y-
English
editAlternative forms
editEtymology
editFrom Middle English y-, from Old English ġe- (perfective and associative prefix); see those entries for more. Cognate with German ge-, Yiddish גע־ (ge-).
Pronunciation
editPrefix
edity-
- (not productive, obsolete) Used with past participle conjugations to form past participles (this prefix does not occur independently and is no longer productive).
Derived terms
editAfar
editPronunciation
editPrefix
edity-
- Used together with the suffix -i to create masculine agent nouns.
References
edit- Mohamed Hassan Kamil (2015) L’afar: description grammaticale d’une langue couchitique (Djibouti, Erythrée et Ethiopie)[1], Paris: Université Sorbonne Paris Cité (doctoral thesis), page 118
Kamba
editAlternative forms
editPrefix
edity-
Middle English
editAlternative forms
editEtymology
editFrom Old English ġe- (perfective and associative prefix), from unstressed Proto-Germanic *ga-, from Proto-Indo-European *ḱóm (“with”). Cognate with Old Frisian e-, Central Franconian je-, Old Saxon gi-, Dutch ge-, Old High German ga- (German ge-), Old Norse g-, Gothic 𐌲𐌰- (ga-). See also ker-.
Pronunciation
editPrefix
edity-
- Added to verbs as a perfective prefix or intensifier.
- Used to form nouns of association similar to English co-.
- Used with past participle conjugations to form past participles.
Usage notes
edit- Not productive in Modern English.
- This prefix represents a common Germanic collective prefix, as well as a perfective prefix which was used to form past participles. Already by the Old English period such participles could be used with or without it, and as it passed into Middle English forms y-, i-, and ȝe-, it became less productive. The prefix was later adopted as a conscious archaism by some writers such as Edmund Spenser, who prepended it to existing past participles.
Derived terms
editDescendants
editSee also
edit- ẏ, Middle English abbreviation for ye
- Middle English, y- (prefix) is often confused with ye (“you”) or with ye, alternative form of þe (“the”) due to typographic variation:
- ȝe- / y- is pronounced /jə/, /i/, consistent with the Old English pronunciation of ge- as /je/; it is usually dropped in Modern English except in archaisms (though note enough)
Navajo
editPrefix
edity-
- a marker for the third person object
Tooro
editPronunciation
editPrefix
edity-
Ye'kwana
editALIV | y- |
---|---|
Brazilian standard | y- |
New Tribes | y- |
Etymology 1
edit
Alternative forms
editPronunciation
editPrefix
edity-
- Marks a noun as having a first-person possessor.
- Marks a postposition as having a first-person object.
- Marks a transitive verb as having a first-person patient/object when the agent/subject is of third person with verb forms that take series I markers.
- Marks a transitive verb as having a first-person patient/object when the agent/subject is unspecified with verb forms that take series II markers.
- Marks an intransitive verb with patient-like argument as having a first-person argument/subject with verb forms that take series I markers (excepting a few verbs that take w-) and on all intransitive verbs with verb forms that take series II markers.
- Marks a verb form derived with n- and -dü or -'jüdü as having a first-person agent/subject.
Usage notes
editThe form taken by this prefix depends on the first syllable of the stem it attaches to:
- y- if the first syllable begins with a vowel.
- ∅- (i.e. the prefix disappears) if the first syllable begins with a consonant.
- ü- if the first syllable begins with two consonants, e.g. as a result of syllable reduction.
- u- if the first syllable begins with two consonants and its vowel is u.
In addition, if the first syllable is an open syllable and not reduced, then its vowel is lengthened, even in the case where the prefix itself disappears.
Inflection
editpronoun | noun possessor/ series II verb argument |
postposition object | series I verb argument | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
transitive patient | intransitive patient-like | intransitive agent-like | transitive agent | |||||||
first person | ewü | y-, ∅-, ü-, u-1 | w-, wi- | |||||||
first person dual inclusive | küwü | k-, kü-, ku-, ki- | k-, kii-, ki-1 | |||||||
second person | amödö | ö-, öy-/ödh-, o-, oy-/odh-, a-, ay-/adh- | m-, mi- | |||||||
first person dual exclusive | nña | y-/dh-, ch-, ∅-, i-1 | chö- | ∅- | n-, ni- | |||||
third person | tüwü | n-, ni- | ||||||||
distant past third person | — | kün-, kun-, kin-, ken-, küm-, kum-, kim-, kini- | ||||||||
coreferential/reflexive | — | t-, tü-, tu-, ti-, te- | — | |||||||
reciprocal | — | — | öö- | |||||||
|
series I verb argument: transitive agent and transitive patient | |
---|---|
first person > second person | mön-, man-, mon-, möm-, möni- |
first person dual exclusive > second person | |
second person > first person | k-, kü-, ku-, ki- |
second person > first person dual exclusive | |
third person > any person X …or… any person X > third person | see person X in the chart above |
Etymology 2
editThe allomorphs ∅- and i- are direct descendants of the original Proto-Cariban *i-, used before consonants. However, Proto-Cariban had ∅- on vowel-initial stems; the Ye'kwana forms y- and ch- are innovations that it shares with certain other Cariban languages. For the former, compare Apalaí, Bakairí, and Chaima y-. The latter, meanwhile, derives from an earlier form *it- also found in several languages of the Venezuelan Cariban branch.
