'Real' nouns and marking reversal

Alan Knutson boris at terracom.net
Mon Apr 26 19:06:41 UTC 2004


Anthony

According to Hoijer 1946: ?ekWan 'dog', ?ekWansxaw 'horse' (?ekWan-
'dog',   -s 'instrumental suffix, -xaw 'to move far(?)'

Alan K

-----Original Message-----
From: owner-siouan at lists.colorado.edu
[mailto:owner-siouan at lists.colorado.edu] On Behalf Of Anthony Grant
Sent: Monday, April 26, 2004 1:51 PM
To: siouan at lists.colorado.edu
Subject: 'Real' nouns and marking reversal

Dear all:

There's a paper on marking reversals of exactly the sort we are
discussing, by Cecil H Brown and te late Stanley R Witkowski, in
Language in the mid-1980s.  And there's a paper on 'real, true and
genine' in Indian languages, somewhere, by the ineffable Albert Samuel
Gatschet from about 1880.

'Horse' in Tonkawa was, inter alia, something like  'ekWanesxaw (W is
superscript) 'horse for dragging'.  I'll have to check the phonemic
shape of this form, but it was something like that. 'ekWan means 'dog'.


Anthony



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