postpositions
Hu Matthews
Hu_Matthews at sil.org
Fri Jan 2 19:48:03 UTC 2004
In Crow postpositions is (are) the rule. I know of no prepositions in Crow.
However, the postpositions are often moved to pre-verb position and
pronounced as if they were part of the verb. Also they are bi-morphemic.
awé áakeen
earth on
on the earth
áakeen consists of áake (surface,top) plus n (at)
Another way of looking at it is to call it a partitive construction. awé
áake (the surface of the earth) plus the postposition n. However, if áake
is a noun and n is the postposition, then we need to explain why there are
very few nouns that can be suffixed with a postposition.
Hu Matthews
----- Original Message -----
From: <bi1 at soas.ac.uk>
To: <siouan at lists.colorado.edu>
Sent: Friday, January 02, 2004 6:32 AM
Subject: postpositions
> Can anyone tell me whether postpositions rather than prepositions are
> general in Siouan-Caddoan. I have some sources on Crow, Omaha
> and Wichita, but they are not clear on that point.
> Bruce
>
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