Biloxi, Ofo, and Tutelo-Saponi Language

rgraczyk at aol.com rgraczyk at aol.com
Mon Oct 12 22:37:40 UTC 2009


Crow has bulu'aka 'downstream, north' and uhpa 'upstream, south'.? That always made good sense to me, since the rivers in Crow country generally flow north to the Yellowstone.? Is the same true in Lakota country?? How about the other branches of Dakotan?? Do they have the same terms?



Randy


-----Original Message-----
From: ROOD DAVID S <David.Rood at Colorado.EDU>
To: siouan at lists.Colorado.EDU
Sent: Mon, Oct 12, 2009 11:35 am
Subject: RE: Biloxi, Ofo, and Tutelo-Saponi Language



For what it's worth, the Lakota etymology for 'south' is 'facing downstream'. Does that help figure out the Biloxi? If I put together the pieces 'cause' 'come' and 'water', it might give me 'makes the water come', i.e. pulls it southward.?
?
David S. Rood?
Dept. of Linguistics?
Univ. of Colorado?
295 UCB?
Boulder, CO 80309-0295?
USA?
rood at colorado.edu?
?
On Mon, 12 Oct 2009, Rankin, Robert L wrote:?
?
> Ny in Siouan texts is almost invariably underlying /ni/ followed by a vowel. So in this case it's probably (a)ni 'water', probably referring to the Gulf of Mexico. Dave's advice on the glossaries is good; don't ever trust the English to Biloxi/Ofo sections. Always cross-check.?
>?
> Bob?
>?
>?
> -----Original Message-----?
> From: owner-siouan at lists.Colorado.EDU on behalf of David Kaufman?
> Sent: Sun 10/11/2009 4:18 PM?
> To: siouan at lists.Colorado.EDU?
> Subject: Re: Biloxi, Ofo, and Tutelo-Saponi Language?
>?
> Scott,?
>?
> I think you have fallen victim to one of the pitfalls of working with > the 1912 D-S Biloxi-Ofo dictionary - if you rely only on the English > index (without tediously checking through all of the Biloxi entry and > examining examples) you will more often than not end up with incorrect > glosses and translations.?
>?
> --The Biloxi have the words hakanaki for East, xunumi for North, > nyuhuyewade for South, and ide for West.--?
>?
> (h)akanaki is ((h)aka 'emerge' + naNki 'posit. sit'), the full form of > which is ina (h)akanaNki 'sun emerges' (east).? I also have inahuye, > which is ina 'sun' + hu 'come' + ye (CAUS), that is, the sun comes > (east).? That xunumi 'north' should be xanami, borrowed from Muskogean > falammi 'north' (D-S u-breve usually = unstressed a). (See my paper in > the Kansas Working Papers in Linguistics, 2006.)? That ide actually just > means 'fall (of its own accord)' and in the Biloxi section D-S give the > word itaduye (yes, under ide!), which, as best I can tell, means iN(na) > 'sun' + ta(ho) + du (?) + ye (CAUS) = ~ 'sun falls' (west).? As for > south, nyuhuyewade has me perplexed - take off the -wade, which just > means 'toward' and you're left with nyuhuye, which appears to mean > nyu(?) + hu 'come' + ye (CAUS), but I haven't been able to figure out > yet what that nyu refers to.? So it seems to be 'something or other > comes' but I don't know what that something coming is!
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> David Kaufman?
>?
>?
>?
> --- On Sun, 10/11/09, Scott Collins <saponi360 at yahoo.com> wrote:?
>?
> From: Scott Collins <saponi360 at yahoo.com>?
> Subject: Biloxi, Ofo, and Tutelo-Saponi Language?
> To: siouan at lists.Colorado.EDU?
> Date: Sunday, October 11, 2009, 8:35 AM?
>?
> Biloxi, Ofo, and Tutelo-Saponi; these languages?have been?classed together before. Is it possible to recontruct words that may be missing or unknown from one of these languages as a substitute for the other??
> ??
> For instance in Tutelo-Saponi I can find no words for the four directions seperatly such as North, South, East, West. There is a word that represents the four directions together mon eke topi. The Biloxi have the words hakanaki for East, xunumi for North, nyuhuyewade for South, and ide for West. The Ofo only have two; ano for North and atoki for South.?
> ??
> I hope this is correct if not please let me know. I am using the Dorsey and Swanton sources on the Biloxi and Ofo languages and the Hale and Oliverio sources on the Tutelo and Saponi languages.?
> ??
> ??
> ??
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>?
> Scott P. Collins?
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