WHICH IS IT?
Rankin, Robert L
rankin at ku.edu
Thu May 4 18:04:36 UTC 2006
There is no real "TH" sound (as in "thin") actually attested in either Osage or Omaha/Ponca. The people who described this were likely hearing a version of S pronounced with the tip of the tongue against the back of the lower teeth -- in linguistic terms, a dental S. So Mark is right, as was Dorsey. Note that Dorsey's field work was done either earlier than Laflesche's. Since Osage and Omaha had S in Dorsey's time and S after Laflesche's time, it is entirely unlikely that they had TH for a few years in between.
But there is a major problem with the use of c-cedilla. It represents not only S but also Z !! You just have to known which words have S and which have Z. Laflesche wrote si 'foot' and zi 'yellow' alike, but they are. of course, different.
Bob
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From: owner-siouan at lists.colorado.edu on behalf of goodtracks at peoplepc.com
Sent: Thu 5/4/2006 11:15 AM
To: siouan at lists.colorado.ed
Subject: WHICH IS IT?
In LaFleche's Osage Dicionary and Mark S's Omaha Lexicon, both use Dorsey "c" with a cedilla.
LaFleche's phonetic key has reads: "C (+ cedilla) as in thin"
Mark's pronunciation guide has: "C (+ cedilla) sounds like s in the word say."
Which way is it? Are they both correct?
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