-ī̆n-: Difference between revisions

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== Commentary ==
== Commentary ==
PIE adjectival ''n''-suffix from bases ending in -''i''- or -''ī''-. Possible sources include derivation from ''i''-abstracts (→ -''ino''-, e.g. {{bib|Nussbaum 1999}}: 400), possibly from ''i''-stem collectives or feminina (*-''ih₂-no''- > -''īno''-), decasuative derivation from ''i''-locatives (→ -''ino''-), ''i''-stem instrumentals (*-''ih₁-no''- > -''īno''-) and {{m||-ī|ī}}-genitives (*-''iH-no''- > -''īno''-). Since any of these may have produced a recut and secondarily productive suffix in Celtic, the decision concerning the length of the vowel is usually difficult to make. For all (potential) Cisalpine Celtic attestations, /{{p||ī}}/ is more probable; see the word pages for details.
PIE adjectival ''n''-suffix from bases ending in -''i''- or -''ī''-. Possible sources include derivation from ''i''-abstracts (→ -''ino''-, e.g. {{bib|Nussbaum 1999}}: 400), possibly from ''i''-stem collectives or feminina (*-''ih₂-no''- > -''īno''-), decasuative derivation from ''i''-locatives (→ -''ino''-), ''i''-stem instrumentals (*-''ih₁-no''- > -''īno''-) and {{m||-ī|ī}}-genitives (*-''iH-no''- > -''īno''-). Since any of these may have produced a recut and secondarily productive suffix in Celtic, the decision concerning the length of the vowel is usually difficult to make (cf. {{bib|Stüber 2005}}: 72). For all (potential) Cisalpine Celtic attestations, /{{p||ī}}/ is more probable; see the word pages for details.
<p style="text-align:right;>[[User:Corinna Salomon|Corinna Salomon]]</p>
<p style="text-align:right;>[[User:Corinna Salomon|Corinna Salomon]]</p>
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Latest revision as of 17:13, 17 August 2023

Type: derivational
Function: adjectival
Language: Celtic
Phonemic analysis: -/īn/- and/or -/in/-
Attestation: iatuini, penini, poenino, poininos

Commentary

PIE adjectival n-suffix from bases ending in -i- or -ī-. Possible sources include derivation from i-abstracts (→ -ino-, e.g. Nussbaum 1999: 400), possibly from i-stem collectives or feminina (*-ih₂-no- > -īno-), decasuative derivation from i-locatives (→ -ino-), i-stem instrumentals (*-ih₁-no- > -īno-) and ī-genitives (*-iH-no- > -īno-). Since any of these may have produced a recut and secondarily productive suffix in Celtic, the decision concerning the length of the vowel is usually difficult to make (cf. Stüber 2005: 72). For all (potential) Cisalpine Celtic attestations, /ī/ is more probable; see the word pages for details.

Corinna Salomon

Bibliography