Number 'nine' in Chiwere.

Rankin, Robert L. rankin at KU.EDU
Thu Sep 12 19:56:25 UTC 2013


Jan,

Good point.  I wasn't aware of the aspiration difference.  I do think the etymology relates to napé ‘hand’ in any event.  Aspirated napchoka has to be a contraction of napV and choka because otherwise the pch cluster wouldn't be possible.

Bob

________________________________
From: Siouan Linguistics [SIOUAN at listserv.unl.edu] on behalf of Jan Ullrich [jfu at LAKHOTA.ORG]
Sent: Thursday, September 12, 2013 2:10 PM
To: SIOUAN at listserv.unl.edu
Subject: Re: Number 'nine' in Chiwere.

> I think perhaps the Dakotan term relates to counting in sign language where 'nine' leaves one finger bent over, i.e., "lying", in the palm of the hand.  napcóka is 'palm' and yųka and wąka are ‘to lie’ in Lakota and the so-called D-dialects respectively

Bob, I wonder if the etymology is rather napé ‘hand’ (or perhaps napsú ‘finger’) and čík’ala and yuŋká/waŋká ‘to lie’. Note that napčhóka ‘palm’ has aspirated čh while napčíyuŋka has a plain one.

Jan


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