Yuecetu - Re: A great Polymath
Clive Bloomfield
cbloom at ozemail.com.au
Tue Jun 27 11:14:18 UTC 2006
Hello again, Dave, Thanks for that cordial greeting in Romanian &
English! Your command of Româneşte looks pretty comprehensive to
me :)! In answer to your query, I guess my fascination for
Lakhotaiyapi all began,(probably) when, as an avid juvenile TV-viewer
of the "Mickey Mouse Club", way back in the mid to late 1950's, on a
Wednesday ("Anything Can Happen Day"), they had a Lakota kid, (prob.
about 9 or 10 years of age,), all bedecked in traditional garb -
buckskins, hairpipe breastplate, and impressive feathered war-bonnet
(the lot!) ,saying some words in Lakota for us, and telling us about
the Oyate's way of life. I can still see his face, & hear him
saying : "Lakhota", "washte"; and of course, "thathanka"! :D (I
wonder who he was, & what ever became of him? : but perhaps it is
better not to know, eh?) My next contact after that, (apart from the
usual Hollywood Western-derived "noble/devilish Sioux" stereotypes),
would have been at Sydney University's Fisher Library stack, decades
later, when one day I unearthed an long-neglected, yellowing original
1939 edition of Father Buechel's Grammar of Lakota. At the time, I
was supposed to be studying Ancient Greek & Latin, so I took it back
in, making a mental note of its location. Then about 15 years after
that, I remembered it & acquired it, via interlibrary loan. (By this
time I had transferred to Melbourne, abt. 600 miles south.) Also,
Hollywood had "roped me in" again, with "Dances with Wolves", but
this time I could actually, for the first time ever, hear Lakhota
spoken! I was hooked forever, by the sheer beauty of its sound, and I
decided to knuckle down and make a serious effort to learn it. Then
came the Information
Superhighway...!
So, you're doing research on Biloxi, eh? I must say Dave, that
I find it unutterably melancholy to hear that a language has become
extinct, and that you have nobody to speak it with! In my forebears'
language, Irish Gaelic (an Ghaeilge), we have a wistful proverb that
translates : "Bitter is the bird, which sings for (or 'to') itself
alone." I am interested in all Native American languages, but
particularly in the Siouan, Na-Dene, Algonquian & Muskogean families.
If I had another lifetime,(alas!) I would probably try to learn
something at least about all the Siouan ones! Now regarding Biloxi &
Ofo, I do know where I can get my hands on a copy of J.O. Dorsey & J.
Swanton's dictionary - guess what?: another library stack! :)) I'd
like to learn a little, so then you will have someone to write/speak
to, if you like. Dave, could you kindly tell me what that phrase you
wrote : (Ąkįxtispeye taneksąye ade) means exactly, and if you have
time, how it "deconstructs", grammatically speaking? Would you
recommend Einaudi's Grammar (1976)? Toksa ake,
Clive.
P.S. I must admit, I had never even
heard of Rumsien Ohlone - I've just looked it up in Mithun : I notice
that she lists a "Rumsey" under the Wintuan family, and a "Rumsen
(Runsien)" (Utian-Miwok-Costanoan). Would I be correct it assuming
yours to be the latter? Penutian seems to be such a vast family, does
it not? P.P.S. How do you say "Hello"/"How are you?"/"I'm well"/"See
You" etc. in Biloxi? :)
On 27/06/2006, at 4:31 AM, David Kaufman wrote:
> > Hello to Dave also, Bună dimineața! Ce mai faceți?
> Mă bucur că vă văd : Încîntat să vă cunosc!
> Unde ați învățat romîneşte? Eu am
> învățat cîteva cuvinte şi expresii româneşte.
> Noroc! La revedere! >
>
> G’day Clive! Bine aţi venit la lista! Placere! Am învăţat
> Româneşte de sine. Adeverat, nu putesc vorbi româneşte foarte
> bine. Îmi place limba româna, dar putesc să vorbesc alte limbe
> latine mult mai bine.
>
> I'm impressed with your Lakota ability! How did you get interested
> in Amerindian languages, particularly Siouan? Ąkįxtispeye
> taneksąya ade. That is, I'm working on Biloxi, but the problem is
> there's no one left to speak it with! The other Amerindian
> language I'm currently involved with is Rumsien Ohlone (Penutian),
> also unfortunately extinct, helping to transcribe John P.
> Harrington's voluminous piles of notes on the language.
>
> La revedere!
>
> Dave
>
>
>
> > ________________________________
> >
> > From: owner-siouan at lists.colorado.edu on behalf of David Kaufman
> > Sent: Sun 6/25/2006 1:12 PM
> > To: siouan at lists.colorado.edu
> > Subject: Re: Yuecetu - Re: A great Polymath
> >
> >
> > Vreau sa stiu ce întelesul Lakotei.
> >
> > Approximate translation from Rumanian: What's this say?
> >
> > (I know the first is Lakota and the second Hungarian. Would my
> > Dakota dictionary be of any help here?)
> >
> > Dave
>
> >
> > Do you Yahoo!?
> > Next-gen email? Have it all with the all-new Yahoo! Mail Beta.
> >
> > advision.webevents.yahoo.com/handraisers>
> >
>
>
>
> Sneak preview the all-new Yahoo.com. It's not radically different.
> Just radically better.
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