Metin/Location and direction

Postural Adjectives
Postural adjectives are used to describe the position and arrangement of an object relative to another object (which is often left unnamed). They are employed heavily as demonstratives, especially in situations where someone is being told to find something. For example, in idiomatic Metin, if you are pointing out a red shirt out of a pile of shirts that happens to be partially hanging off of a shelf, you would probably describe it as "huską męęs" (that hanging-off shirt) and not "huską ty'uy" (that red shirt) when pointing it out.

1D objects
crossing a gap(like a bridge): tj'ii

hanging from one point to another (like a loose string attached to two places): suug

stretched taut between two points: súx

leaning against something (also used of 2D objects): cháun

dangling off of something (like a loose rope): dhii

jutting off of something (scroll sticking out of a bookcase): dhį́

running through several things (like a necklace): thxeuz

jabbed through something (like a needle through paper): pxéi

sticking out of a bulk (like a loose thread): pxee

tangled: dyaun

patterned, regularly knotted: dazáh