Affrication Diminutive Marker (Re: butterfly)
Catherine Rudin/HU/AC/WSC
CaRudin1 at wsc.edu
Mon Nov 3 20:40:53 UTC 2003
LOVE the joke! If this doesn't show productive use, I don't know what
could.
Catherine
It's also true that Ponca makes use of affrication of dental stops for a
diminuative effect, or "baby talk" (what John calls "grandmother speech"),
as in "Dha?e'c^hewadhe!" 'You poor thing!' (said to a child) compared to
"Dha?e'thewadhe!" (said to an adult), with the same meaning. This brings
to
mind a "xuube" joke that I was told:
A woman sees a little nest of baby mice and says to the other people
nearby,
"J^u'ama j^NaN'baia!" ("Du'ama
daNaN'baia!") 'Look at these!' To which her husband replies, "J^am!"
'Damn!'
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