How far/how long?
Koontz John E
John.Koontz at colorado.edu
Thu Nov 15 03:53:56 UTC 2001
On Wed, 14 Nov 2001 bi1 at soas.ac.uk wrote:
> Does anyone know the Lakota equivalent of 'how far' in distance. I
> presume tohanyan is something like that. But I wonder how one
> would say 'how far is it to Rapid city from here?' and indeed would
> one say that or would one say 'how many days march is it?' or
> something. I am surprised that in none of my texts is there any
> such sentence? It is the sort of thing a foreigner in Lakota contry
> might ask and Lakota would not need to. Any hints from other
> Siouan languages.
Well, for Omaha-Ponca a close match in syntax would be. There's no "from
here" or "to there" phrase.
Dorsey 1890:690.4-5
S^e' SiN'de Gdhe'ska a=thaN' gdhiN' e'=iN=the e' iNwiN'dh(a)
that Spotted Tail how far he sits perhaps that to tell me
idha=i ga!
send it IMPm
Note that a=thaN' (stress seems irregular?) is analogous to
to=haN' yaN
a is the indefinite, and the particle thaN is actually cognate with haN,
one of various cases where the rare OP th corresponds to Dakotan h, like
thi : hi 'to arrive there'. There doesn't seem to be any analogue of the
-ya (nasalized in context?).
There are a couple of additional examples in the Dorsey texts, but they
are relatives (as far as ...).
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