Alternative forms
edit- dh-, d- (Cunucunuma River dialect)
- ch-, ∅-, i- (allomorphs)
- chö- (allomorph with postpositions only)
Pronunciation
editPrefix
edity-
- Marks a noun as having a third-person possessor.
- Marks a postposition as having a third-person object.
- Marks a transitive verb as having a third-person patient/object with verb forms that take series II markers.
- Marks an intransitive verb as having a third-person argument/subject with verb forms that take series II markers.
- Marks a verb as having third-person arguments when marked with the admonitive -'no, prohibitive -i, or uncertain future -tai suffixes.
Usage notes
editThe form taken by this prefix depends on the first syllable of the stem it attaches to:
- y- if the first syllable begins with a vowel other than ö.
- ch- if the first syllable begins with a vowel ö.
- ∅- (i.e. the prefix disappears) if the first syllable begins with a consonant. The initial consonant is also palatalized.
- But, with postpositions only, chö- instead if the first syllable begins with a consonant j, n, w, or y.
- i- if the first syllable begins with two consonants, e.g. as a result of syllable reduction.
In addition, if the first syllable is an open syllable and not reduced, then its vowel is lengthened, even in the case where the prefix itself disappears.
In the Cunucunuma River dialect, the forms taken and their distribution are somewhat different:
- ∅- (i.e. the prefix disappears) if the reference is deictic, referring to a specified object.
- dh- (in free variation with d-) if the first syllable begins with a vowel other than ö.
- ch- if the first syllable begins with a vowel ö.
- i- if the first syllable begins with a consonant. The initial consonant is also palatalized.
- But, with postpositions only, chö- instead if the first syllable begins with a consonant (unclear if limited to j, n, w, and y).
Inflection
editpronoun | noun possessor/ series II verb argument |
postposition object | series I verb argument | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
transitive patient | intransitive patient-like | intransitive agent-like | transitive agent | |||||||
first person | ewü | y-, ∅-, ü-, u-1 | w-, wi- | |||||||
first person dual inclusive | küwü | k-, kü-, ku-, ki- | k-, kii-, ki-1 | |||||||
second person | amödö | ö-, öy-/ödh-, o-, oy-/odh-, a-, ay-/adh- | m-, mi- | |||||||
first person dual exclusive | nña | y-/dh-, ch-, ∅-, i-1 | chö- | ∅- | n-, ni- | |||||
third person | tüwü | n-, ni- | ||||||||
distant past third person | — | kün-, kun-, kin-, ken-, küm-, kum-, kim-, kini- | ||||||||
coreferential/reflexive | — | t-, tü-, tu-, ti-, te- | — | |||||||
reciprocal | — | — | öö- | |||||||
|
series I verb argument: transitive agent and transitive patient | |
---|---|
first person > second person | mön-, man-, mon-, möm-, möni- |
first person dual exclusive > second person | |
second person > first person | k-, kü-, ku-, ki- |
second person > first person dual exclusive | |
third person > any person X …or… any person X > third person | see person X in the chart above |
References
edit- Cáceres, Natalia (2011) Grammaire Fonctionnelle-Typologique du Ye’kwana[2], Lyon, pages 168–169, 172–174, 176–177, 186–188, 190–191, 212
- Hall, Katherine Lee (1988) The morphosyntax of discourse in De'kwana Carib, volumes I and II, Saint Louis, Missouri: PhD Thesis, Washington University, pages 219–220, 284, 293–295, 298–299
- English terms derived from Proto-West Germanic
- English terms inherited from Proto-West Germanic
- English terms derived from Proto-Germanic
- English terms inherited from Proto-Germanic
- English terms derived from Proto-Indo-European
- English terms inherited from Proto-Indo-European
- English terms inherited from Middle English
- English terms derived from Middle English
- English terms inherited from Old English
- English terms derived from Old English
- English 1-syllable words
- English terms with IPA pronunciation
- English lemmas
- English prefixes
- English terms with obsolete senses
- Afar terms with IPA pronunciation
- Afar lemmas
- Afar prefixes
- Kamba lemmas
- Kamba prefixes
- Middle English terms derived from Old English
- Middle English terms derived from Proto-Germanic
- Middle English terms derived from Proto-Indo-European
- Middle English terms with IPA pronunciation
- Middle English lemmas
- Middle English prefixes
- Navajo lemmas
- Navajo prefixes
- Tooro terms with IPA pronunciation
- Tooro lemmas
- Tooro prefixes
- Tooro subject concords
- Ye'kwana terms with IPA pronunciation
- Ye'kwana lemmas
- Ye'kwana prefixes
- Ye'kwana terms inherited from Proto-Cariban
- Ye'kwana terms derived from Proto-Cariban