Query: Possessor Raising
Koontz John E
John.Koontz at colorado.edu
Fri May 19 06:27:27 UTC 2000
Bob asks:
> The question in Omaha and Ponca would be whether you could
> get "Shinuda iNt?e" by itself. aN+ki (dative/benefactive) collapses
> to iN- in Ponca but aN- in Quapaw. There's a "ki" hidden in there.
> You report Shinuda (witta) iNt?e. Does that mean the witta is
> optional? That's my basic question.
Examples from Dorsey 1890. Basically, it looks to me as though an animate
inalienable possessum generally gets the dative construction with all
persons of possessors, though some non-dative examples occur in at least
embedded contexts. The construction is also used with partitives, e.g.,
'some/many of us died' or 'some/many of you died', but non partitive
constructions occur, too, perhaps more frequently. Sometimes the posessum
seems to be marked as subject.
S^iN'gaz^iNga git?e' ugdha'=bi=ama.
Child his was dead he told of his, they say.
jod 1890:347.10
Inalienable possession. Third person.
Ni'kkas^iNga ama iN't?a=i
People the have died to me
jod 1890:495.8
Presumably 'people' refers to friends, kin, associates, so inalienable
possession or at least initmate association. First person. Possessum
marked as subject with article.
S^iN'gaz^iNga aNttaN'=i ede, we't?a=i ha.
Child we had him but, he died to us
A child which we had (?)
jod 1890:347.10-11
Inalienable possession. Inclusive person.
Di'ghe=s^te wakhe'ga a'higi wea't?a=i UmaN'haN ama.
Small-pox too sick many died to us Omahas the.
jod 1890:399.8
"Many of our/us Omahas had died of the smallpox."
Partitive. Inclusive person. Dative formation. Possessor marked as
subject? Or is it the possessum? Noun subject with inclusive agreement.
N.B.: Case before has wa-(gi)-; this, wa-(gi)-a-. Is this just personal
variation, or something else?
GaN' ni'kkas^iNga s^e'nuz^iNga wahe'h=az^i=xti bahi'=xti aNt?a'=i ha.
And person young man very stout-hearted picked we have died.
jod 1890:502.2
Partitive. Inclusive peson. Non-dative formation. Compare to
(1890:399.8) (smallpox example).
N.B.: 'Very stout-hearted' is literally 'very not trembling'.
Ni'as^iNga aNt?a'=i ha.
People we have died
jod 1890:687.3-4
Partitive. Inclusive person. Non-dative formation.
A'=na s^aN' dhat?a'=i e=iN=the winaN'?aN=i kkaN'=bdha.
How many in fact you have died perhaps I hear from you I wish.
jod 1890:512.1-2
Partitive without dative. Second person. In embedded position.
Wiz^iN'dhe iN't?e, naN'de iN'ppi=m=az^i=hnaN s^aN's^aN.
My elder brother died to me, heart bad for me regularly always.
jod 1890:506.3
Clear inalienable possessum. First person dative. Simple association of
clauses, with body part first person dative in second clause.
INda'di, S^e'kki, udhe'hna=tte ha, witta'haN t?e=the.
My father, Ceki, you will tell him, my brother-in-law died the.
jod 1890:497.8-9
Clear inalienable possessum, but no dative, and verb agrees with
possessum. 'Died' in embedded position.
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