Reconstruction:Proto-Algonquian/wa·kwehsa

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

Etymology

edit

The term resembles Yurok wɹgɹs (fox), but Goddard rejects the idea that the two terms go back to one Algic root, and describes the Yurok word as a regular derivative of the verb stem wrsry- (be thin)[1] (compare wrsryehl (they (pieces of cloth) are thin).

The term seems to be (*w- + ) *-a·kw- + *-ehsa.

Noun

edit

*wa·kwehsa

  1. fox
edit
  • *a·kw (bushy-tailed animal (fox))

Descendants

edit
  • Plains Algonquian:
  • Central Algonquian:
    • Menominee: wa·koh (fox)
    • Ojibwe: waagosh / ᐙᑯᔥ (fox)
    • Atikamekw: wakoc
    • Algonquin: wonkis (fox)
    • Potawatomi: wekshi (fox)
    • Fox: wâkoshêha (fox)
  • Eastern Algonquian:
    • Mi'kmaq: wokwis (fox)
    • Abenaki: ôkwses, wôkwses (fox)
    • Penobscot: kwɑ'ŋk'ʷsəs (fox)
    • Powhatan: ouxe (fox)
    • probably Malecite-Passamaquoddy: qaqsoss (fox)
    • Massachusett: wonksis, wonkqŭssis (fox)
    • Mohegan-Pequot: wôks (fox)
    • Mahican: waugoosus (fox)
    • Unami: òkwës (fox)

See also

edit

References

edit
  • Contributions to Anthropology: Linguistics (1967)
  • William Cowan, Papers of the sixth Algonquian Conference, 1974, page 134
  1. ^ Ives Goddard, Sapir's Comparative Method, in New Perspectives in Language, Culture, and Personality, page 199