Breakdown of Asante kwa msaada wako jana; bila msaada huo nisingekamilisha maandalizi.
Questions & Answers about Asante kwa msaada wako jana; bila msaada huo nisingekamilisha maandalizi.
Why is kwa msaada used in Asante kwa msaada wako jana?
How does the possessive suffix -ako work in msaada wako?
Why is jana placed after msaada wako instead of at the start of the sentence?
What is the formation of nisingekamilisha?
nisingekamilisha is the negative conditional (past unreal) form of kamilisha (‘to complete’). It breaks down as:
• ni-: subject marker ‘I’
• si-: negation ‘not’
• -nge-: conditional/past marker (‘would have’)
• kamilisha: verb root ‘complete’
Putting it together: ni-si-nge-kamilisha → nisingekamilisha, meaning ‘I would not have completed’.
How does bila work with the noun phrase msaada huo? Why isn’t there another preposition?
Why do we use the demonstrative huo with msaada, and not huyo or yule?
Could we say bila msaada wako instead of bila msaada huo? What would change in meaning?
Is it possible to use maliza or kumaliza instead of kamilisha in nisingekamilisha maandalizi?
Can we rephrase it as Bila msaada huo singeweza kukamilisha maandalizi? What changes?
Yes. That adds the verb of ability weza (‘to be able’) in its negative conditional singeweza, plus the infinitive kukamilisha. So:
• Bila msaada huo (‘Without that help’)
• singeweza (‘I wouldn’t have been able’)
• kukamilisha maandalizi (‘to complete preparations’)
It shifts the focus slightly to your ability rather than the direct action.
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