"bow"
Koontz John E
John.Koontz at colorado.edu
Mon Nov 14 18:41:41 UTC 2005
On Sat, 12 Nov 2005, David Costa wrote:
> The words for 'bow' got dragged into this as well, in that the Shawnee word
> for 'bow' is /hilenahkwi/, which is literally 'ordinary wood'. And of
> course, the Shawnee word for 'gun' is /mtekwa/ (pl. /mtekwaapali/), which
> derives from the old 'bow' word.
Does the plural mtekwaapali involve the *-aapy- final? If so, does the
singular mtekwa not?
Also, in regard to an earlier comment:
> The other main term for the concept can be reconstructed variously as PA
> */a?ca:pyi/ (usually 'bowstring') or */a?ta:pya/ 'bow' (the form found
> in Eastern).
I take it that 'bowstring' is the inanimate gender form of the stem
*a?caapy- while 'bow' is the animate form?
Am I remembering correctly that animate *me?tekw-a is (sometimes?) 'bow',
while inanimate *me?tekw-i is 'stick'?
It is, of course, the me?tekw- stem that I was suggesting might be from a
hypothetical PS *maNaNt(e)=ko 'his bow', thus explaining the
Proto-Mississippi Valley Siouan alternation of forms like *maNaNte and
*maNaNt(-)ku- for 'bow'. Alternatively, perhaps some of the MV Siouan
dialects simply deleted Algonquian -ku on the false assumption that it was
=ko. However, some of the dialects where this happens (Dhegiha) lack
synchronic traces of =ko 'his/hers'. Dakotan does have it.
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