Papers of the ... Algonquian Conference, Volume 23Carleton University, 1992 - Algonquian Indians |
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Page 122
... suffix -aps as a sequence of two suffixes , -ap , which he refers to as " the higher ranking object suffix " , essentially equivalent to an inverse marker , followed by Es , the obviative subject marker . The question of the correct ...
... suffix -aps as a sequence of two suffixes , -ap , which he refers to as " the higher ranking object suffix " , essentially equivalent to an inverse marker , followed by Es , the obviative subject marker . The question of the correct ...
Page 135
... suffixes and a separate set of first and second person object suffixes , rather than a system with direct and inverse . Examples ( 39 ) and ( 40 ) illustrate the first and second person subject proclitics , while ( 41 ) illustrates the ...
... suffixes and a separate set of first and second person object suffixes , rather than a system with direct and inverse . Examples ( 39 ) and ( 40 ) illustrate the first and second person subject proclitics , while ( 41 ) illustrates the ...
Page 147
... suffix -iL , and Reichard characterizes the morphological difference between the two verb forms as a difference between two different object suffixes , the usual suffix being -am ( or -aw ) , as in ( 59 ) , the less common suffix ...
... suffix -iL , and Reichard characterizes the morphological difference between the two verb forms as a difference between two different object suffixes , the usual suffix being -am ( or -aw ) , as in ( 59 ) , the less common suffix ...
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Common terms and phrases
Abenaki Algonquian languages American animacy animals Anne's band Baraga Canada Canadian Carleton University Chart Cherokee chief clan Court culture Curwood Delaware dialects discourse elders evidence example fortis consonants fur trade Hudson's Bay Company hunting inanimate Indian Land indicates inflectional inverse involved Kansas Kutenai and Algonquian Land Claims leg hold traps Linguistics merchandise Micmac Montagnais Moose Moose Factory morphemes morphological Munsee Nation Native students Nichols non-Native notional subject obviation system obviative obviative subject occur Ojibwa Ontario oral paper participant pictographic Plains Cree possessed noun previous proximate prosodic prox proximate shift records reduplication reference River Roy's account book s/he Shingwokaunce similar social society stem Stockbridge-Munsee story suffix suggests syllable Teme-augama template third person Toronto trading captains trading posts traditional transitivized trappers treaty tribe University verb forms Vermillion Lake Vincent Roy vowel Waller Wallis Weenusk White Winisk Wolf word