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An Entity of Type : owl:Thing, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

Sentence structure generally follows the following structure: * "ELAM" + SUBJECT(s) + "EITAV" + INDIRECT OBJECT(s) + DIRECT OBJECT(s) + "KANU"/ "KAINA"/ "AHMAN" + VERB + PREPOSITIONAL PHRASE(S) * "ELAM" and "EITAV" mean "FROM" and "AT" respectively. These are only used if the subject and indirect object are both present in the sentence. * "KANU" "KAINA" and "AHMAN" Mean "HE" "SHE" and "IT" respectively. This refers to the subject and can be omitted if the subject is directly before the verb. * If there are multiple subjects, use "KANUN"/ "KAINAN"/ "EIL" * "KANUN" is masculine and plural, "KAINAN" is feminine plural "EIL" is gender-neutral and plural (like "they") although "KANUN" can be used the same as "EIL" * "The man and the woman exchanged their presents" becomes

AttributesValues
rdfs:label
  • Ailak
rdfs:comment
  • Sentence structure generally follows the following structure: * "ELAM" + SUBJECT(s) + "EITAV" + INDIRECT OBJECT(s) + DIRECT OBJECT(s) + "KANU"/ "KAINA"/ "AHMAN" + VERB + PREPOSITIONAL PHRASE(S) * "ELAM" and "EITAV" mean "FROM" and "AT" respectively. These are only used if the subject and indirect object are both present in the sentence. * "KANU" "KAINA" and "AHMAN" Mean "HE" "SHE" and "IT" respectively. This refers to the subject and can be omitted if the subject is directly before the verb. * If there are multiple subjects, use "KANUN"/ "KAINAN"/ "EIL" * "KANUN" is masculine and plural, "KAINAN" is feminine plural "EIL" is gender-neutral and plural (like "they") although "KANUN" can be used the same as "EIL" * "The man and the woman exchanged their presents" becomes
dcterms:subject
abstract
  • Sentence structure generally follows the following structure: * "ELAM" + SUBJECT(s) + "EITAV" + INDIRECT OBJECT(s) + DIRECT OBJECT(s) + "KANU"/ "KAINA"/ "AHMAN" + VERB + PREPOSITIONAL PHRASE(S) * "ELAM" and "EITAV" mean "FROM" and "AT" respectively. These are only used if the subject and indirect object are both present in the sentence. * "KANU" "KAINA" and "AHMAN" Mean "HE" "SHE" and "IT" respectively. This refers to the subject and can be omitted if the subject is directly before the verb. * If there are multiple subjects, use "KANUN"/ "KAINAN"/ "EIL" * "KANUN" is masculine and plural, "KAINAN" is feminine plural "EIL" is gender-neutral and plural (like "they") although "KANUN" can be used the same as "EIL" * "The man and the woman exchanged their presents" becomes "The man and the woman their presents they (KANUN or EIL) exchange." * If there is only one subject, even if it is plural, use "KANU"/ "KAINA"/ "EIL" * NOTE: In this situation, the verb is still conjugated as a plural even though the reference pronoun is singular. * "The brothers exchanges their presents" becomes "The brothers their presents he (KANU) exchange", not "The brothers their presents they exchange". * Modifiers are placed before the words the modify. * Prepositional phrases are structured modifier+object+preposition * "Beyond the city" becomes "The city beyond"
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