Prepositions as building blocks
von EldanarLambetur, 17. August 2011
Beiträge: 43
Sprache: English
EldanarLambetur (Profil anzeigen) 17. August 2011 14:38:06
I've often noticed (and really like) the use of prepositions (like "ĉe" and "kun") in word building. But I'm wondering what effect it has on the use of verbs in particular. Take two examples:
- Kunlabori = to cooperate, collaborate (to work with?)
- Ĉeesti = to attend, to be present (to be at?)
I've noticed two different styles (with seemingly equal frequencies) with these kinds of verbs:
1. Mi kunlaboras vin, Mi ĉeestos la feston
2. Mi kunlaboras kun vi, Mi ĉeestos ĉe la festo
Are they equivalent and both permissible? Is one more or less hard to understand? Is there a different shade of meaning between them?
Is the accusative "n" just filling in for the preposition (like often it does with "je") or can the verbs truly be transitive? Or is it wrong to think of "kunlabori" as "to work with", and instead it is a kind of "labori" that is with another person but still intransitive, and therefore you have to repeat the kun/ĉe (so using the accusative "n" is only shorthand)?
Thanks for any help!
erinja (Profil anzeigen) 17. August 2011 15:00:07
I would always say "Mi kunlaboras kun vi" and "Mi ĉeestas la feston"
It depends on the preposition and it depends on the verb, in my opinion. Some verbs are very commonly combined with a certain preposition, such that the new word has a meaning that is agreed upon by pretty much everyone, and that combined word is assumed to have a certain transitivity, which is also agreed upon by most everyone.
In some cases you can take or leave the repeated preposition and it changes nothing but emphasis. "Mi eniras la buson", "Mi iras en la buson", and "Mi eniras en la buson" would all describe the same action, but perhaps with differing levels of emphasis.
darkweasel (Profil anzeigen) 17. August 2011 17:18:23
erinja:I would never say "Mi ĉeestas ĉe la festo"why not? i wouldn't recognize that as strange in any way...
Miland (Profil anzeigen) 17. August 2011 17:46:23
darkweasel:I would say that in ĉe-estas ĉe the second ĉe is redundant. I haven't seen any examples of this in the tekstaro, or in print. Have you?erinja:I would never say "Mi ĉeestas ĉe la festo"why not? i wouldn't recognize that as strange in any way...
geo63 (Profil anzeigen) 17. August 2011 17:46:28
"Petronius vekiĝis apenaŭ ĉirkaŭ tagmezo, kaj kiel ordinare, tre laca. La antaŭan tagon li ĉeestis festenon ĉe Nero, kiu longiĝis ĝis malfrua nokto..."
Of course it is so because there is:
"festeno ĉe Nero, kiun Petronius ĉeestis"
Miland (Profil anzeigen) 17. August 2011 17:48:36
geo63:La antaŭan tagon li ĉeestis festenon ĉe Nero, kiu longiĝis ĝis malfrua nokto..."That's not ĉe-estis ĉe la festonon; the second ĉe relates to Nero's house (ĉe Nero).
geo63 (Profil anzeigen) 17. August 2011 17:52:02
Miland:Hey, I was not answering your post, but previous ones. You simply have sent yours before mine reached the thread. Compare the time stamps. Sorry for the mess.geo63:La antaŭan tagon li ĉeestis festenon ĉe Nero, kiu longiĝis ĝis malfrua nokto..."That's not ĉe-estis ĉe la festonon; the second ĉe relates to Nero's house (ĉe Nero).
Miland (Profil anzeigen) 17. August 2011 17:55:16
geo63:Hey, I was not answering your post, but previous ones. You simply have sent yours before mine reached the thread.Saluton! Understood, mi pardonpetas. Well, perhaps readers who are komencantoj will still benefit.
erinja (Profil anzeigen) 17. August 2011 18:02:16
However, as geo63 mentioned in his post, ĉeestis feston ĉe via domo would not be redundant, the second "ĉe" is just giving the location of the party.
36lima (Profil anzeigen) 17. August 2011 19:02:21
Just curious. If the general response is "you'll just have to keep reading/speaking Esperanto and get a feel for it", I can live with that but don't want to overlook a resource with more specific information if there is one.
Thanks!
Kelly