Syntactic Variation in Diminutive Suffixes: Russian, Kolyma Yukaghir, and Itelmen
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Kolyma Yukaghir
1.2. Itelmen
2. Russian Expressive Suffixes
2.1. Semantic Types of Expressive Suffixes in Russian
1. | a. | d’ed | ||
grandfather.masc.sg | ||||
‘grandfather’ | ||||
b. | d’ed-ul’/us’-a | |||
grandfather-expr-masc.sg | ||||
‘grandfather (affect.)’ |
2. | a. | star’-ik | ||
old-nom.masc.sg | ||||
‘old man’ | ||||
b. | star’-ik-an | |||
old-nom-expr.masc.sg | ||||
‘old man (vulg.)’ |
3. | a. | dom | ||
house.masc.sg | ||||
‘house’ | ||||
b. | dom’-ik | |||
house-expr.masc.sg | ||||
‘house (dim.)’ |
4. | a. | volk | ||
wolf.masc.sg | ||||
‘wolf’ | ||||
b. | volč’-išč’-e3 | |||
wolf-expr-masc.sg | ||||
‘wolf (aug.)’ |
2.2. Syntactic Types of Expressive Suffixes in Russian
2.2.1. Manner of Syntactic Attachment: Head vs. Modifier
5. | a. | b. |
6. | adjective → noun (attitude suffix) | |
a. | gr’az-n-yj | |
dirty-adj-masc.sg | ||
‘dirty’ | ||
b. | gr’az-n-ux-a | |
dirty-adj-expr-masc/fem.sg | ||
‘dirty person (vulg.)’ |
7. | *adjective → noun (size suffix) | |||
a. | gr’az-n-yj | |||
dirty-adj-masc.sg | ||||
‘dirty’ | ||||
b. * | *gr’az-n’-íšč’-e/a | |||
dirty-adj-expr-sg | ||||
‘dirty person (aug.)’ |
2.2.2. Place of Syntactic Attachment: To √Roots or to Syntactic Categories
8. | a. | b. |
9. | a. | kras-ot-a |
beauty-nom-fem.sg | ||
‘beauty’ | ||
b. | kras-ul’-a | |
beauty-expr-masc/fem.sg masc.sg | ||
‘beautiful person (affect.)’ | ||
c. | kras-ot-ul’-a | |
beauty-nom-expr-masc/fem.sg | ||
‘beautiful person (affect.)’ |
10. |
11. | a. | kras-ot-ul’-k-a |
beauty-nom-exprattit-exprsize-fem.sg | ||
‘little beautiful person (affect.)’ | ||
b. | kras-ot’-išč’-a | |
beauty-nom-exprsize-fem.sg | ||
‘big beauty’ | ||
c. | *kras’-išč’-a |
12. | Base form–exprattitude–exprsize |
13. | verb →noun | |
a. | vr-at’ | |
lie-inf | ||
‘to lie’ | ||
b. | vr-uš-a | |
lie-exprattit-masc/fem.sg | ||
‘liar (affect.)’ | ||
c. | vr-uš-k-a | |
lie-exprattit–exprsize-masc/fem.sg | ||
‘little liar (affect.)’ | ||
d. |
3. German
3.1. German Size Suffixes -chen and -lein
3.2. Manner of Syntactic Attachment
14. |
15. | masc. → neuter | ||
a. | der/klein-er | Tisch | |
the.masc/little-masc | table | ||
‘the/little table’ | |||
b. | das/klein-es | Tisch-chen/-lein | |
the.neut/little-neut | table-dim/dim | ||
‘the/little table (dim.)’ | |||
c. |
16. | fem. → neuter | ||
a. | die/klein-e | Flasche | |
the.fem/little-fem | bottle | ||
‘the/little bottle’ | |||
b. | das/klein-es | Fläsch-chen/-lein | |
the.neut/little-neut | bottle-dim/dim | ||
‘the/little bottle (dim.)’ | |||
c. |
3.3. Place of Syntactic Attachment
17. |
4. Kolyma Yukaghir
4.1. Kolyma Yukaghir Size Suffix -die
18. | a. | šāl |
tree | ||
‘a tree’ | ||
b. | šā-die | |
tree-dim | ||
‘a little tree, stick’ |
19. | a. | terike |
old.woman | ||
‘an old woman’ | ||
b. | terike-die | |
