Reconstruction:Proto-Algonquian/-hpani

This Proto-Algonquian entry contains reconstructed terms and roots. As such, the term(s) in this entry are not directly attested, but are hypothesized to have existed based on comparative evidence.

Proto-Algonquian edit

Alternative forms edit

  • *-ʔpani
  • *-spani
  • (with the uncertain-identity placeholder symbol 'ç':) *-çpani

Noun edit

*-hpani (plural *-hpanari)

  1. lung
    *nehpani (my lung)
    *wehpani (her or his lung)

Descendants edit

  • Plains Algonquian:
    • Blackfoot: -xpin
    • Arapaho: hiikón (lung)
    • Cheyenne: he'po (lung)
  • Central Algonquian:
    • Cree: -(h)pan/-(ᐦ)ᐸᐣ (-(h)pan, lung), as in ohpan/ᐅᐦᐸᐣ (ohpan, her or his lung), mihpan/ᒥᐦᐸᐣ (mihpan, someone's lung)
    • Ojibwe: -pan (lung), as in opan (her or his lung)
    • Shawnee: hohpani (his lung)
    • Miami: nihpana (my lungs)
  • Eastern Algonquian:
    • Mi'kmaq: -p'n (lung)
    • Malecite-Passamaquoddy: -pon(-) (lung), as in (wo)pon(ol) ((her or his) lung(s))
    • Unami: hopàn (lung)
    • Munsee: wáhpan (lung)

References edit

  • David Costa, Shawnee Noun Plurals, in Anthropological Linguistics, 43:3 (2001): weçpani "his lung"
  • Costa, David J. (2003) The Miami-Illinois Language (Studies in the Native Languages of the Americas), Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, →ISBN: *ne?pani "my lung"
  • Paul Proulx, Initial change in Blackfoot, in Calgary Papers in Linguistics, 26 (2005): PA *-hpani 'lung'
  • In Honor of Mary Haas: From the Haas Festival Conference →ISBN, 1988):
    Ch[eyenne] he'po 'lung' reflects what is usually reconstructed as PA *wehpani (→ Cree ohpan), but Woods Cree oθpan, ospan 'his lung' (Pentland 1979a:65) and Arapaho hiikon 'lung' cast doubt on the identity of the PA cluster.
  • Christopher Harvey, Sound Change in Old Montagnais (2005):
    Goddard (1994:196 note 14) suggests *wespani (alias weçpani) to explain the variation in Woods Cree and the hp reflex in other Cree-Montagnais dialects.