Iskousogos
Anthony Grant
Granta at edgehill.ac.uk
Wed Feb 11 10:27:00 UTC 2004
It put me in mind of Algonquian names such as Missisauga. Could it be
Alg?
Anthony
>>> rankin at ku.edu 10/02/2004 20:44:50 >>>
It's a mystery to me too. Looks like nothing I've ever seen. I
assume
if it's French spelling that it represents something like [iskuzogo],
with or without the final consonant. But that doesn't give me any
bright ideas.
Bob
-----Original Message-----
From: Koontz John E [mailto:John.Koontz at colorado.edu]
Sent: Tuesday, February 10, 2004 2:28 PM
To: siouan at lists.colorado.edu
Subject: Re: Iskousogos
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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