WA- once more.
Koontz John E
John.Koontz at colorado.edu
Fri Jan 16 05:21:57 UTC 2004
On Thu, 15 Jan 2004, R. Rankin wrote:
> What about verbs with locative prefixes like i-?
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Carolyn Q." <cqcqcq1 at earthlink.net>
> > I don't find any difference in Osage between wa- 'us' and wa- 'them'.
Well, it's LaFlesche, but i'pize ("i'-bi-c,e") 'thirsty'
P1 oNdhoN'pize
P2 i'dhipize
P12 wea'piza=i (Note wea'- < wa-i-a-)
This is the onlyi-locative example offered outright in the dicitonary that
I have noticed. Forms with different objects tend not to occur
However, as I said, datives are a bit different in Osage, and the pattenr
there features regular, but accented pronominals alternating with ki' in
the third person, rather like the ka-instrumental forms, except those have
ka- in the third person. Omaha-Ponca's fusions of the pronominals with
dative (g)i- do not occur.
ki'pakkoN ("gi'-ba-k.oN") 'angry'
P1 oN'pakkoN
P2 dhi'pakkoN
P12 wa'pakkoN=i
ki'zu ("gi'-c,u") 'happy'
P1 oN'zu
P2 dhi'zu
P12 wa'zu=i
As far as the -a-wa- pattern:
e'kippi?oN ("e-gi-p.i=oN") 'accustomed to, used to'
P1 e'= ki-p- pi-m- oN
P2 e'= ki-s^-pi-z^-oN
P3 e'= kip- pi- oN
P12 e'=awa-kip- pi- oN
This is what I call a fun verb.
hni'=...cce ("hni'-t.se") 'cold'
P1 hni=oN-cce
P2 hni'=dhi'-cce
P12 hni=a-wa-cca=i
oaNppe=...hi ("noN-p.e'-hi") 'hungry'
P1 noN'ppe=oNhi
P2 noN'ppe=dhehi [sic, for dhihi?]
P12 noN'ppe=awahi=i
Osage Rituals
s^a'pe=awadhe 'dark he-makes-us'
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