Mixed stative and Whorf.
Koontz John E
John.Koontz at colorado.edu
Thu Dec 19 17:05:56 UTC 2002
On Thu, 19 Dec 2002 rlarson at unlnotes01.unl.edu wrote:
> We seem to have elicited a couple more of these from our Omaha speakers.
...
> dhishkade you play
...
> dhini'uwoN you swim
It's interesting to note that in these examples and udhihi, it's the
always second persons that are stative in form.
> In these two examples, the dhi- could be the emphatic/independent pronoun
> rather than the affixed you-object pronoun. That would seem especially
> likely in the "swim" case.
That's certainly possible, and I can think of some parallels around
Siouan, e.g., consistent use of the independent first person plural in the
stative paradigm in Crow, or etti 'his house' in Omaha-Ponca. Still, I
think this is just what it seems, an unexpected stative second person.
> But compare the word for "crawl", which seems
> to be entirely stative(!):
>
> mide' crawl
> oN'mide I crawl
> dhi'mide you crawl
I don't think I'd ever run across this!
> I don't know if I have the accent correct on the last two. Perhaps they
> had to emphasize the first syllable to convince me that that was what
> they really meant!
More likely, for some reason pronominals are long with this stem.
> Also, what about the word for die/dead? We have two separate words for
> this in our language, but they seem to handle the distinction by treating
> the same word as either active or stative, don't they?
>
> at?e' I die
> oNt?e' I am dead
I now recall you pointing this out before. And I think this occurs in
Dakotan, too. However, as far as I can recall Dorsey always has active
forms for this stem. This would be more like the fluid-S pattern Bpb
Rankin mentioned.
More information about the Siouan
mailing list