old.woman-dim | ||
‘a little old woman’ |
20 | a. | Pulut |
old.man | ||
‘an old man’ | ||
b. | pulun-die | |
old.man-dim | ||
‘a little old man’ |
4.2. Manner of Syntactic Attachment
21. |
4.2.1. Diagnostic 1: dim -die Does Not Produce a Grammatical Change
22. | jukō-d’e | qorobo-die-lek | tadī–ŋile |
small-attrib | cow-dim-pred | give-3pl.of | |
‘They gave him a tiny cow.’ |
23. | čūl-e | jukō-d’ōn-ben-die-lek | pan-mele. |
meat-instr | small-subj.nom-result.nom-dim-pred | cook-of.3sg | |
‘She cooked a very small piece of meat.’ |
4.2.2. Diagnostic 2: dim -die Is Not Relevant for Grammatical Agreement
24. | kin-pe-lek | egu-žu-ŋi-l | ||||
who-pl-pred | walk-iterative-3pl-Focus | |||||
‘Who (pl) would walk (here)?’ | ||||||
25. | taŋ | pajpe | uø-die | laŋin | juø-de-če | |
that | woman | child-dim | directional | see-detr-perf.intrans.1sg | ||
‘I looked at the little girl.’ |
26. | a. | touke-p-tie | oj-d’e-p-ki | medi-s’ | |
dog-pl-dim | bark-detr-pl-poss | be.perceivable-perf.intrans.3sg | |||
‘The little dogs started barking.’ | |||||
b. | touke-pul | oj-d’e-p-ki | medi-s’ | ||
dog-pl | bark-detr-pl-poss | be.perceivable-perf.intrans.3sg | |||
‘The dogs started barking.’ |
4.3. Place of Syntactic Attachment
27. |
28. | Nominal paradigm in Kolyma Yukaghir |
Base form-Number-dim-Possessive-Case |
29. | a. | pulut |
old.man | ||
‘an old man’ | ||
b. | pulut-pe | |
old.man-pl | ||
‘old men’ | ||
c. | pulut-pe-die | |
old.man-pl-dim | ||
‘little old men’ [8] (p. 61) | ||
d. |
30. | uø:re-p-tie, | jaq | ukej-delle | qāqā-ŋin | |
child-pl-dim | imperative | go.out-same.subj.perf | grandfather-dat | ||
tit | qorobo | igeje-š-telle | tadī-ŋi-k. | ||
your | cow | rope-proprietive.caus-same.subj.perf | give-pl-imprf.2 | ||
‘Children, go, tie your cow and give it to grandfather.’ |
4.4. Russian Influence
31. | a. | dom |
house.masc.sg | ||
‘house’ | ||
b. | dom’-ik’-i | |
house-dim-pl | ||
‘little houses’ |
32. | a. | d’ed |
grandfather.masc.sg | ||
‘grandfather’ | ||
b. | d’ed-ušk’-i | |
grandfather-dim-pl | ||
‘grandfathers (affect.)’ |
33. | a. | terike |
old.woman | ||
‘an old woman’ | ||
b. | terike-p-tie | |
old.woman-pl-dim | ||
‘old women (affect.)’ |
34. | a. | Russian |
Base-dim-pl | ||
b. | Kolyma Yukaghir | |
Base-pl-dim |
35. | šuke-die | tāt | eskerī-l’-ie-l’el-u-m |
pike-dimpl | connective | attack-0-ingressive-inferential-0-trans.3.sg | |
‘The pike attacked (him).’ [8] (p. 523) |
36. | aduøn | aleksej-die | čuƞe-l. |
this | Aleksej-dim | whistle-Focus | |
‘It is Aleksej who is whistling.’ [8] (p. 453) |
37. | a. | šuke-die |
pike-dim | ||
‘pike (dim.)’ | ||
b. | šuke-pul | |
pike-pl | ||
‘pikes’ | ||
c. | šuke-die-pe | |
pike-dim-pl | ||
‘pikes (dim.)’ | ||
[8] (pp. 105, 316, 523, 564) | ||
d. |
38. | d’e | tāt | tude-gele | gudel’e-š-ie-l’el-ŋā | ani-n |
discourse.part | connect | he-acc | prepare-caus-ingr-ingr-3.pl.tran | fish-attr | |
