In front of. Spatial tense. It Indicates that the event occurs to in front of the tagged sumti. When used as a selbri tag or without without a tagged sumti, it defaults to the current location of the speaker, but can refer to other locations depending on the context.
fi'o se crane
"dinju" is not normally "web"; this is inferred from context because
it's a spider making it.
Above. Spatial tense. It Indicates that the event occurs above the tagged sumti. When used as a selbri tag or without a tagged sumti, it defaults to the current location of the speaker, but can refer to other locations depending on the context.
fi'o se gapru
Indicates that something is positioned below the speaker. When tagging a sumti, indicates that the relation described by the bridi in question is positioned below the tagged sumti.
fi'o se cnita
Indicates that something is positioned to the right of the speaker. When tagging a sumti, indicates that the relation described by the bridi in question is positioned to the right of the tagged sumti.
fi'o se pritu
Indicates that something is wrapped around of the speaker. When tagging a sumti, indicates that the relation described by the bridi in question is wrapped around the tagged sumti.
fi'o se sruri
Does this work like sruri, which has "near total containment in some dimension(s)" in the notes?
The ru'u limna example seems like it doesn't work, because Alice herself is not wrapped around anything.
Is this word actually useful for much of anything.
Indicates that something is positioned behind of the speaker. When tagging a sumti, indicates that the relation described by the bridi in question is positioned ... of the tagged sumti.
fi'o se trixe
Indicates that something is positioned to the left of the speaker. When tagging a sumti, indicates that the relation described by the bridi in question is positioned to the left of the tagged sumti.
fi'o se zunle
Most of these make no sense in front of a selbri with "mi" in the
bridi, because you can't be (for example) above yourself, so "mi
ga'u zutse" doesn't seem possible.
Does "ri'u do" mean "on your right", or "rightwards of you relative to the speaker"? Whichever it means, we need a way to say the other without leaving tenses.