Another Patient-Subject Verb
Koontz John E
John.Koontz at colorado.edu
Sat Jun 17 02:42:31 UTC 2000
Here's an interesting Omaha-Ponca patient subject example that I found in
Dorsey's 1891 Omaha and Ponka Letters collection, p. 78, in a the Notes to
a letter from Gihaz^i (Samuel White) to Cornelius Rickman. Gihaz^i
delivered an English preface to his letter in which he stated that he had
been having problems with sore eyes, but "Now my eyes are well, and I am
in good health." Dorsey offers as the Omaha equivalent:
Is^ta'=dhaN aNgi'gdhaska, iN'udaN.
eyes the my own are well it's good for me
The form aNgi'gdhaska agrees with the speaker using the patient marker aN,
though is^ta'=dhaN 'the eyes' is in patient form, too, to judge by the
article. (It might also be an obviative subject, I guess, though the verb
doesn't take an plural marking.) The verb stem is a suus gigdhaska 'one's
own to be clear', from gaska 'to strike clear', probably here 'to become
clear', following partially the pattern of u-ga-X stems meaning 'to become
X colored'. Dorsey renders the form literally as 'mine is white again',
primarily refering to the cornea and secondarily to the sight.
Compare 1890:690.8
Wi' naNxi'de aN'ska=xti
I hearing it is very good for me
I have excellent hearing
JEK
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