Sujet : Re: Heine or Goethe -- Kommen drei Logiker in eine Bar.
De : benlizro (at) *nospam* ihug.co.nz (Ross Clark)
Groupes : sci.lang sci.mathDate : 18. Jun 2024, 22:25:11
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <v4stvv$1hr5h$1@dont-email.me>
References : 1 2 3
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On 19/06/2024 1:35 a.m., jerryfriedman wrote:
Helmut Richter wrote:
On Mon, 17 Jun 2024, HenHanna wrote:
Kommen drei Logiker in eine Bar. Der Kellner fragt: "Na, was darfs
sein,
die
Herren? Drei Bier?" Sagt der erste Logiker "Ich weiß nicht", der zweite
auch
"Ich weiß nicht" und der Dritte sagt "Ja"
>
>
------- how this starts with a Verb...
In German, jokes are typically told with inversion in all sentences
that belong to the narrative. The word order is the same as that of
questions but the intonation is that of affirmative sentences.
Example (the inversion in the 1st, 3rd and 4th sentence is joke
syntax, the "gehen wir rein" is not but is normal 1st person plural
imperative):
Spielen zwei Pferde Federball. Auf einmal wird es windig und der
Ball fliegt weg. Sagt das eine Pferd: "Komm, gehen wir rein und
spielen Tischtennis." Sagt das andere: "Spinnst du? Hast du schon
mal Pferde Tischtennis spielen sehen?"
Telling jokes without such inversion would be unidiomatic.
If you don't mind my saying so, that's weird. How does such a
thing get started?
The only other situation I know where a non-question main sentence
starts
with the verb is "sei" (let be) at the beginning of the statement of a
precondition of a mathematical theorem. E.g.: "Sei G eine Gruppe."
(Let G be a group.) Probably this wording tries to avoid a single
letter at
the beginning of the sentence. Normal grammar would be "G sei ..." or
"Es sei G ...".
..
I assume imperatives, like the "gehen wir" above, are too obvious to
mention.
Is another situation poetry and song lyrics, at least old-fashioned
ones? "Sah ein Knab ein Röslein stehn."
I thought of "Es ritten drei Reiter zum Tor hinaus", an old ballad that Mahler set to music.
The word order must be "Germanic V2" -- a finite verb comes after the first constituent in the clause, whatever it may be. If the first constituent is the subject, you get normal subject-verb order; if it's anything else, the verb ends up preceding the subject.
The first constituent can be this "Es" [it]. And then it can be left out, leaving the inverted word order. That's as far as I can take it.
The V2 word order principle is quite clear in Old English.
The closest thing I think we have in modern English is with "there":
There came a wind like a bugle [Emily Dickinson]
Came a hot Friday... [Ronald Hugh Morrieson]