Čalbmi čalmmis ja suoldnečalmmit suoidnečalmmis:sámegielaid singulatiivvat

Abstract North Saami čalbmi ‘eye’ (< Proto-Uralic *ćilmä) has cognates in all Uralic languages, and everywhere they refer to the visual organs of humans and animals. However, scholars have barely paid attention to the grammatical functions of čalbmi in compound-like formations such as suoldnečalb...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ylikoski, J. (Jussi)
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:Northern Sami
Published: University of Tromsø 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:http://urn.fi/urn:nbn:fi-fe20231018140538
id ftunivoulu:oai:oulu.fi:nbnfi-fe20231018140538
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivoulu:oai:oulu.fi:nbnfi-fe20231018140538 2023-11-12T04:20:12+01:00 Čalbmi čalmmis ja suoldnečalmmit suoidnečalmmis:sámegielaid singulatiivvat Ylikoski, J. (Jussi) 2022 application/pdf http://urn.fi/urn:nbn:fi-fe20231018140538 sme sme University of Tromsø info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess © 2022 Jussi Ylikoski. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons “Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International”license. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ Saami languages number singulatives info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion 2022 ftunivoulu 2023-10-18T23:00:14Z Abstract North Saami čalbmi ‘eye’ (< Proto-Uralic *ćilmä) has cognates in all Uralic languages, and everywhere they refer to the visual organs of humans and animals. However, scholars have barely paid attention to the grammatical functions of čalbmi in compound-like formations such as suoldnečalbmi “dew eye”, suoidnečalbmi “grass eye”, varračalbmi “blood eye”, jiekŋačalbmi “ice eye”, vuoktačalbmi “hair eye” and muorječalbmi “berry eye”. This article examines such expressions as so-called singulatives — grammatical means for individuating a single referent from a group or mass (i.e., ‘a single drop of dew’, ‘a single blade of grass’, ‘a single drop of blood’, ‘a single crystal of ice’, ‘a single human hair’ and ‘a single berry’). The article mainly discusses morphological, syntactic and semantic features of singulatives in North Saami and other present-day Saami languages, but comparable singulatives in Khanty, Mansi and Samoyed languages as well as in Hungarian suggest that singulative expressions such as *weri-ćilmä ‘a single drop of blood’, *jäŋi-ćilmä ‘a single crystal of ice; hailstone’ and *me̮rja-ćilmä ‘a single berry’ can, in principle, be reconstructed all the way back to Proto-Uralic. Article in Journal/Newspaper khanty khanty-mansi saami samoyed* Mansi Jultika - University of Oulu repository
institution Open Polar
collection Jultika - University of Oulu repository
op_collection_id ftunivoulu
language Northern Sami
topic Saami languages
number
singulatives
spellingShingle Saami languages
number
singulatives
Ylikoski, J. (Jussi)
Čalbmi čalmmis ja suoldnečalmmit suoidnečalmmis:sámegielaid singulatiivvat
topic_facet Saami languages
number
singulatives
description Abstract North Saami čalbmi ‘eye’ (< Proto-Uralic *ćilmä) has cognates in all Uralic languages, and everywhere they refer to the visual organs of humans and animals. However, scholars have barely paid attention to the grammatical functions of čalbmi in compound-like formations such as suoldnečalbmi “dew eye”, suoidnečalbmi “grass eye”, varračalbmi “blood eye”, jiekŋačalbmi “ice eye”, vuoktačalbmi “hair eye” and muorječalbmi “berry eye”. This article examines such expressions as so-called singulatives — grammatical means for individuating a single referent from a group or mass (i.e., ‘a single drop of dew’, ‘a single blade of grass’, ‘a single drop of blood’, ‘a single crystal of ice’, ‘a single human hair’ and ‘a single berry’). The article mainly discusses morphological, syntactic and semantic features of singulatives in North Saami and other present-day Saami languages, but comparable singulatives in Khanty, Mansi and Samoyed languages as well as in Hungarian suggest that singulative expressions such as *weri-ćilmä ‘a single drop of blood’, *jäŋi-ćilmä ‘a single crystal of ice; hailstone’ and *me̮rja-ćilmä ‘a single berry’ can, in principle, be reconstructed all the way back to Proto-Uralic.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Ylikoski, J. (Jussi)
author_facet Ylikoski, J. (Jussi)
author_sort Ylikoski, J. (Jussi)
title Čalbmi čalmmis ja suoldnečalmmit suoidnečalmmis:sámegielaid singulatiivvat
title_short Čalbmi čalmmis ja suoldnečalmmit suoidnečalmmis:sámegielaid singulatiivvat
title_full Čalbmi čalmmis ja suoldnečalmmit suoidnečalmmis:sámegielaid singulatiivvat
title_fullStr Čalbmi čalmmis ja suoldnečalmmit suoidnečalmmis:sámegielaid singulatiivvat
title_full_unstemmed Čalbmi čalmmis ja suoldnečalmmit suoidnečalmmis:sámegielaid singulatiivvat
title_sort čalbmi čalmmis ja suoldnečalmmit suoidnečalmmis:sámegielaid singulatiivvat
publisher University of Tromsø
publishDate 2022
url http://urn.fi/urn:nbn:fi-fe20231018140538
genre khanty
khanty-mansi
saami
samoyed*
Mansi
genre_facet khanty
khanty-mansi
saami
samoyed*
Mansi
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
© 2022 Jussi Ylikoski. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons “Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International”license.
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
_version_ 1782336283915321344