Iskousogos
Koontz John E
John.Koontz at colorado.edu
Tue Feb 10 20:27:56 UTC 2004
On Tue, 10 Feb 2004, Michael Mccafferty wrote:
> I was wondering if there's any chance "Iskousogos" is a Siouan vocable.
Well, as it stands it looks remarably unlike typical (Mississippi Valley)
Siouan forms, but this is more of a fuzzy instinct based on what phonemes
are where - call it typical morpheme patterns or canonical form - than any
outright impossibilities. I assume the final s is to be taken as part of
the form, and not a French morpheme?
I suppose something like you could see in the initial isk- something like
ieska < i(y)e 'to speak; word(s)' + ska 'clear, white', which is fairly
widely used for translators and speakers of the local language and
sometimes as a self-designation. But you have to assume that had
something else appended to it to account for the -usogos/usokos.
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