The stems of verbs like shashkaimu and pakuneimu are shashkai- and pakunei-. They can be found before the endings -mu or -n.
These stem finals consist of a vowel followed by the sound [j]LINGUISTICS : The sounds [j] and [w] are called semi-consonants or semi-vowels because they can act like a vowel or a consonant. In Innu spelling, these sounds are written with the letters i and u, which are also used to write the vowels [i] and [u]. (also called yod) : ai [aj] (as in English pie or sky), or ei [ej] (as in English may, day). TI stems ending in ai or ei usually have as their basic meaningLINGUISTICS : These stem endings are called instrumental endings in Algonquian linguistics. an action that is done with a blow or an object, either a tool or an instrument. Because the stems end in vowels, the thematic TI vowels -a- and -e-are dropped Except in the Pessamit dialect: [nt∫ǝpje:n] I close it., as if replaced by the final stem vowels, as shown in the following examples.
EXAMPLES OF TI VERBS WITH ai or ei STEMS
takaimu
s/he touches it
takaimuat
they touch it
shashkaimu
s/he lights it
shashkai!
light it!
maimu
s/he goes downstream by canoe
tshika main
you go downstream by canoe
utamaimu
s/he hits it
nutamaiti
I hit it
munaimu
s/he digs it up
nimunainan
we dig it up
tshinaimu
s/he sharpens it
tshinaimińua
s/he (obv) sharpens it
tepaimu
s/he meets it by chance
tshitepaiti
you met it by chance
apaimu
s/he takes it apart
apaimuat
they take it apart
peshaimu
s/he paints it
apu peshaik
s/he doesn’t paint it
mishaimu
s/he patches it
nimishain
I patch it
kutaimu
s/he verifies it
apu kutaiman
I don’t verify it
kashkameimu
s/he takes a shortcut by canoe
nikashkamein
I take a shortcut by canoe
pińeimu
s/he frays it
eka pińei!
don’t fray it!
pakuneimu
s/he pierces it
pakuneimupan
s/he pierced it
natumesheimu
s/he goes fishing by boat
natumesheitau!
let’s go fishing by boat!
tapitsheimu
s/he brushes it
apu tapitsheik
s/he doesn’t brush it
atatsheimu
s/he fences it in
apu atatsheimin
you don’t fence it in
amisseimu
s/he mixes it
amissei!
mix it!
NOTES ON PRONUNCIATION AND SPELLING
In the eastern dialects, vowels followed by [j] are pronounced, while in the western dialects, ai is pronounced more as though there were only one vowel: [i:]. Western speakers should therefore be aware that, in writing, there is no TI ending in i [imu]; they are always spelled: -aimu, -eimu, -ain, -ein, etc. On the other hand, ei stems are always pronounced [ej]. So the difficulty is in knowing which vowel, a or e, precedes the i.
In eastern dialects, the distinction between -ai and -ei has a tendency to be neutralized, i.e. the two pronunciations are the same, and closer to [ej] than [aj]. It is therefore necessary to learn how to distinguish these endings. The dictionary is a useful tool for knowing the correct spelling of these TI verbs.
APA:
Baraby, A.-M. & Junker, M.-O. (2014). Les radicaux de verbes. Dans Grammaire innue / Innu Grammar / Aimun-Mashinaikan. Repéré à [URL]
MLA:
Anne-Marie Baraby et Marie-Odile Junker. Les radicaux de verbes. Dans Grammaire innue / Innu Grammar / Aimun-Mashinaikan. 2014. Web. [date]
[URL] = l’addresse du site web, débutant avec le “http://” [Date] = la date à laquelle la page a été consultée, écrit comme suit: 10 déc. 2013
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