HINDUSTANI LANGUAGE.
127
^ ,j> \L£ & neither colcl nor liot pleases;
p ij y
I am opening or I am about to open ;
uUb JT I am about to malce manijest my Jormer
state before tJiee.
77. The adverbs of negation or <0 maj be used
either before, or afteu verbs : however is peculiar to
imperatives, or to infinitives adopted for tliem ; may be
applied to any rnood, but in prose it rarely can be post-
poned to the verb ; wrhilst though incapable of being
joined to an imperative, is yet more emphatical and in
more general use than aj with the other parts of a verb ;
o ? 9
so, c^= do not ask ; prciy do not forget; aj
9 9
clo not suppose ; Jp U. \J> aj U place not tJiy
affections any wJiere ; wJiat Jiast tJiou not Jieard ? When the
emphatick moreover, is adopted, it frequently with
elegance supplants the present of the verb at the end
j- c 9
or a sentence: as, Jib ff acts of cruelty
(are) not becoming tJiy dignity : and, in a compound sen-
tence, the negative adverb may sometimes be understood
in the first member and expressed conjunctively in the
o
second part only ; so Mir Taki says, 'iJ \J jt
fp aj m tJie mosque, 0 sJiaikJi! is tJiere (neitJier) a cup nor
a morsel?
78. The conjunctions J and ^ tJiat, are adopted at
127
^ ,j> \L£ & neither colcl nor liot pleases;
p ij y
I am opening or I am about to open ;
uUb JT I am about to malce manijest my Jormer
state before tJiee.
77. The adverbs of negation or <0 maj be used
either before, or afteu verbs : however is peculiar to
imperatives, or to infinitives adopted for tliem ; may be
applied to any rnood, but in prose it rarely can be post-
poned to the verb ; wrhilst though incapable of being
joined to an imperative, is yet more emphatical and in
more general use than aj with the other parts of a verb ;
o ? 9
so, c^= do not ask ; prciy do not forget; aj
9 9
clo not suppose ; Jp U. \J> aj U place not tJiy
affections any wJiere ; wJiat Jiast tJiou not Jieard ? When the
emphatick moreover, is adopted, it frequently with
elegance supplants the present of the verb at the end
j- c 9
or a sentence: as, Jib ff acts of cruelty
(are) not becoming tJiy dignity : and, in a compound sen-
tence, the negative adverb may sometimes be understood
in the first member and expressed conjunctively in the
o
second part only ; so Mir Taki says, 'iJ \J jt
fp aj m tJie mosque, 0 sJiaikJi! is tJiere (neitJier) a cup nor
a morsel?
78. The conjunctions J and ^ tJiat, are adopted at