.Good point. Given no more detail in Benson between the intransitive and the transitive (palpebrumi-intr, palpebrumigi-tr), how would you interpret/translate the difference?