Tibetan Grammar - originative case: Difference between revisions
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=Originative | =Originative Case—འབྱུང་ཁུངས་ཀྱི་སྒྲ་: ནས་, ལས་= | ||
{{Tibetan}} | {{Tibetan}} | ||
* Also called: originative particle, source particle, ablative particle. | |||
==Independent of verb type== | |||
===Source, origin, འབྱུང་ཁུངས་, place, substance, person=== | |||
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སངས་རྒྱས་ལས་ཆོས་འབྱུང༌། | སངས་རྒྱས་ལས་ཆོས་འབྱུང༌། | ||
བྱུང་བ། འབྱུང་བ། འབྱུང་བ། ༼ཐ་མི་དད་པ༽ | བྱུང་བ། འབྱུང་བ། འབྱུང་བ། ༼ཐ་མི་དད་པ༽ | ||
Revision as of 18:44, 8 June 2011
WORK IN PROGRESS: the grammar articles are being edited for wiki publication. During editing, the content might be incomplete, out of sequence or even misleading.
| Articles on Tibetan Grammar |
| 1. Introduction |
| 2. Formation of the Tibetan Syllable |
| 3. Formation of the Tibetan Word |
| 4. First case: ming tsam |
| 5. agentive particle |
| 6. Connective Particle |
| 7. La don particles |
| 8. La don particles—Notes |
| 9. Originative case |
| 10. Verbs |
| 11. Verbs—Notes |
| 12. Syntactic particles |
by Stefan J. E.
Originative Case—འབྱུང་ཁུངས་ཀྱི་སྒྲ་: ནས་, ལས་
| This section contains Tibetan script. Without proper Tibetan rendering support configured, you may see other symbols instead of Tibetan script. |
- Also called: originative particle, source particle, ablative particle.
Independent of verb type
Source, origin, འབྱུང་ཁུངས་, place, substance, person
[...]
