chapter view
sentence 1003
no lemma: no 'but'
form: conjunction
ne+ lemma: ne 'no, not'
form: negation particle
ʾímaše lemma: imam 'have'
form: 2/3sg.impf (ipf)
tàmo lemma: tamo 'there'
form: adverb
mě`sto lemma: město 'place'
form: n.sg.nom/acc
za+ lemma: za 'for, about'
form: preposition
koné lemma: kon 'horse'
form: m.pl.nom
but there was no place for the horses,
total elements: 7
tree view (.svg)
linear view (Embedded brat):
view .conllu
ROOT no ne imaše tamo město za kone 
cc(no-2, imaše-4)
advmod(ne-3, imaše-4)
root(imaše-4, ROOT)
advmod(tamo-5, imaše-4)
obj(město-6, imaše-4)
case(za-7, kone-8)
nmod(kone-8, město-6)no
no
lemma: no 'but' SJS SNSP Miklosich search
CS nъ, no, or also nǫ.
tag: C
form: conjunction
element 1
dependency: cc→3
ne+
ne
lemma: ne 'no, not' SJS SNSP Miklosich search
tag: Qz
form: negation particle
element 2
dependency: advmod→3
ʾímaše
imaše
lemma: imam 'have' SJS LOVe search
CS iměti (irregular ě-/a-verb: 1sg.prs imamь, 2sg imaši) or imati (an a-/je-verb: 1sg.prs emljǫ, 2sg emlješi, SJS - link). Punčo uses various 3pl.prs forms - e.g. in chapter 062a, sentences following each other show imutь, imajutь and imatь.
inflection: a-verb
tag: Vmii3si
form: 2/3sg.impf (ipf)
element 3
dependency: root→0
tàmo
tamo
lemma: tamo 'there' search
Modern BG codifies tam, but older sources use prevalently tamo, which is common in CS texts too. Originally an allative correlant of tu, it seems to have replaced it in a static locative function too (e.g. sьtvori tamo čjudesa ʹhe did there miraclesʹ here).
suffixes: allative -amo
tag: R
form: adverb
element 4
dependency: advmod→3
mě`sto
město
lemma: město 'place' search
inflection: o-stem noun
tag: Nnsnn
form: n.sg.nom/acc
element 5
dependency: obj→3
za+
za
lemma: za 'for, about' search
tag: Sa
form: preposition
element 6
dependency: case→7
koné
kone
lemma: kon 'horse' search
Punčo uses both kone and koni as plural forms, preferring the latter.
inflection: jo-stem noun
tag: Nmpny
form: m.pl.nom
element 7
dependency: nmod→5