Quappa
Rankin, Robert L
rankin at ku.edu
Thu Sep 15 21:24:23 UTC 2005
Sorry, I've been out of town.
The "F" in Quapaw even turns up sporadically in semi-speakers of the '60's and '70's. It's a mishearing of [x] or an inability to replacate it on the part of monolingual Europeans.
Similar change takes place in English, after all, where the /x/ of 'enough, rough, tough', etc. was replaced with [f], often said to be of Northumbrian origin (and, no, it doesn't matter to me where the English sound change really originated).
Bob
________________________________
From: owner-siouan at lists.colorado.edu on behalf of Alan H. Hartley
Sent: Wed 9/14/2005 4:35 PM
To: Siouan
Subject: Quappa
I've been working on the Papers of George Washington and came across in
a letter of 1777 the phrase "three Tribes low down upon the Missisipi
viz. the Ukafpaw Tuckepaws and Oyayachtanu's 2000".
Has anyone seen an -f- in Quappa? I wonder if it's a misreading of -h-.
The editor identifies the Tuckepaws as Atakapas, which seems reasonable.
For the Algonquianists: might Oyayachtanu be a slightly garbled variant
of the full form of Wea?
Thanks,
Alan
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