that 1995 handout on Sanganash

Rankin, Robert L. rankin at KU.EDU
Fri Aug 23 20:53:34 UTC 2013


Thanks to Anthony we have basically the last and most authoritative word on Saganash and its cousins in Colonial North America.

Just a quick note on the Osage <me-gra-sha>.  I assume this represents an attempt to render something like mi gráša or mį gráša using English spelling conventions.  Mi, in this instance, appears to be 'one', as in the Kansa (Kaw) personal name Mi-dayinga 'furious one' (referring to a wounded raccoon, i.e., in this case, a member of the raccoon clan).  I'd have expected wį in Osage for 'one', but a mishearing as mi isn't out of the question.  The term could also have been borrowed into Osage from Kaw just to the North.  In any event, the use of 'one' as a head noun in this case follows Dhegiha naming practice, even though it follows the noun when it functions as an indefinite article.  So mį gráša is '(some)one English', whereas gráša-mi would be 'an English something-or-other' or 'English woman'.

Bob

> Here it is!

Anthony
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