vat Vat.Slav.2

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sentence 17

i+ lemma: i 'and'
form: conjunction

rodi+ lemma: rodja 'give birth, beget'
form: 2/3sg.aor (pf)

sna+ lemma: sin 'son'
form: m.sg.gen/acc.anim

svoego, lemma: svoi 'of oneself'
form: m.sg.gen/acc.pron

imenemъ+ lemma: ime 'name'
form: n.sg.inst

oiluša lemma: Oiluš 'Ilus'
form: m.sg.gen/acc.anim

kralě. lemma: kral 'king'
form: m.sg.gen/acc.anim


And he gave birth to his son, King Ilus by name.

total elements: 7


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ROOT i rodi sna svoego imenemъ oiluša kralě 
cc(i-2, rodi-3)
root(rodi-3, ROOT)
obj(sna-4, rodi-3)
amod:poss(svoego-5, sna-4)
acl(imenemъ-6, sna-4)
obl:pred(oiluša-7, imenemъ-6)
appos(kralě-8, oiluša-7)


i+
i
lemma: i 'and' SJS SNSP Miklosich search
tag: C
form: conjunction
element 1
dependency: cc→2


rodi+
rodi
lemma: rodja 'give birth, beget' LOVe search
inflection: i-verb
tag: Vmia3se
form: 2/3sg.aor (pf)
element 2
dependency: root→0


sna+
sna
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: Nmsgy
form: m.sg.gen/acc.anim
element 3
dependency: obj→2


svoego,
svoego
lemma: svoi 'of oneself' SJS SNSP Miklosich search
A reflexive-possessive adjective.
inflection: soft pronominal
suffixes: possessive -ьj-
tag: Amsgy
form: m.sg.gen/acc.pron
element 4
dependency: amod:poss→3


imenemъ+
imenemъ
lemma: ime 'name' search
inflection: n-stem noun
tag: Nnsin
form: n.sg.inst
element 5
dependency: acl→3


oiluša
oiluša
lemma: Oiluš 'Ilus' search
inflection: jo-stem noun
tag: Nmsgy
form: m.sg.gen/acc.anim
element 6
dependency: obl:pred→5


kralě.
kralě
lemma: kral 'king' search
An alternative to knęz as the second highest secular title (ʹkingʹ). Paisius divides the Bulgarian rulers to krale ʹkingsʹ and care ʹemperorsʹ, going back to a story about ʺAsen the Greatʺ (actually Khan Tervel). Pagan rulers used titles arkhon or kanasubigi, later the Slavic kъnęźь. The title kralь was common in West Slavic area, and its use in the South is likely a later Hungarian influence.
inflection: jo-stem noun
suffixes: possessive -ьj-
tag: Nmsgy
form: m.sg.gen/acc.anim
element 7
dependency: appos→6