<div>LaXayEm !</div> <div> </div> <div>There is a Chinook Jargon word for "turnip", that appears in various forms in different sources:</div> <div>- lenawo (in Le Jeune's "Chinook Vocabulary" and "Practical Chinook Vocabulary", and also in Shaw's English-Chinook part, taken obviously from Le Jeune); </div> <div>- lenamo (Demers); </div> <div>- ledowo (Hutchings&Rosenfield 1860, Macdonald 1863); </div> <div>- la mooow (Tate 1889?, Downing&Clarke 1898, and again Shaw, who found it probably in one of the former two). </div> <div>I assumed that the "correct" form (or at least the closest to the original) should be Le Jeune's _lenawo_ and supposed that the etymology is most probably the French word _le navet_ = "turnip". </div> <div>But re-reading an old message posted to the Chinook List by Dave Robertson (10 Apr 1999, Subject: <SPAN id=MSGHDR-SUBJECT-PRE>Upper Chehalis Salish in relation to ChInuk Wawa</SPAN>), I noticed among the "words from Chinuk Wawa"
(i.e. Upper Chehalis loanwords from CW) the word _ninamu_ = "rutabaga" (i.e. a kind of turnip). </div> <div>Taking into account that the oldest form from those quoted above is Demers' _lenamo_, now I suspect that this is also the most "correct", being also the closest to _ninamu_. But what could be the origin of this word? Is it French? </div> <div>It isn't easy to derive "lenawo" from "le navet"; but if the word is in fact lenamo/ninamu, it's even more difficult... or maybe _m_ and _w_ are two forms for rendering the [v] sound? In fact, we have, in the case of the French loanwords, examples both with v>w (la veste > lawest) and v>m (la vieille > lamiyay). But in this case what could be the explanation of changing the last vowel from [e] to [o]?</div> <div>Or maybe the word has another origin? Laksta kEmtEks ukuk?</div> <div> </div> <div>Francisc</div><p>
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