Pig Latin/Lessons/6:Pronouns and Possessives

Main Concept
I run. She sits. You eat. Have you noticed a pattern? Pronoun + Verb. The pronoun tells you the who. In NAPL, the conjugation already tells you the who, in most cases. So, really, in most instances where you'd use pronouns in English you wouldn't in NAPL. Of course, sometimes you have to clarify who the conjugated verb refers to.

For example, let's say there's a boy and a girl in a room. If you just say "ilkayi," it could mean that either she or he is killing something or other. So you've got to specify the who-- "ŝē ilkayi." There's no set rule for this, really, it's just up to your discretion as to when you specify. Just keep in mind the fact that pronouns are used as sparingly as possible in NAPL!

Vocabulary
First off, pronouns:


 * 1) ŝē: she (singular)
 * 2) hē: he (singular)
 * 3) ťay: they/them (singular)
 * 4) ťays: they/them (plural)
 * 5) ī: I (singular)
 * 6) mē: me (singular)
 * 7) ēō: you (singular)
 * 8) ēōs: you (plural)
 * 9) ōuē: we (plural)

Alright, got that? I hope you did, they're a tad important. I also hope you noticed that they are very similar to English'es pronouns-- the only differences, really, is the singular-plural "they" distinction that NAPL makes, something English leaves ambiguous.

Now for the possessives:
 * 1) ŝēāy: hers
 * 2) hēāy: his
 * 3) ťāy: their (singular/singular)
 * 4) ēōāy: your (singular/plural)
 * 5) ōuēāy: our(s)
 * 6) mīy: my

Remember how there are different pronouns for plural "you" and singular "you," along with singular/plural "they?" Well, that isn't the case with possessives, unfortunately. Possessives are just as ambiguous as in English. You win some you lose some, I suppose. Still an improvement.

Alright, I think it's time for some exercise! 10 push-ups, right now!

English to NAPL
Make sure to use pronouns-- in most of these cases, you wouldn't ordinarily use pronouns (as the conjugation renders them redundant), but this is just so you get some pronoun-practice, really.