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Re: Iltârer Nouns

From:Muke Tever <alrivera@...>
Date:Friday, May 4, 2001, 22:22
From: "Tom Tadfor Little" <tom@...>
> ><<Assuming that the collective plural of "bird" also has the > >archetypal connotation I described (hadn't really considered it > >specifically), I would imagine it being somewhat more narrow than the list > >of qualities you mention, according to whatever aspect of "birdness" > >captured the imagination of the Iltârer people; perhaps a meaning relating > >to flight and the freedom of living by instinct. That more abstract meaning > >would tend to apply when the noun was used metaphorically, in the > >referential case. "a person of birds" might be an Iltârer expression > >roughly equivalent to "a free spirit" in English idiom.>> > > > > This is somewhat different, though. It seems like the collective plural > >here makes an abstract noun out of whatever. In that case, does it still > >have to be considered a plural? > > I'm probably not entirely clear on this myself. Your questions are helping > me refine the idea. Thanks! > > I think what I'm getting at is that the collective plural is always first > and foremost a number form of the base noun, but may (for many nouns, but > not all) acquire a secondary abstract meaning. So a statement like "Birds > (coll.) are blessed" would convey both a rather literal meaning (all birds, > actual and imagined, are divinely favored or fortunate) and a more abstract > meaning (to be like a bird, to have the qualities that are special to > birds, is a blessed thing).
This reminds me of the IE -ia ending for "forming abstract or collective nouns", [which is theoretically related to the feminine adjective ending -a and the -a ending for neuter plurals]. where you'd have sets like Gk. <sophos> 'wise' and <sophia> 'wisdom', or Latin <Hispanus> 'Spanish' and <Hispania> 'Spain', only but these seem to start with adjectives instead of nouns; English pairs like <academy>/<academia> might be more apt. Right?
> Actually, in Iltârer symbolism, the turtle represents emotional > reclusiveness, stubbornness, and unwillingness to explore.
As a turtle I can find this accurate. *Muke!

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Tom Tadfor Little <tom@...>