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sentence 114
ʾi+ lemma: i 'and'
form: conjunction
dóbi lemma: dobija 'gain'
form: 2/3sg.aor (pf)
drugi lemma: drug 'other'
form: m.pl.nom
sínove lemma: sin 'son'
form: m.pl.nom
ʾi+ lemma: i 'and'
form: conjunction
dь´šteri lemma: dъšterja 'daughter'
form: f.pl.nom/acc
and he got other sons and daughters
total elements: 6
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ROOT i dobi drugi sinove i dъšteri
cc(i-2, dobi-3)
root(dobi-3, ROOT)
amod(drugi-4, sinove-5)
obj(sinove-5, dobi-3)
cc(i-6, dъšteri-7)
conj(dъšteri-7, sinove-5)
ʾi+
i
lemma: i 'and' SJS SNSP Miklosich search
tag: C
form: conjunction
element 1
dependency: cc→2
dóbi
dobi
lemma: dobija 'gain' LOVe search
inflection: e-verb
prefixes: final do-
tag: Vmia3se
form: 2/3sg.aor (pf)
element 2
dependency: root→0
drugi
drugi
lemma: drug 'other' SJS search
According to SJS, the hard-stem adjectival declension is common in OCS sources too, save for Sav.k., where pronominal forms like drugomu appear.
inflection: hard adjectival
tag: Ampnn
form: m.pl.nom
element 3
dependency: amod→4
sínove
sinove
lemma: sin 'son' SJS search
CS synъ was an u-stem. Punčo seems to follow a paradigm combining o-stem oblique case endings with u-stem direct forms (as in other monosyllabic masc nouns): sg.nom sinь, gen sina, dat sinu, voc sine, pl.nom sinove/sinovi, also pl.acc sini (< CS syny).
The two pl.nom forms may remind us of Serbo-Croat variation (pl.nom -ovi, pl.acc -ove). However, Punčo clearly prefers the form -ove (the other form comes only once in 9 instances in first 30 chapters), which is used both in subject and oblique positions.
inflection: monosyllabic noun
tag: Nmpny
form: m.pl.nom
element 4
dependency: obj→2
ʾi+
i
lemma: i 'and' SJS SNSP Miklosich search
tag: C
form: conjunction
element 5
dependency: cc→6
dь´šteri
dъšteri
lemma: dъšterja 'daughter' search
CS dъšti (r-stem)
inflection: jā-stem noun
tag: Nfpny
form: f.pl.nom/acc
element 6
dependency: conj→4