User:Aegon/High Valyrian Tutorial/4-1: Difference between revisions

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===Iqighagon, Making Someone Feel===
===Iqighagon, Making Someone Feel===
The verb ''iqighagon'' indicates the speaker making another feel something. The other appears in the ''accusative case'' and the emotion in the ''instrumental case''. Again, if one makes oneself feel something, use the reflexive.
The verb ''iqighagon'' indicates the speaker making another feel something. The other appears in the ''accusative case'' and the emotion in the ''instrumental case''. Again, if one makes oneself feel something, use the reflexive.
{| class="wikitable"
|'''High Valyrian'''
|'''English'''
|-
| bgcolor="#CCFFFF" | aōhi dāri vēdroso iqīdā
| bgcolor="#CCFFCC" | you have angered your king
|-
| bgcolor="#CCFFFF" | tubī aōle kirimvose iqighās
| bgcolor="#CCFFCC" | make yourself happpy today
|}

Revision as of 07:10, 4 April 2023

Lesson 1| Feelings

Vocabulary

Lesson Vocabulary
High Valyrian English
biarves (4sol.) happiness, jubilation; luck, fortune
hōzinon (3ter.) swelling; pride
jessives (4sol.) joy
munnon (3ter.) sorrow
ōdres (4sol.) pain; damage
ossȳngnon (3ter.) terror
zūger (6col. 4sol.) fear (uncountable)
zūges (4sol.) fear (countable)
iqighagon (c-fin.) to make somebody feel; (reflexive) to make oneself feel

Expressing Feelings

High Valyrian features a number of ways to express feelings.

Iōragon, Expressing Feelings Towards Another

The verb iōragon, meaning "to stand, (to be feeling)", expresses feelings towards someone with the feeling in the locative case and the recipient of the feeling with the comitative case.

High Valyrian English
vēdrot ñuhom raqiroso iōran I am angry with my friend

If the recipient is oneself, use the reflexive.

High Valyrian English
munnot aōloma iōragon daor don't feel sorry for yourself

Iqighagon, Making Someone Feel

The verb iqighagon indicates the speaker making another feel something. The other appears in the accusative case and the emotion in the instrumental case. Again, if one makes oneself feel something, use the reflexive.

High Valyrian English
aōhi dāri vēdroso iqīdā you have angered your king
tubī aōle kirimvose iqighās make yourself happpy today