XPost: alt.usage.english, alt.language.latin
On Tue, 12 Nov 2024, HenHanna wrote:
3. "Wenn du so laut redest, wirst du noch gehen und die Nachbarn
st�ren!"
This usage of "gehen" is not customary in the German dialects I know,
including Standard German. Maybe it exists in other dialects.
The analogous construction, but with "come" instead of "go", is sometimes
used in Swahili:
"Useme kwa sauti ndogo usije ukawasumbua majirani."
Speak with low voice that you don't come and bother the neighbours.
This is used because the negated optative has two meanings
"usiwasumbue majirani" can mean either
so that you don't bother the neighbours or
without bothering the neighbours
but the above construction has unambiguously the first meaning.
Thus, it would be interesting to find out which languages use either "go"
or "come" in this context.
--
Helmut Richter
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