Siouan-Catawban reduplication - a bunch of questions...
cstelfer at ucalgary.ca
cstelfer at ucalgary.ca
Thu Apr 27 23:01:39 UTC 2006
John Koontz wrote:
>
> I think it would be safe to say that reduplication occurs in all Siouan
> languages (or maybe all languages?), though the form, extent of
> productivity, and function varies.
One language that does not seem to have any type of reduplication is
Blackfoot. This is probably due to the fact that Blackfoot has a small
phoneme inventory and fairly long morphemes. Reduplication would just
create confusion.
This subject does have a small connection to Siouan reduplication. Shaw
(1980) includes the word siksika 'the Blackfoot people' in her section on
Dakota reduplication, but she could not find a root word sika. As far as
I can tell, this is because siksika is a borrowed word, and is not a
result of reduplication, even though it looks identical to reduplicated
forms. Siksika is the term that the Blackfoot people use to refer to
themselves. Here is a gloss of this word in Blackfoot (as I recall it):
siksi + ka
'black' + 'foot'
Just some thoughts,
Corey.
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