tlapani, tlapana, tlatlapaca, tlatlapatza

John Sullivan, Ph.D. idiez at me.com
Wed Nov 25 21:34:38 UTC 2009


Because the meaning of tlatlapatza can be understood in two ways:
1. tlapana>tlatlapatza, "to split s.t. many times.
2. tlatlapaca> tlatlapatza, " to cause s.t. to be split into many pieces"
John

On Nov 25, 2009, at 1:08 PM, Michael McCafferty wrote:

> Quoting "John Sullivan, Ph.D." <idiez at me.com>:
> 
>> Piyali listeros,
>> 	Ce tlahtlaniliztli. I have a question about sets of words like:
>> tlapa:ni, "to split"; tlapa:na, "to split s.t."; tlatlapaca, "to
>> split  into many pieces", tlatlapatza, "to split s.t. into many
>> pieces". I  understand that tlapa:na is a causative derivation of
>> tlapa:ni. And  the grammars say that tlatlapaca is a reduplicated
>> form of tlapa:ni,  and that tlatlapatza is a reduplicated form of
>> tlapa:na.
> 
> What I want  to know is if tlatlapatza could also be
>> considered a causative  derivation of tlatlapaca.
> 
> Why?
> 
> :-)
> 
> 
> After all, we do
>> have hua:qui, "to dry" and  its causative derivation hua:tza, "to dry
>> s.t."; popo:ca, "to smoke" /  popo:tza, "to smoke s.t."; ti:tica, "to
>> throb (a wound) / ti:titza,  "to strain while making an effort", none
>> of which have underlying  thematic verbs forms in -ni or -hui.
> 
> One thing about these particular forms that you note, John, is that
> they all retain the long vowel when taking the -tza form, which is not
> the case for the productive verbs noted further above.
> 
> 
> Michael
> 
> 
> 
> And I
>> think all verbs ending in - tza are transitive (pi:tza, po:tza).
>> John
>> 
>> John Sullivan, Ph.D.
>> Professor of Nahua language and culture
>> Universidad Autónoma de Zacatecas
>> Zacatecas Institute of Teaching and Research in Ethnology
>> Tacuba 152, int. 43
>> Centro Histórico
>> Zacatecas, Zac. 98000
>> Mexico
>> Work: +52 (492) 925-3415
>> Fax: +1 (858) 724-3030 (U.S.A.)
>> Home: +52 (492) 768-6048
>> Mobile: +52 1 (492) 103-0195
>> idiez at me.com
>> www.macehualli.org
>> 
>> 
> 
> 
> 


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