pulut-pe, | tiŋ | šuke-die-pe | n’atn’ujā-pe | čamani-pe | |
old.man-pl | this | pike-dim-pl | burbot-pl | white.salmon-pl | |
īče-pul | jen-ben-pe. | ||||
sturgeon-pl | other-rel.nom.pl | ||||
‘Well, the fish elders began to prepare him for the trip, the pikes, burbots, white salmon, sturgeons, and others.’ [8] (p. 564) |
4.5. Summary
39. |
5. Itelmen
5.1. Itelmen Size Suffix -čχ (-č in Plural)
40. | Singular | Plural | Sg. Dim. | Pl. Dim. | Gloss | |
a. | ansx | ansx-aṅ | ansx-čaχ | ansx-aṅ-č | ‘morsel’ | |
b. | kist | kist-eṅ | kist-čaχ | kist-eṅ-č | ‘house’ | |
c. | kəłɸ | kəłɸ-eṅ | kəłɸ-čaχ | kəłɸ-aṅ-č | ‘pond’ | |
d. | mem | mem-eṅ | mem-čχ | meme-ṅ-č | ‘hut’ | |
e. | mimsx | mimsx-eṅ | mimsx-čaχ | mimsx-əṅ-č | ‘woman’ | |
f. | lʲaŋe | lʲaŋe-ṅ | lʲaŋe-čχ | lʲaŋe-əṅ-č | ‘girl | |
[11] (p. 317) |
5.2. Manner of Syntactic Attachment
41. |
5.2.1. Diagnostic 1: dim -čχ/-č Does Not Produce a Morphological Change
42. | Kəmma-n | qamyan-čχ | ximļx-enk | lu-s-ç | ˚t’it’im | ||
pp.i.sg-poss | husband-dim | fire-lok | burn-pres-2sg | smoke | |||
x-qre-knen | xanke | isxu-s-ç. | |||||
inf.iii-be.stong-inf.iii | up | rise-pres-2sg | |||||
‘My husband (dim.) burns in fire, the smoke is strong, it rises up.’ [10] (p. 256) | |||||||
5.2.2. Diagnostic 2: dim -čχ/-č Is Not Relevant for Agreement
43. | Qitkine-čχ | k’-ishtte-knen, | ˚plah | massu | k’-le-knen |
brother-dim | inf.iii-grow-inf.iii | big | bear | inf.iii-become-inf.iii | |
‘The brother (dim) grew up and became a big bear.’ [10] (p. 109) |
44. | a. | Kist-eṅ-č | om-lah-aṅ. |
house-pl-dim | warm-adj-pl | ||
‘The small houses are warm.’ | |||
b. | Kist-eṅ | om-lah-aṅ. | |
house-pl | warm-adj-pl | ||
‘The houses are warm.’ |
5.3. Place of Syntactic Attachment
45. |
46. | Nominal paradigm in Itelmen |
Base-pl-dim |
47. | a. | lʲaŋe |
girl | ||
‘girl’ | ||
b. | lʲaŋe-čχ | |
girl-dim | ||
‘little girl’ |
48. | a. | lʲaŋe-ṅ |
girl-pl | ||
‘girls’ | ||
b. | lʲaŋe-əṅ-č | |
girl-pl-dim | ||
‘little girls’ | ||
c. |
5.4. Russian Influence
49. | a. | ekolʲ-uške-ṅ-č |
girl-Russian.dim-pl-Itelmen.dim | ||
‘little girls’ | ||
b. |
5.5. Summary
50. |
6. Conclusions
- (i)
- In Kolyma Yukaghir, the Russian morpheme order (dim-pl) only overrides the Yukaghir morpheme order (pl-dim) for roots of Russian origin.
- (ii)
- In Itelmen, both orders are present within a single word (russ.dim-pl-itelm.dim).
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
- Marantz, A. 1997. No Escape from Syntax: Don’t Try Morphological Analysis in the Privacy of Your own Lexicon. University of Pennsylvania Working Papers in Linguistics: Philadelphia, PA, USA: Penn Graduate Linguistics Society, Volume 4. [Google Scholar]
- Steriopolo, O. 2008. Form and Function of Expressive Morphology: A Case Study of Russian. Ph.D. Thesis, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada. Available online: http://www.steriopolo.com/category/thesis (accessed on 10 June 2008).
