Details
General
| Morphemic form: | V{təq}V |
| New orthography: | +terpoq |
| Old orthography: | -terpâ |
| Sources: | [19, 16] |
| Combinations: | View list |
| Variants: | N{təq}V |
| Left sandhi: | t-truncative |
| Right sandhi: | Default/none |
| Inflection sandhi: | Default/none |
| Stem type: | q-stem |
| Diathesis: | None |
| Valency: | Preserving |
| HTR-morphemes: | V{ði}V |
Description and behaviour
Form and usage:
The meaning of this affix is 'Vb gradually', Or 'step by step', 'one by one' etc. It is a verbal variant of the verbalising affix N{təq}V, 'smear with N'. According to the Comparative Eskimo Dictionary [21], they derive from the same morpheme, although their meanings seem to be only vaguely related: smearing something with N is presumably done gradually/in stages.
Left sandhi:
The affix is normally additive, but it may be truncative on t-stems, similar to V{tət}V. This is in particular seen in the combination with this aforementioned affix, i.e. V{tətəq}V, where the final /t/ indeed was deleted. However, this behaviour is likely not productive nowadays.
Right sandhi:
When this affix is followed by a vowel-initial affix (most notably V{-(cc)utə}N or V{-(cc)ut(ə)}V, it will not be able to delete the final /q/ and expose the /ə/. Thus, this combination will yield
- V{təq}V{-utə}V ⇒ /tərut(ə)/ ⇒ -teruppaa
similar to how a nominal strong q-stem would behave. Likewise, this affix uses the {-i} variant of the HTR-morpheme V{ði}V as usual with a q-stem, but this too will not remove the final /q/, but instead weaken it to /r/, so we obtain the HTR-form /təri/.
Notable forms:
Meanings and examples
Or 'step by step', 'one by one' etc.
- aterterpoq, he descends gradually/step by step
From aterpoq, 'he descends'.
- aserorterpaa, he crushes/grinds it
E.g. coffee beans in a coffee grinder.
- kangujarterpoq, he moves further into the living room
From kangujarpoq, he goes into the living room
- sinerparterpoq, he goes further out towards the sea.
Or 'towards the edge' of something.
- sinerparteruppaa, he brings it down to the edge of the sea
With V{-ut(ə)}V, illustrating that /q/ is not removed but weakened to /r/.