Reconstruction:Proto-Japonic/uma

This Proto-Japonic 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-Japonic

edit

Etymology 1

edit

Possibly derived as a nativized borrowing from Old Chinese (OC *mraːʔ),[1] from Proto-Sino-Tibetan *k-m-raŋ ~ s-raŋ (horse). See the Proto-Sino-Tibetan entry for more details.

The ma sound denoting "horse" is common to a number of languages of central Asia, where horses were first domesticated, which has led some to speculate about a possible cognate root (but no consensus on any kind of relation exists). Compare Manchu ᠮᠣᡵᡳᠨ (morin, horse), Mongolian морь (morʹ, horse), Korean (mal, horse), Mandarin (, horse), Sanskrit मर्य (márya, stallion; young man) and Proto-Indo-European *márkos (horse) and descendants such as Irish marc (horse, archaic) or English mare (female horse). More at *márkos.

Alternative reconstructions

edit

Noun

edit

*uma

 
*uma: a horse.
  1. horse
Descendants
edit
  • Old Japanese: (ma, uma, muma)
  • Peninsular Japonic: *ma
    • Puyǒ:
      • Baekje: (*ma)
      • Goguryeo: *馬 (*ma)
    • Han:
  • Proto-Ryukyuan: *Cma
    • Northern Ryukyuan: 烏馬 (uma) (Liúqiú guăn yìyŭ, 1469-1470)[2]
      • Kikai: (ma, uma)
      • Kunigami: ('mā)
      • Northern Amami-Oshima: ('mā)
      • Okinawan: ('nma, 'nmā)
      • Oki-No-Erabu: ()
      • Southern Amami-Oshima: ('mā)
      • Toku-No-Shima: ()
      • Yoron: (uma)
    • Southern Ryukyuan: *Vma (Bentley, 2008b)
      • Miyako: (mma)
      • Yaeyama: (mma)
      • Yonaguni: (nma)

Etymology 2

edit

Might originally be an interjection; compare English mmm.

Samuel Martin compares *ama (sweet).[3]

Alternative reconstructions

edit

Adjective

edit

*uma

  1. good
    Antonym: *warə (bad)
  2. delicious
Descendants
edit

References

edit
  1. ^ Vovin, Alexander (2014) “Out of Southern China?”, in XXVIIes Journées de Linguistique d'Asie Orientale[1]
  2. ^ Lin (2015)
  3. ^ Samuel E. Martin (1987) The Japanese Language Through Time, New Haven, London: Yale University Press, →ISBN, page 843