Biloxi Words and Tutelo-Saponi
Rankin, Robert L.
rankin at KU.EDU
Sun May 13 18:30:11 UTC 2012
There's a proto-Siouan 'cedar' word. I'll get it for you.
"Yellow wood" in the Dhegiha languages is reserved for the wood of the Osage orange. It was also called "the bow wood tree" because of the resilience of the branches. This is why it's called "bois d'arc" in French. Cedar was considered holy among the Siouan tribes of the plains, but I don't know how far back East this goes.
The udi term in Biloxi is from proto-Siouan *hu:de which refers to the base or trunk of any object. It occurs in lots of tree names.
>From the Comparative Siouan Dictionary:
GLOSS[ juniper, red cedar
PSI[ *xąte
MAndan[ óxtąre ~ óxtą ‘cedar’ H-134
MA[ oxtą́ ‘pine tree?’ C
MA[ oxtą́• ‘sage?’ C
PMV[ *xą́te
LAkota[ xąté ‘cedar’ C
DAkota[ †xąté “ḣaŋté” ‘cedar’ R-162a
Omaha-Ponca[ †xąde “áxoⁿdepa” ‘wrist guard’ FLF-225
Kanza[ xą́ǰe ‘cedar’ RR
OSage[ †xą́ce “xoⁿ´dse” ‘red cedar’ LF-219a
QUapaw[ xtté ‘cedar’ RR
QU[ xǫttéhi ‘cedar’ JOD
OTHLGS[ JEK: Iroquoian, Mohawk, Oneida, Onondaga ohnéhtaʔ, Huron “xahⁿdéhtaʔ”,
Wyandot “andeta”, Tuscarora uhtéhneh, Mithun (1984, 270).
COMmentary[ The OP term refers to a packet strapped to the sacred (cedar) pole:
|a-| ‘on, upon’, |xąde| ‘cedar’, |-pa| ‘locative (?)’. (Analysis from JEK).
The BI term for ‘cedar’ is borrowed from Western Muskogean. QU stress has
shifted; it must have been initial earlier in order for the |*t| to geminate.
The MA root appears to exhibit an irregular syncope. Cedar has sacred
properties among all or most of the Siouan-speaking peoples.
Note the look-alikes in Iroquoian languages. Numeroąus tree names are widespread terms.
>From these comparative data I would project the Tutelo word to be very similar, probably something very close to /xąte/ or /xǫte/, where /x/ is a gutteral sound like the "ch" of German Ach! Or Achtung!, words everybody knows from the movies.
The wasti word in Tutelo corresponds to the general Siouan term for 'pine', but could possibly mean 'cedar' also.
Bob
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