-aa
See also: Appendix:Variations of "aa"
Fula
editSuffix
edit-aa
Usage notes
edit- Placed after a verb root to indicate the middle voice
Greenlandic
editEnclitic
edit-aa
Usage notes
editCauses nasalization of a preceding stop consonant by
- -k > -n(g)-
- -t > -n-
- -q > -rng-
May freely be connected by hyphenation instead of assimilation, in which case the word to which the enclitic appends is unchanged; this difference is purely orthographic, and stops are still nasalized.
Further reading
edit- DAKA
- Vestgrønlands Grammatik, p. 29, F.A.J. Nielsen, 2014
- Fortescue, M.: "Basic Structures and Processes in West Greenlandic" in ARCTIC LANGUAGES: An Awakening, p. 323. UNESCO 1990.
Ojibwe
editFinal
edit-aa
- be in a state or condition
Derived terms
editSuffix
edit-aa
- A suffix denoting the first-person singular, second-person singular or indefinite actor, to third-person singular object independent form of a transitive animate verb (vta)
Usage notes
edit-aa acts together with a personal prefix to denote the first or second-person, or in the absence of a prefix to denote an indefinite actor.
Ottawa
editFinal
edit-aa (inanimate intransitive)
- to be...
References
editJerry Randolph Valentine (2001) Nishnaabemwin Reference Grammar, University of Toronto, page 385
Tlingit
editUsage notes
edit- The preceding syllable will generally have a high tone after affixing.
Suffix
edit-aa
- Used at the end of verbs to form an agent noun, effectively meaning "the one that does (verb)".