⌋♂) Í DIKTÁ DOGOR LETIMAKA AKUOME PASIUSITANTATAS KONEN FLUSO, Í XELIPASIUSITANTORS PODIXELIPASIUS SOBER TERO KÉ TANTIMENTO XELIUSO.⌋⎄) Í MAKÁ DOGOR AKUIPASIUSITANTATAS GRANDIUSATAS, I KÉ TUTO TANTO FLUSIUSO PASUTA KÉ MAKÁ PESKATA GENUSEKO, I KÉ TUTO XELIPASIUSITANTO BOLATA GENUSEKO. Í BIDÁ DOGOR LARO XENTROLEKO.⌋⚭) Í BARAKÁ DOGOR LATAS DIKTEXE: FRUKTA I FILA, Í FLUSA AKUATA MARUXE, Í XELIPASIUSITANTORS LETIFILE TERUXE.⌋𐐒) Í SERÁ ANTALUNIOR I FUTLUNIOR SOLIOBA PENTIUSO.
GENESIS ; ⌋𐐒 (BABELIRO v4.0)

HÓI HUMANAXES!

In the FLUSOLIO, I explain how we understand the use of prepositions and cases in a logical dimension. All of those prepositions were derived from the non-word expressions EW, AW, UW, OW:

4 prepositional roots: EN [XEN]; AT [PAS]; DU [DUS]; KON4 verbal roots: MENT, TANT, FLUS, ROL

Now we can make a situational table for them:

This table is showing us then 16 different moods of Babeliro. The central axis gives us the “whales” (GRANDIPESKOS):
→ XETI / -ELEN = subjunctive mood → (FATI) / -ARAS / -E / *KÉN = indicative mood (* means a loose particle, it would be the equivalent of “so”)
→ BILI / -URUN / -ÚS = future mood → KROKI / -OLOS / -ONDo = continuous mood

You can use either (or several) mood(s) (aka modals) in BABELIRO and you can use either indicative FATI (often omitted), -ARAS or -E ending or particle *KÉN. Another example, for future mood, you can use BILI or end roots with -URUN / -ÚS. Í KÉN PAS… (and so on…).

Then you have the “fish”(PESKOS), which are more or less equivalent to English modal verbs: must, should, can/might, would, the passive for and pass form.

And then there are the “birds” (BOLATOS), which are some other modal verbs which are not easily known as such but includes: let, may, possibly, probably, hopefully and the questioning form.

Day 5: 16 moods or modal verbs

XÁO,
BIKTOR AURELIUS, LO BONIBOLIUSO STONOR DUS BABELAND▷☐⎳⌋, ☽ ⎳, ☼ ⌋☓

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