Crow Citation Form and MVS Theme Form (Re: "WOUND")
Koontz John E
John.Koontz at colorado.edu
Wed May 17 08:05:46 UTC 2006
On Sat, 13 May 2006 Rgraczyk at aol.com wrote:
> This is interesting. John, what are the Mississippi Valley suffixes that
> behave the same as the Crow suffixes that follow the citation form?
Warning - I now proceed to beat this topic to death!
Comparing Crow Citation Forms with Moribund Mississippi Valley
Theme Formation Morphology; Cognates and Functional Similarities
Between Crow Suffixes Conditioning Citation Forms and MVS Enclitics
Conditioning Thematic Forms
Crow citation form discussion after Graczyk draft grammar, 2.5.12.
All Crow stems end in vowels. There are no nasal vowels at present, and
all possible short and long oral vowels occur as stem finals, as well as
the two diphthongs ia and ua.
The relation of stem form to citation form, Table 6:
Stem Ending : Citation Form Ending : Formation of Citation Form
i : e (= ee) : lowering
ii : iia : schwa off-glide
u : o (= oo) : lowering
uu : uua : schwa off-glide
e (= ee) : e ( = ee) : invariant short (mid)
ee : ee : invariant long (mid)
o (= oo) : o (= oo) : invariant short (mid)
oo : oo : invariant long (mid)
a : e ( = ee) : short ablauting
aa : ee : long ablauting
ia : ia : invariant diphthong
ua : ua : invariant diphthong
The annotation V (= VV) for o and e refers to RG's comment that all mid
vowels are essentially long, though the popular orthography writes some
as short. Notice that "short e" and "short o" alternate with themselves
(invariant short mid pattern), with short a (short ablauting pattern),
and with short i or u (lowering pattern).
Final e and o utterance-final or in isolation are pronounced [<aesc>]
and [<open o>]. Except for ablauting stems then, one might say that
final i and u lowered to e and o, similarly, in citation forms.
Lowering
e => <ae>
o => <open o>
i => e
u => o
a not lowered, but ablauted
Perhaps short e and o are sometimes just contextual variants of short i
and u, and so truely are short? Not exactly a pure phonemic analysis,
but students of vowel harmony and Eskimo schwa have often found
similarly awkward neutralizations. (JEK, not RG, waxing heretical.)
The stem is the base for addition of most suffixes. The citation form
is the un-suffixed form, and the base for a few suffixes. The citation
form is also the form used to answer "What's the word for ...?" The
citation form of nouns is common, but verbs tend to occur with post
stem suffixes.
Suffixes that attach to the citation form are:
-sh definite article (also with names? JEK) e.g. 'the man'
-m indefinite, non-specific article e.g. 'a horse'
-n locative e.g. 'in, on'
-taa path e.g. 'along'
-ta 'seem, resemble'
Ignoring the invariant cases, it appears that the behaviors associated
with citation forms are lowering of high short vowels, schwa off-glides
of long high vowels, and ablauting of a and aa to e and ee,
respectively.
Nothing so far said addresses the question of accentual shifts in
connection with citation form or adding of these suffixes. Randy has
discussed some of this with Bob on the list recently. So, note
Stem : Citation Form : Suffixed Citation Form
bili' 'water' : (bilee' ?) : bile'esh 'the water'
bi'tchii 'knife' : bi'tchiia
short u?
awuu' 'inside': awuua' : awu'uan 'inside'
e'hche 'know' : e'hche
bachee' 'man' : bachee' : bache'esh 'the man'
awa' 'earth' : (awe' ?) : awe'en 'on the ground'
long a?
bi'a 'woman' : bi'a : (bi'ash 'the woman' ?)
bua' 'fish' : bua' : (bu'ash 'the fish' ?)
I am not sure the forms listed exhaust the accentual patterns, but it
looks a bit as though the citation forms here were exhibiting V1(V1)' +
V2 + suffix, where the deleted vowel V2 merges with V1(V1)' as low mora
of a simplified V1'V1. (This is more or less [=la] what Randy and Bob
were discussing.) So perhaps stems besides the long high final vowel
stems add schwa in their citation forms, but it is absorbed phonetically
by the preceding vowel under some conditions.
Mississippi Valley Cognates of Suffixes to Citation Forms
-sh def art < *=s^ (cf. Mandan =s)
Maybe an irregular reduction of *=ki via *=k<raised y>?
OP animate proximate articles are
=akha +/- singular and
=ama ~/- plural.
The OP obviative proximate article
=ma collective
shows that a- is added in =ama.
