| Integrated Coptic Orthodox Forums
|
| Author |
Message |
egyptianhomeboy
Posts: 791

Joined: Jul 28, 2003
Location: California
|
Posted:
Oct 24, 2005 - 11:03 PM |
|
So what does a question in coptic look?
What I mean is, what will indicate that the sentence is a question? |
_________________ Your Servant,
Michael Fam
Saint Marina Coptic Orthodox Church |
|
|
 |
ABasanti
Posts: 191

Joined: Feb 23, 2004
|
Posted:
Oct 24, 2005 - 11:21 PM |
|
With a question mark  |
_________________ + Andrew Basanti +
HCOC Member & Sales Representative
+ To Protect and Preserve +
For the Lord does not see as man sees; for man looks at the outward appearance, but the Lord looks at the heart. (1 Samuel 16:7) |
|
|
 |
ABasanti
Posts: 191

Joined: Feb 23, 2004
|
Posted:
Oct 24, 2005 - 11:24 PM |
|
haha what i ment to say was that you have to no how to write it in coptic.... jus like any other language, but there isn't that much on punctuation.... |
_________________ + Andrew Basanti +
HCOC Member & Sales Representative
+ To Protect and Preserve +
For the Lord does not see as man sees; for man looks at the outward appearance, but the Lord looks at the heart. (1 Samuel 16:7) |
|
|
 |
geomekhaiel
Posts: 1726

Joined: Aug 05, 2003
Location: Saint George COC
|
Posted:
Oct 24, 2005 - 11:34 PM |
|
Hey Michael,
Well, if u want to ask a question in Coptic you would use the word
my
so, for example, if u wanted to say "You will come to church tomorrow?" you would say:
my `,na`i `e ]iek`klyci`a `nrac]
or if u wanted to say You will find your book in the house? You would say
my `,nagini `nn`ekgwm qen `pyi
its really very easy once u get the hang of the
my
thing...all you have to remember is that "in Coptic, yes or No questions are made by inflection. The interrogative Particle My is used to aid the beginning of questions"...quote from a coptic grammer book...
George Mekhaiel |
|
|
|
 |
Remnkemi
Ask me for help! Posts: 679

Joined: Apr 07, 2003
Location: Boston, MA USA
|
Posted:
Oct 25, 2005 - 12:17 AM |
|
Actually, according to GB, which copied from Greek grammar, the question mark is a colon. But this isn't used anymore. As George said, you can use the interrogative participle. There are also some words that denote questions, like
as pe
-"what is",
sa `;nau
-"for how long",
`;nau
-when,
;wn
-"where",
oumyr
-how many,
nim
-who, etc.
Actually, from the Coptic Bible, most questions are recognized by context, not punctuation or grammar.
I hope this helps.
George |
|
|
|
 |
Ramez Mikhail
Posts: 1783

Joined: Sep 15, 2002
|
Posted:
Oct 25, 2005 - 01:26 AM |
|
A question mark in Greek is a semicolon, not a colon.
Its ok..both look weird to me as question markers either way..hehe |
|
|
|
 |
MikeS
Posts: 213

Joined: Feb 19, 2003
Location: Manchester, NH - USA
|
Posted:
Oct 25, 2005 - 12:10 PM |
|
Yeah, Coptic punctuation is suposed to follow that of Greek (which does look a bit strange to people who are used to the usual punctuation), but as others mentioned, Western punctuation is frequently used or a question can be inferred by the use of an interrogative word (the so-called "wh-words" in English - who, what, where, etc.).
Coptic seems to have this interrogative particle, MH, which seems to function the same way, for those of you who may be familiar with Slavic languages, "czy" in Polish or "li" in Russian, or even the "ma" in Chinese. These are kind of nice because it tells the listener right away that what's being said is a question.
Mike S |
|
|
|
 |
Remnkemi
Ask me for help! Posts: 679

Joined: Apr 07, 2003
Location: Boston, MA USA
|
Posted:
Oct 25, 2005 - 04:49 PM |
|
Ma is also used in Arabic.
I remember the first time I went to Arabic class and the teacher asked me to translate "What is your name?" into Arabic. I told hime "Ismak ay" but that is colloquial Egyptian Arabic. Proper Arabic is "MA ismak?"
I knew Arabic is closer to Chinese than Coptic.
George |
|
|
|
 |
|
|
Powered by phpBB2 and the coptichymns.net Network of Coptic Hymns and Coptic Orthodox Sites.
| |
|
|