reduplication
R. Rankin
rankin at ku.edu
Thu May 13 14:40:27 UTC 2004
Randy,
What is true for John's Omaha examples is also true for Kansa. I did not get a
lot of reduplication, but when I did, it seemed mostly to signal iterative
aspect. Only root CV sequences are reduplicated. The verb 'say' may follow the
Omaha pattern in Kaw -- I'm not sure. If it does, it's for the same reason as
in Omaha, namely that the inflected forms have become opaque and second person
/$-/ is mistaken for part of the root.
(The re-analyzed and reduplicated 'say' forms are the ones that give those
wonderful examples in Dakota like "Oompapa" /uNphapha/ which should mean
something like 'I keep telling the two of us'. Here, 1st person /p-ha/ is from
underlying *w-ha 'I-say'.)
I can try to find some examples if you like.
Bob
************************
> I have little or no information on Dhegiha, Winnebago and Chiwere.
> How does reduplication work in these languages?
> Randy
More information about the Siouan
mailing list