Lesson 6: Nominal Bipartite Sentences
Nominal Bipartite Sentences
A nominal sentence is a sentence that consists of a subject and a complement without a linking verb. In English, this would look something like: "Very interesting, those books!" The verb is implied to be "be" (i.e. "Those books 'are' very interesting."). The nominal sentences we will form in this section look very similar where in English they would use the verb "be." However, in Coptic, in place of a conjugated verb, there is a copula.Application
A copula is a connecting word, in particular a form of the verb "be" connecting a subject and a complement. In English, an example would be "You smell nice." Instead of "Your smell is nice" which uses the "is" conjugation of the verb "be," "smell" acts as a copula.
In Coptic, there are three copular verbs.
In this section, we will study a couple forms of a tripartite sentence. In a future lesson, we will look at bipartite sentences. Tripartite sentences have three components:
SubjectCopulaPredicate
It can take on several forms depending on whether the predicate is definite or indefinite. In all cases, if the subject and predicate agree in gender and number, the appropriate copula is used. If the subject and predicate do not agree, then the copula follows the noun that precedes it.
In a sentence, the subject is who or what the sentence is about (and more specifically, the noun or pronoun that performs the verb in the sentence); the predicate gives more information about the subject. For example, in English:
"The man is a teacher" - the subject is "the man" and the verb here is "is" so the (indefinite) predicate is "a teacher.""The teacher is a man" - the subject is "the teacher" and the (indefinite) predicate is "a man.""The teacher is the man" - the subject is "the teacher" and the (definite) predicate is "the man.""This man is a teacher" - the subject is "This man", the verb is "is" and the (indefinite) predicate is "a teacher.""This man is my teacher" - the subject is "This man", the verb is "is" and the (definite) predicate is "my teacher."
Indefinite Predicate
When the predicate is indefinite, the sentence takes the following form:
<subject> + <indefinite predicate> + <copula>
<subject> + <copula> + <indefinite predicate>
Definite Subject and Predicate
When the predicate is definite, the sentence can take one of the following forms:
<subject> + <copula> + <definite predicate>
<definite predicate> + <copula> + <subject>
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Application
Application 1:
This is an excerpt from <>.
Exercises
Exercise 1: Translate to Coptic
Translate the following into Coptic:
Exercise 2: Translate to English
Translate the following phrases into English:
Resources
"A Study in Bohairic Coptic" by Nabil Matar; p162
See Moawad Daoud Lesson 2
See Sameh Younan page 59 in the PDF
ACTS 2990 Introduction to the Coptic Language (Bohairic) with Hany Takla Lesson 3A