- Steriopolo, O. 2009. Form and Function of Expressive Morphology: A Case Study of Russian. Russ. Lang. J. 59: 149–194. [Google Scholar]
- Steriopolo, O. 2013. Diminutive Affixes in the Number Domain: A Syntactic Variation. Quest. Answ. Linguist. 1: 33–56. Available online: http://www.ifa.uni.wroc.pl/linguistics/qal_vol2.html (accessed on 13 February 2013). [CrossRef]
- Steriopolo, O. 2014. The Syntax of Expressive Suffixes in Russian. Wrocław, Poland: Generative Linguistics in Wrocław (GLiW). [Google Scholar]
- Maslova, E. 2003. A Grammar of Kolyma Yukaghir. Berlin, Germany: New York, NY, USA: Mouton de Gruyter. [Google Scholar]
- Lewis, M.P., G.F. Simons, and C.D. Fennig, eds. 2013. Ethnologue: Languages of the World, 17th ed. Dallas, TX, USA: SIL International. [Google Scholar]
- Georg, S., and A. Volodin. 1999. Die Itelmenische Sprache: Grammatik und Texte. Wiesbaden, Germany: Harrassowitz Verlag. [Google Scholar]
- Bobaljik, J. 2005. Itelmen Plural Diminutives: A Belated Reply to Perlmutter 1988. In Yearbook of Morphology 2004. Edited by G. Booij and J. van Marle. Houten, The Netherlands: Springer, pp. 317–319. [Google Scholar]
- Stankiewicz, E. 1968. Declension and Gradation of Russian Substantives. The Hague, The Netherlands: Mouton. [Google Scholar]
- Vajda, E. 1996. Russkie suffiksy s emotsional’noj okraskoj [Russian suffixes with emotive meaning]. In Metodica Prepodavaniia Russkogo Iazyka I Literatury v Amerike [Methods of Teaching Russian Language and Literature in America]. Moscow, Russia: Russky Yazyk Publishing House, pp. 103–111. [Google Scholar]
- Wiltschko, M., and O. Steriopolo. 2007. Parameters of Variation in the Syntax of Diminutives. In Proceedings of the 2007 Annual Conference of the Canadian Linguistic Association. Edited by M. Radišić. Toronto, ON, Canada: Canadian Linguistic Association, Available online: http://homes.chass.utoronto.ca/~cla-acl/actes2007/Wiltschko_Steriopolo.pdf (accessed on 15 December 2007).
- Wiltschko, M. 2006. Why Should Diminutives Count? In Organizing Grammar: Linguistic Studies in Honor of Henk van Riemsdijk. Edited by H. Broekhuis, N. Corver, R. Huijbregts, U. Kleinhenz and J. Koster. Berlin/Heidelberg, Germany: Walter de Gruyter, pp. 669–679. [Google Scholar]
- Steriopolo, O. 2015. Syntactic Variation in Expressive Size Suffixes: A Comparison of Russian, German, and Spanish. SKASE J. Theor. Linguist. 12: 2–21. Available online: http://www.skase.sk/ (accessed on 25 December 2015).