Proto-Dhegiha forms would be
*=a-kha
*=a-Wa
*=Wa
Here we see noun + a + article, but -a- is
reanalyzed as part of the article.
Note also the Winnebago article
=ra ?< *=ya, comparable to the Dakotan postvocalic
-ya variant of the -a "stem forming" vowel,
as in wiNyaN 'woman' ~ wiN- (combining form)
iNyaN 'stone' ~ iN- (combining form)
heya 'louse' ~ he- (combining form).
Here we see again noun + a forming the definite or
independent form.
Winnebago may generalize *=ya to replace *-a ~ -ya,
and substitute noun + a for noun + a + article.
-m indef art Cognate presumably with *wiN-a-, *waN 'a, one'.
No evidence on thematic form with MVS indefinites.
-n locative < *-r.
May be an irregular reduction of PS *=tu, cf., Dakotan
pattern for *tu.
For *=tu consider:
OP =di locative: 'in, at' ('to' with motion verbs)
Os =ci
Ks =j^i
On the whole these suggest
PDh *=ti (?),
but I think that
PDh *=tu is correct, taking Dakotan into account.
The Os and Ks forms may simply unround in final
unstressed position?
Te =tu ~ =l
Sa =tu ~ =d
etc.
suggest
PDa *=tu ~ *=R, where *R is regular from *t in final
position.
-taa path < *taa
Seems a good match for MVS *=(k)-ta 'to(ward)',
though it might be *thaN 'from', too!
OP =tta 'to' ('toward' with motion verbs)
Os =tta
Ks =tta
PDh *=tta < *=hta
Te =ta, but =k-ta after e 'the aforesaid'
he 'that'
The extra -k- with demonstratives explains the
*=hta form in Dhegiha. The source of this *-k-
is not clear. Perhaps *ki 'the'?
OP =di=thaN 'from' < 'in' + thaN
=tta=thaN 'from' < 'to' + thaN
Te =taNhaN < *=ta=thaN (*th > h in Dakotan)
The interesting thing about the Dh and Da locative
forms is that they condition inserted -a- after
some nouns,
e.g.
OP tti' 'dwelling' + di => tti'a=di
but Te thi'=l
(I don't think we ever find *-ya=l or *-ya=tu.)
OP tti' 'dwelling' + tta => tti'a=tta
Te thi- + ta => thiya'=ta
Dakotan makes up for lacking -ya- with *tu
by using it with -takiya 'toward' and -taNhaN
'on that side, from'.
Te thi + takiya => thiya'=takiya, etc.
Dakotan =tu conditions the e-grade of ablaut in
nouns.
-ta 'seem, Compare the Dakotan diminutive.
resemble'
Te =laka 'consider as' (dependent verb)
Te =la diminutive
I think the Dakotan diminutive derives from
readings like 'a so-called X', 'a sort of X',
'something that would pass for an X', 'x-like'.
English use of -kin: panikin, manikin,
munchkin, etc., seems similar.
The Dakotan diminutive conditions the e-grade
of ablaut in some nouns including the -ye variant
of the stem forming -e e.g.
s^uNkwiN'ye=la 'mare'
s^ahi'ye=la 'Cheyenne'
So, to summarize:
Crow has -a (including perhaps some covert cases) or a => e ablaut to
mark the citation form, and that is used in "independent" (unsuffixed)
contexts and with certain suffixes in the class of articles,
postpositions, and 'seem, resemble'.
MVS has -a ~ -e to mark what I've been called themes, i.e., nouns in
independent contexts (not compounded). Thematic forms in *-(y)a are
fossilized before certain locatives, and extra a- prefixes some classes
of articles in Dhegiha. The e-ablaut grade occurs in Dakotan before one
locative (=tu) and before the diminutive which seems to have a 'seem,
resemble' origin.
The most likely cognates for the actual conditioning suffixes (Crow) or
enclitics (MVS) are
PS *wiN-a- 'one' : Cr -m indef art : Te waN indef art : OP wiN indef art
PS *=tu : Cr -n : Te =tu ~ =l : OP =di : Os =ci : Ks =j^i loc
PS *=thaN path : Cr -taa path : Te =(taN)haN 'side, from' : OP =thaN
extent, from-compounds
and/or
PS *=k-ta 'to' : Cr -taa : Te =(k)-ta- 'to' : OP =tta 'to'
Less secure is
PS *ki def art : Cr -s^ def art : Te ki(N) def art : OP ...
A certain amount of irregularity is involved in the sound
correspondences, and often patterns are somewhat variable, but I think
the general pattern is clear enough.
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