Archaic A1 p- in Dakotan
Robert L. Rankin
rankin at lark.cc.ukans.edu
Tue Apr 6 16:28:07 UTC 1999
> Actually, I would like to modestly remind those interested in this issue
> that I wrang two pages out of these forms in:
>
> Koontz, John E. 1985. A syncopating conjugation *k-stem in Lakota.
> IJAL 51.4: 483-4.
Sorry, John, ...just goes to show how my memory is doing these days!
> I'm not sure that the ?*wke 'turtle' form is relevant, but... Assuming
> Mandan pke matches Da kheya and OP kke, it looks like *pku should yield
> ?khu regularly in Da, presumably via *hku, like other hypothetical
> preaspirates that yield aspirates in Da and IO and preaspirates or tense
> stops throughout Dh and voiceless stops in Wi (Ho).
It's more than just hypothetical. Root mah- 'earth' with the noun
formative -ka (i.e., mah-ka) gives Dakota makha, so hC > Ch was definitely
a Dakotan sound change. There are a couple of other parallel cases in the
CSD maybe.
'Turtle', like many other animal names, presumably had a wa- or wi- prefix
at one time (I make a case for wi- in a couple of papers). Like the 1st
person pronominal, it lost its vowel in 'turtle, bison cow, otter', etc.
giving a secondary cluster, again like the 1st person (if we're right
about the underlying 1st person).
Dheghiha has both patterns for secondary pk- clusters. Usually they go
through the changes:
*w-k > pk > kp > hp > pp (like in vertitive ku we've been discussing).
In Dakotan the last stage is different: hp > ph as we've seen.
'Want' in proto-Dhegiha is ko~ra and it is doubly conjugated. 'I want',
*w-ko~-w-ra, where both w's are 1st person markers, you get 1st sg.
kko~bla in Kansa (with exact analogs in the other Dhegiha lgs.) So this
verb for some reason apparently didn't undergo the metathesis that the
other verbs in its class did:
*w-k > pk > hk > kk
It remains unclear what the chronology of morphological (as opposed to
phonological) changes was with the noun prefix wi- or wa- and the 1st
person wa-.
Bob
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