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Person Pronoun

Person Pronominal Prefixes specifies one person/people as the subject and another person/people as the object of a sentence. Person Pronouns are used if a living thing, especially a person, is the expressed object of a sentence. Personal Pronominal can be used on Set A or Set B verbs IF the verb concept can apply the idea of a person as an object in the statement. If so, you replace the Set A/Set B Pronoun Prefix with the appropriate Person Pronoun Prefix. Some verbs have a Person verb. When that occurs, a Person Pronominal Prefix will not be used.

This means Tsalagi makes it a point to state if someone is the object of a sentence or not. The Person Pronominal Prefix reflects the idea people as the most important thing. If a person is the object of the sentence and the Person Pronoun can be applied then the relevant pronoun MUST be used.
Person Pronominal differ from Set A and Set B by usage on a specific range of verbs called person verbs; can replace Set A or Set B on certain verbs; and clear indication of the subject and object as being a person/people and specifically ‘who’ they are.
The Person Pronouns are often called Combined Person Prefixes. Any idea which requires the subject to act on the object, both are people, will use these prefixes.
There are six forms of Person Pronoun Prefixes, where a new prefix is introduced. The remaining four forms use a Set A pattern unless the verb is expressed in the Remote Past or Infinitive. Then, the Set B form is used. Those for are She/he; they; She/he and I; and They and I.

More Common Person Pronoun

Completed List Set A

Completed List Set B