Details
General
| Morphemic form: | {tunnəjut(ə)}V |
| New orthography: | tunniuppaa, tunniussivoq |
| Old orthography: | túniúpâ, túniússivoĸ |
| Sources: | [14] |
| Combinations: | Click here |
| Constituents: | {tunə}V, V{-(cc)ut(ə)}V, |
| Right sandhi: | t(ə) sandhi,
|
| Inflection sandhi: | Default/none,
|
| Stem type: | t(ə)-stem |
| Diathesis: | Reflexive (BP) |
| Valency: |
Increasing,
Trivalent,
|
| HTR-morphemes: | V{ði}V |
Description and behaviour
Form and usage:
This is a non-standard combination of {tunə}V and V{-(cc)ut(ə)}V, where the latter has caused gemination of /n/ in the stem.
Note the extra /j/ added after the /ə/ in {tunə}V, because this /ə/ will not change to [a] even though it is followed by /u/ in the construction. Thus, this /j/ is just an artefact of the notation; it will never be written.
The meaning of this stem is 'Agent gives Patient (to someone)'.
Thus, the stem is trivalent, like {tunə}V, and with a similar meaning.
However, the effect of adding V{-(cc)ut(ə)}V is to switch the focus of the Patient and secondary Object.
Agent and Patient are marked in the ending as usual, whereas Object is optional and is indicated in the allative case (-mut, -nut).
Hence, in this construction, focus is on the giver and the given thing, thereby giving them a definite meaning, whereas the recipient is defocused, thus giving it an indefinite meaning (an Object).
See also {tunə}V for a construction with the opposite focus.
Right sandhi:
Right sandhi is inherited from the right-most component, V{-(cc)ut(ə)}V. See this for details.
Inflection sandhi:
Inflection sandhi is inherited from the right-most component, V{-(cc)ut(ə)}V. See this for details.
Notable forms:
-
HTR-form:
{tunnəjut(ə)}V + V{ði}V ⇒ /tunnəjucci/
-
Passive participle:
{tunnəjut(ə)}V + V{-ðaq}N ⇒ /tunnəjuccaq/
Meanings and examples
Agent and Patient are marked in the ending.
The recipient is optional and is indicated in the allative case.
According to Kleinschmidt [9], if the stem is used intransitively without a HTR-morpheme, the meaning becomes reflexive: 'Agent gives himself (to something)'.
- Piitamut tunniuppaa, he gives it to Peter
Here Peter is the optional recipient, indicated in the allative case.
- atuagaq Piitamut tunniuppara, I gave the book to Peter