Details
General
| Morphemic form: | {qulə(k)}N |
| New orthography: | qulit, qulingat, qulaa, qummut |
| Old orthography: | ĸulit, ĸulingat, ĸulâ, ĸúmut |
| Sources: | [MFSJLK10], [SK71], [JP67], [CWSL58], [CBBJRPIKJR97] |
| Combinations: | View list |
| Right sandhi: | Irregular |
| Inflection sandhi: | Weakening, Irregular, Default/none |
| Stem type(s): | Weak k-stem, ə-stem |
Description and behaviour
Form and usage:
This stem has three different meanings:
- As a spatial noun, it denotes either 'the upper part of
Possessor' or 'the area abovePossessor'. When used in this sense, it is always used with possessive endings, or with the unmarked allative singular ending N{mut}, denoting 'upwards'. - When used with plural endings, it denotes the numeral 10. The logic behind this is that 10 is the highest of the 'upper' numbers, i.e. all the numbers counted on the fingers (since counting on numbers higher than 10 continues on the feet, and these are instead derived from {atə}N, 'area below').
According to the Comparative Eskimo Dictionary [MFSJLK10], the historical form of this stem is {qulə-}, i.e. it is a ə-stem. However, when used as a numeral with vowel-initial endings, i.e. some of the possessive endings, which are used to express the ordinal numbers, it behaves as a k-stem, /qulək/, which declines with weakening of this final /k/. On the other hand, with the ordinary plural endings, and in all cases when used as a spatial noun, this /k/ is not present. To account for this behaviour, we record this /k/ as a parenthetical segment.
Right sandhi:
The parenthetical segment (k) is not normally present, when an affix is added. However, in those cases, the stem-final /ə/ usually does not alternate with [a]. For example,
This is likely because the stem is perceived as qulit, with a 'frozen' /ə/ in this usage, since the meaning is that of a numeral.
Conversely, when the meaning of the stem is perceived as a spatial noun, it is generally not used with affixes. However, in some historical combinations such as qulangerpaa, 'occupies the space above him', with N{-iq}V, this 'ng' may either reflect this parenthetical (k), or an historical, initial /ŋ/ of the affix.
Inflection
Declension pattern:
| Stem type: | Weak k-stem |
| Declension type: | p-declined |
| Declension sandhi: | Weakening, Irregular |
| Stem before consonant | Stem before vowel | Notable forms | |
|---|---|---|---|
| New orthography | quli | quling | , , qulit, qulingat |
| Old orthography | ĸuli | ĸuling | , , ĸulit, ĸulingat |
| Phonemic orthography | qulə | quləŋ | , , qulit, quliŋat |
Notes on declension:
When used as a numeral, the stem is inherently plural, and it is therefore only used with unmarked plural endings or possessive endings.
- With unmarked plural endings, the stem behaves like a vowel stem, so the parenthetical segment (k) is not present. The plural form is qulit, and likewise with unmarked prepositional case endings, we have qulinut, qulinik etc.
- With vowel-initial, possessive endings, the ending attaches to the parenthetical stem-final (k), which is nasalised to /ŋ/. The absolutive 3pl/sg form is thus qulingat, etc.
Thus, when used as a numeral, this stem actually should be regarded as a weak k-stem, but with nasalation: i.e. /k/ is dropped before consonant-initial endings, but retained (and nasalised) before vowel-initial endings.
Declension pattern:
| Stem type: | ə-stem |
| Declension type: | p-declined |
| Declension sandhi: | Default/none |
| Stem before consonant | Stem before vowel | Notable forms | |
|---|---|---|---|
| New orthography | quli | qula | , , , qulaa, qummut |
| Old orthography | ĸuli | ĸula | , , , ĸulâ, ĸúmut |
| Phonemic orthography | qulə | qulə | , , , quləa, qulmut |
Notes on declension:
When used as a spatial noun, the parenthetical (k) segment is never present, so the stem behaves like an ordinary ə-stem. It is almost exclusively used with possessive endings, which will cause the /ə/ to alternate between [i] and [a] in the regular way according to the ə-rule. The only exception is, that it is also used with the allative singular ending N{mut} to express 'upwards', and this ending will elide the /ə/.
Meanings and examples
In this sense, the stem is used without the final /k/, and /ə/ takes the sound [a] when followed by a vowel as usual. Without possessive endings, it is only used with the allative singular ending, N{mut}, which will elide the /ə/ and attach directly to /l/.
- umiap qulaa, the upper part of the boat; the space above the boat
[SK71]
- matup qulaa, the upper part of the door; the area above the door
[SK71]
- qaqqap qulaa, the space/air above the mountain
[SK71]
- qulerput, that which is above us; the mountain by the foot of which we live
[SK71]
Here, 'mountain' is implied, since that is usually the only thing that can be above houses.
- qulaaniippoq, it is (in the space) above him
[SK71]
Verbalisation of the 3sg/sg possessive locative.
- qulaanut, (moving) up over it
[SK71]
Literally: 'to the space above it'.
- qulitsigut, (going) above us
[SK71]
Literally: 'through/via the space above us'.
- qummut, upwards
[SK71]
With the unmarked allative singular ending.
- qummut inorpara, I cannot reach that high
[CWSL58]
Literally: 'I cannot reach it upwards'.
- qummut pitarpaa, he surpasses him in hight
[CWSL58]
Literally: 'he surpasses him upwards'.
When used with plain, plural endings, i.e. qulit, qulinut etc. The ordinals are formed with possessive endings on the k-stem form, which then declines with weakening of /k/ to /ŋ/, i.e. qulingat etc.
- qulinut, at 10 o'clock
With the unmarked allative plural ending. This example illustrates that unmarked prepositional case endings like N{nut} attach directly to the final vowel, as with vowel stems and weak stems.
- qulingat, the tenth
With a possessive, vowel-initial ending, here N{ABS.3pl/sg}. This example illustrates how vowel-initial (possessive) endings are attached to the final /k/, which then is nasalised.
Search the corpus for further examples.
Tags
References
- [MFSJLK10] Michael Fortescue, Steven Jacobson, Lawrence Kaplan (2010): Comparative Eskimo Dictionary (2ED).
- [SK71] Samuel Kleinschmidt (1871): Den grønlandske Ordbog.
- [JP67] Jonathan Petersen (1967): Ordbogêraĸ.
- [CWSL58] C.W. Schultz-Lorentzen (1958): Den Grønlandske Ordbog.
- [CBBJRPIKJR97] Christian Berthelsen, Birgitte Jakobsen, Robert Petersen, Inge Kleivan & Jørgen Rischel (1997): Oqaatsit.