ssoto
Ye'kwana edit
Alternative forms edit
Etymology edit
From Proto-Cariban *wɨtoto (“person”).
Pronunciation edit
Noun edit
ssoto (possessed ssotoi) (Cunucunuma River dialect)
Numeral edit
ssoto
- (as a component in other numerals) twenty
References edit
- Cáceres, Natalia (2011) “sotto”, in Grammaire Fonctionnelle-Typologique du Ye’kwana[1], Lyon, page 113
- Hall, Katherine Lee (1988) “ssoto”, in The morphosyntax of discourse in De'kwana Carib, volumes I and II, Saint Louis, Missouri: PhD Thesis, Washington University
- Hall, Katherine (2007) “ssoto”, in Mary Ritchie Key & Bernard Comrie, editors, The Intercontinental Dictionary Series[2], Leipzig: Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, published 2021
- de Civrieux, Marc (1980) “so’to”, in David M. Guss, transl., Watunna: An Orinoco Creation Cycle, San Francisco: North Point Press, →ISBN