Yan! For the example "techneki" shouldn't that have been plural? So "technekih Maria"? Like the next example that read "techittah" it seems like the "itta" took the "h" to be plural. Am I correct to assume the lack of an "h" on "techneki" was a typo?
I don't remember the example in the video, but there's two plurals we can't confuse. Plural subject and plural object. techneki = she loves us technekih= they love us techitta = she sees us techittah = they see us the -h is for plural subjects. but tech is an object.
@@thenahuatlchannel3896 Thank you. I'm still, after nearly a year, having a rough time remembering that the lack of a prefix indicates he/she/it. So in your above example, "techitta" it is he/she sees us. Only when the "h" goes on the end do we know that the prefix is plural. I need more practice actually speaking
Buen trabajo! 🥰
Yan! For the example "techneki" shouldn't that have been plural? So "technekih Maria"? Like the next example that read "techittah" it seems like the "itta" took the "h" to be plural. Am I correct to assume the lack of an "h" on "techneki" was a typo?
I don't remember the example in the video, but
there's two plurals we can't confuse. Plural subject and plural object.
techneki = she loves us
technekih= they love us
techitta = she sees us
techittah = they see us
the -h is for plural subjects. but tech is an object.
@@thenahuatlchannel3896
Thank you. I'm still, after nearly a year, having a rough time remembering that the lack of a prefix indicates he/she/it.
So in your above example, "techitta" it is he/she sees us. Only when the "h" goes on the end do we know that the prefix is plural. I need more practice actually speaking