Does anyone have any ideas on how to make a definitive rule about how to turn a verb into an adjective?
My initial assumption is: "The adjective describes what the person/thing who does the verb MUST be like because it does the verb, or what a person/thing who habitually does the verb must be like."
e.g.:
I wait, therefore I am patient.
It lasts, therefore it is durable or permanent.
It attracts, therefore it is attractive.
I forget, therefore I am forgetful.
But this doesn't account for all the definitions given by Sudre, so I would make an amendment: "If the verb necessitates a direct object, the adjective describes what the object acted on by the verb must ideally be like."
I read IT, therefore it must be legible.
I carry it, therefore it must be portable.
This usually works, but I still see problems with it.
For example:
I love you, therefore... Am I 'loving' or 'enamored', or are you 'lovable'? (Sudre says 'enamored')
I forget it, therefore... Am I 'forgetful', or is it 'forgetable'? (Sudre says 'forgetful')
I need it, therefore... Am I 'needy', or is it 'necessary'? (Sudre says 'necessary')
This kind of ambiguity is difficult to get around. Should the adjective be able to describe the subject OR the object, and be inferred from context? Do some words just always become adjectives a certain way? (This would mean that all the ambiguous cases would just have to be learned). Should there be a specific grammatical form to create an adjective for object (for example, using the word falare - can, able, may? Used, perhaps, like, "La misolredo lamîsol" - the forgetful person; "La misolredo falâre lamisol" - the forgetable person (the person able-to-be-forgotten))
So - thoughts, anyone? I'd like to remove the ambiguity from Solresol as much as we can, and this seems like a large gray spot to me.
My initial assumption is: "The adjective describes what the person/thing who does the verb MUST be like because it does the verb, or what a person/thing who habitually does the verb must be like."
e.g.:
I wait, therefore I am patient.
It lasts, therefore it is durable or permanent.
It attracts, therefore it is attractive.
I forget, therefore I am forgetful.
But this doesn't account for all the definitions given by Sudre, so I would make an amendment: "If the verb necessitates a direct object, the adjective describes what the object acted on by the verb must ideally be like."
I read IT, therefore it must be legible.
I carry it, therefore it must be portable.
This usually works, but I still see problems with it.
For example:
I love you, therefore... Am I 'loving' or 'enamored', or are you 'lovable'? (Sudre says 'enamored')
I forget it, therefore... Am I 'forgetful', or is it 'forgetable'? (Sudre says 'forgetful')
I need it, therefore... Am I 'needy', or is it 'necessary'? (Sudre says 'necessary')
This kind of ambiguity is difficult to get around. Should the adjective be able to describe the subject OR the object, and be inferred from context? Do some words just always become adjectives a certain way? (This would mean that all the ambiguous cases would just have to be learned). Should there be a specific grammatical form to create an adjective for object (for example, using the word falare - can, able, may? Used, perhaps, like, "La misolredo lamîsol" - the forgetful person; "La misolredo falâre lamisol" - the forgetable person (the person able-to-be-forgotten))
So - thoughts, anyone? I'd like to remove the ambiguity from Solresol as much as we can, and this seems like a large gray spot to me.