=(b)(i) in Dakotan
voorhis at westman.wave.ca
voorhis at westman.wave.ca
Tue Jun 4 14:45:39 UTC 2002
ROOD DAVID S wrote:
> The pi/kta discussion reminds me of something that I only vaguely
> remember, but which someone who works with Lakota in Canada, or Dakota,
> should tell us more about. In the relative clause construction in Sioux
> Valley, according to some 60's or 70's work by either Pat Shaw or Jack
> Chambers or Valerie Drummond or some combination thereof, the clauses
> were said to end in either -g (from ki) or -b (from pi); can anyone recall
> or find out what these marked?
-b is still plural. In relative clauses it is a contraction of pi g
(from pi ki). Incidentally, around here ki is still kiN, with the nasal
vowel, when people take the care not to reduce it to g. But saying kiN
instead of g seems to be akin to pronouncing the English definite
article like thee, instead of with schwa, even before consonants.
pi kta~e contracts to pta~e.
Paul
Brandon MB, Canada
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