- Scalise, S. 1988. The Notion of ‘Head’ in Morphology. In Yearbook of Morphology 1988. Edited by G. Booij and J. van Marle. Dordrecht, The Netherlands: Foris, pp. 229–246. [Google Scholar]
- Ouhalla, J. 1994. Introducing Transformational Grammar: From Principles and Parameters to Minimalism. London: Arnold. [Google Scholar]
- Radford, A. 2004. English Syntax: An Introduction. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. [Google Scholar]
- Carnie, A. 2013. Syntax. A Generative Introduction, 3rd ed. Oxford, UK: Blackwell. [Google Scholar]
1 | The square root symbol √ denotes a root. |
2 | The dominant language is the language in which a bilingual or multilingual speaker has the greatest proficiency and/or uses more often (see also ‘primary language’). |
3 | There is a k ~ č’ alternation in this word, which is typical in Russian. |
4 | There are also adjectival augmentative suffixes in Russian, such as -uš or -enn, e.g., bol'š-oj ‘big’ > bol'š-uš-ij ‘ginormous’; zdorov-yj ‘good sized’/’healthy’ > zdorov’-enn-yj ‘truly big’/’truly healthy’. These suffixes are attached to an adjective stem and are never form- or class-changing, so they parallel the exclusively nominal diminutive suffixes such as -ik in Table 3, as in dom’-ik ‘little house’. I am grateful to an anonymous reviewer for bringing this to my attention. |
5 | The symbol # denotes the Number category. |
6 | |
7 | Notice that here, a Russian suffix is borrowed into Itelmen, in contrast to the Yukaghir example (37), in which a Russian noun is borrowed into Yukaghir. There may also be cases in which Russian roots are borrowed into Itelmen, as is the case in Yukaghir. Unfortunately, however, the data on which this analysis is based does not include any such examples. |
Diminutive Suffixes | Manner of Attachment: Syntactic Modifiers | Place of Attachment: Attaching below Number |
---|---|---|
Russian -k/-ek/-ok/-ik; -c/-ec/-ic; -išč’ | ✔ | ✔ |
Kolyma Yukaghir -die | ✔ | * |
Itelmen -č | ✔ | * |
Attitude suffixes (exprattitude) | affectionate | -án’, -áš, -ón, -úl’, -ún’, -úr, -ús’, -úš |
vulgar | -ág, -ák, -ál, -án, -ár, -áx, -íl, -in, -ób, -ot, -óx, -úg, -úk, -úx | |
Size suffixes (exprsize) | diminutive | -k (allomorphs: -ok/-ek/-ik) -c (allomorphs: -ec/-ic) |
augmentative | -išč’ |
Merging with √Roots | Merging with Nouns | |
---|---|---|
exprattitude (heads) | -án’, -áš, -ón, -úl’, -ún’, -úr, -ús’, -úš, -ág, -ák, -ál, -án, -ár, -áx, -íl, -in, -ób, -ot, -óx, -úg, -úk, -úx | |
exprsize (modifiers) | -k/-ek/-ok/-ik; -c/-ec/-ic; -išč’4 |
Size Suffixes | Manner of Attachment: Syntactic Modifiers | Place of Attachment: Attaching to n |
---|---|---|
Russian -k/-ek/-ok/-ik; -c/-ec/-ic; -išč’ | ✔ | ✔ |
German -chen; -lein | * | ✔ |
Diagnostics | Syntactic Heads | Syntactic Modifiers |
---|---|---|
Can they change the syntactic category or grammatical features of the base? | ✔ | * |
Are they relevant for grammatical agreement? | ✔ | * |
Size Suffixes | Manner of Attachment: Syntactic Modifiers | Place of Attachment: Attaching below Number |
---|---|---|
Russian -k/-ek/-ok/-ik; -c/-ec/-ic; -išč’ | ✔ | ✔ |
Kolyma Yukaghir -die | ✔ | * |
Size Suffixes | Manner of Attachment: Syntactic Modifiers | Place of Attachment: Attaching below Number |
---|---|---|
Russian -k/-ek/-ok/-ik; -c/-ec/-ic; -išč’ | ✔ | ✔ |
Kolyma Yukaghir -die | ✔ | ✔ |
Size Suffixes | Manner of Attachment: Syntactic Modifiers | Place of Attachment: Attaching below Number |
---|---|---|
Russian -k/-ek/-ok/-ik; -c/-ec/-ic; -išč’ | ✔ | ✔ |
Itelmen -č | ✔ | * |
© 2017 by the author. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Share and Cite
Steriopolo, O. Syntactic Variation in Diminutive Suffixes: Russian, Kolyma Yukaghir, and Itelmen. Languages 2017, 2, 23. https://doi.org/10.3390/languages2040023
Steriopolo O. Syntactic Variation in Diminutive Suffixes: Russian, Kolyma Yukaghir, and Itelmen. Languages. 2017; 2(4):23. https://doi.org/10.3390/languages2040023
Chicago/Turabian StyleSteriopolo, Olga. 2017. "Syntactic Variation in Diminutive Suffixes: Russian, Kolyma Yukaghir, and Itelmen" Languages 2, no. 4: 23. https://doi.org/10.3390/languages2040023
APA StyleSteriopolo, O. (2017). Syntactic Variation in Diminutive Suffixes: Russian, Kolyma Yukaghir, and Itelmen. Languages, 2(4), 23. https://doi.org/10.3390/languages2040023