ütö
Ye'kwana
editALIV | ütö |
---|---|
Brazilian standard | ötä |
New Tribes | ötä |
Alternative forms
editEtymology
editFrom Proto-Cariban *tô (“to go”).
Pronunciation
editVerb
editütö
- (intransitive) to go
- 2008, speaker ‘Anl’ from Boca de Piña (CtoWoshi.005), recorded in Cáceres, Natalia (2011), Grammaire Fonctionelle-Typologique du Ye’kwana, page 355:
- ¿Össa küntaakö tüwü?
- Where was he going?
- 2008, speaker ‘Anl’ from Boca de Piña (CtoWoshi.005), recorded in Cáceres, Natalia (2011), Grammaire Fonctionelle-Typologique du Ye’kwana, page 355:
- (intransitive) to walk, stroll
Usage notes
editThis verb takes an irregular suffix -mö in place of the ordinary recent/distant past perfective suffix -i. Similarly, the plural form of the same suffix is -nto rather than -icho.
The imperative form is also irregular: singular öjöne, plural ojonkomo.
Derived terms
editReferences
edit- Cáceres, Natalia (2011) “ütö(mö)”, in Grammaire Fonctionnelle-Typologique du Ye’kwana[1], Lyon, pages 129, 215–216, 230–231
- Hall, Katherine Lee (1988) The morphosyntax of discourse in De'kwana Carib, volumes I and II, Saint Louis, Missouri: PhD Thesis, Washington University, pages 223, 391, 403: “['i:'tšë:dï] ~ [i:'tšë:dï] 'to walk' […] i:'chö:dü - walk, stroll […] wü:tö:nö - to go”
- Hall, Katherine (2007) “wɨʔtə̄-nə”, in Mary Ritchie Key & Bernard Comrie, editors, The Intercontinental Dictionary Series[2], Leipzig: Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, published 2021
- Hall, Katherine (2007) “w-ōhoyma-nə”, in Mary Ritchie Key & Bernard Comrie, editors, The Intercontinental Dictionary Series[3], Leipzig: Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, published 2021