trit
Keywords: law
Pronunciation (IPA): | trit |
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Part of Speech: | term noun verb |
Class: | skurun |
Forms: | trit, tritys, tritca, tritka, tritcasyn, tritysyn |
Glosses: | rule, regulation, measure, measurement, regulated, orderly, judicious, referee, judge, government, object (linguistic), sovereign, sovereignty, regular, standard, normal |
Description:
The term 'trit' means a rule or measure, and is used to derive a lot of words used in legal or government contexts. It is an Old Common word that it is believed that Davidson coined by creating an abstract agreement form of the word 'tret', number or count.
Noun:
As a noun, 'trit' means a rule or regulation, or rules or regulations in general. It can also refer to a standard. It is also a word for 'government', and the bare form is the most standard way to express the idea of 'sovereignty' or 'rule' in Common. It can also pertain to a measurement. There are a number of important derived forms:
- tritca: A judge or referee when referring to a person, it can also refer to a device used to control or regulate something, or a measuring tool, although 'tritwilu' might be used in this context as well.
- tritcasyn: A specific government. 'Na tritcasyn na sufetysyn' refers to the New World Order global government. 'Na onpas tritcasyn' is a common synonym.
- tritka: A way of disambiguating that you are talking about a specific ruling or measurement, as opposed to a rule that a ruling might be based on. In Common linguistics, this also refers to the object of a verb or modifier (i.e., 'that which is governed'). This extends as well to government, where 'tritka' could refer to some who is under the rule or juristiction of something (which can be specified with the null preposition). This can be extended metaphorically, so 'na tritka na ruz', 'the governed of fear' is a way of caying 'coward'.
- tritysyn: Emphasises the general or abstract sense of rulership or judgement, can be used to disambiguate.
'Trit' can also be a base form for types of government systems and political positions. See 'temokrasi', attached. Examples are 'na trit naz uluan', 'elite rule' or oligarchy, which is how the NWO would describe its own governmental system, or 'na affe trit', or 'public rule', broadly translatable as 'republicanism', which is how the NWO refers to the form of restricted democracy with elite regulation that is practices in some NWO states that still have voting and even alternation of power between Globalist parties.
This contrast sets up one of the political debates in NWO polite society regarded as a legitimate disagreement - between 'uluatritfisa', roughly 'elite-rule-belief' and 'affetritfisa' or 'public-rule-belief'. These roughly line up temperamentally with conservatives and liberals in NWO society. The conservatives (uluatritfisaka) absolutely have the upper hand, but affetritfisa remains a legitimate political philosophy which influences overall political outcomes and which has been gaining momentum in recent years in some states like Cascadia.
Do not mistake the affetritfisaka for true liberals. They advocate performing more public business openly, and more inclusion for the sifres soxot, the professional class - they absolutely do not advocate democracy or a general public franchise, the farthest they go is to advocate for better conditions for workers and slaves, framed as promoting greater productivity and social order.
Verb:
As a verb, 'trit' is a transitive skurun verb meaning to judge, regulate or rule, taking an ergative judger and an absolutive thing judged or ruled. To state the target or content of a judgement, use an absolutive object or dependent clause. To state the matter being judged, add it periphrastically as a prepositional phrase introduced with 're'. For example:
Ja tritca te trit a pifit.
The referee is judging the match.
Ja tritca te trit re na urek.
The referee is ruling on the goal.
Ja tritca tene trit si a urek se an was.
The referee ruled that the goal was invalid (false).
An alternative was to frame the idea of making a ruling is with the compound verb phrase 'te wero a trit su ...' or 'te wero a trit re ...', which frames the decision in a less dispassionate way that focuses on its impact on someone. You can also have 'te wero a trit erpa ...' for 'rule against' and 'te wero a trit upána ...' for 'rule in favour of'.
'Trit' also carries the idea of sovereign rule. For example:
Ja Kaskétija te trit a Tehas.
Cascadia governs/rules over Texas.
The Common sentence expresses the idea of 'rule over' as a straight-forward transitive relationship.
Modifier:
The modifier form 'tritys' means something like 'orderly' or 'regulated'. When applied to a person, it can mean 'judicious', or refer to a person with good self-control. In a legal context, 'tritys' can express the idea of 'sovereign' or 'having jurisdiction'.
Another sense of 'tritys' is regular, standard or normal, especially in a legislated or formally defined context, or on other contexts for humorous exaggeration.