The particle 'in'

Michael McCafferty mmccaffe at indiana.edu
Sun Jul 12 17:57:05 UTC 2009


Holatzin, Gordon,

I don't know the answer to your question. It just made me think of some 
of my favorite Nahuatl terms-- i:ntzin and o:ntzin, and then "in 
i:ntzin," sometimes written inintzin.

Do you have Andrews II? He goes into /in/, the vocable that introduces 
clauses in pretty great detail throughout his book. I don't remember 
his referencing an article such as you're referring to if he read it.

Michael


>
> On Sun, Jul 12, 2009 at 10:49 AM, Gordon Whittaker <gwhitta at gwdg.de> wrote:
>
>> Hello everyone,
>>
>> I'm trying at the moment to track down studies of the Nahuatl particle
>> 'in'. I seem to recall that an article with exactly this focus was
>> published in the '60s or 'early '70s, but I can't seem to find the
>> reference. I thought it was in IJAL ,but it looks like I was mistaken. I
>> would be very grateful if some kind reader could please help me out here.
>> Thanks!
>>
>> Best wishes,
>> Gordon
>>
>> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
>> Gordon Whittaker
>> Professor
>> Linguistische Anthropologie und Altamerikanistik
>> Seminar fuer Romanische Philologie
>> Universitaet Goettingen
>> Humboldtallee 19
>> 37073 Goettingen
>> Germany
>> tel./fax (priv.): ++49-5594-89333
>> tel. (office): ++49-551-394188
>> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
>>
>>
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>>
>



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