Back to the Platte
Kathleen Shea
kdshea at falcon.cc.ukans.edu
Tue Mar 20 17:20:31 UTC 2001
I enjoyed your poetic description of Nebraska this time of year. Here in north central Oklahoma, the green grass and winter wheat is starting to show, and people around here are planting potatoes and frying up wild onions. The shinny games will start soon--in April--giving people the chance to get outside and run around after the winter.
I'm not saying much linguistic, except that I did find out from Henry Lieb the meaning of the third Ponca term in the minimal triplet for vowel length and stress that I wrote about in a previous message: s^ee'dhaN (shee'thaN) 'the (round, inanimate) apple'; s^e'dhaN (she'thaN) 'that (round, inamimate object)'; and s^edhaN' (shethaN') 'broken.'
Kathy
----- Original Message -----
From: Mark Awakuni-Swetland
To: Siouan
Sent: Monday, March 19, 2001 7:03 AM
Subject: Back to the Platte
19 March 2001
From the earlier discussion about the term Nibthaska and its reference to "shallowness?"
In the preface to La Flesche's "The Middle Five," he notes that..."Most of the country now known as the State of Nebraska (the Omaha name of the river Plattt, descriptive of its shallowness, width, and low banks)..." (1963:xix).
The geese are coming back, so the warm weather will soon be here to stay.
Aloha,
uthixide
Mark Awakuni-Swetland, Lecturer
Anthropology/Ethnic Studies
c/o Department of Anthropology-Geography
University of Nebraska
Bessey Hall 132
Lincoln, NE 68588-0368
Office 402-472-3455
Dept. 402-472-2411
FAX 402-472-9642
mawakuni-swetland2 at unl.edu
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://listserv.linguistlist.org/pipermail/siouan/attachments/20010320/2ccfc849/attachment.htm>
More information about the Siouan
mailing list