Chapter ## FROZEN PLURACTIONALS C hapter ## describes three verbal pluractional formation processes in Bole—one productive process of initial CV- reduplication, available for essentially all verbs, and two active but non-productive processes, viz. infixing -Ki- within a verb root and geminating the second consonant of a root. The latter two active processes apply only to a limited number of CVC- verb roots. Lexical evidence suggests that the latter two processes at one time may have been more productive than they now are and may have applied to a larger range of root types than they now do. This evidence is in the form of “frozen pluractionals”, for which unmodified roots are no longer in use and which do not convey obvious pluractional meaning (see the introductory section of Chapter ## for a description of canonical pluractional meanings). This chapter presents several patterns of frozen pluractionals. The concluding section presents a comparative/historical perspective in which we argue that all Bole geminate and infixed pluractionals have their source in an infixed root consonant. 1. Frozen Pluractionals with a Geminate Consonant 1.1. CVGV verbs (G = geminate consonant). A feature of Bole that strikes anyone first approaching the language is the large number of verbs of the form CVGV. In our currently available list of nearly 700 verbs, 117 are of this type, excluding those that have an active relationship to roots without a geminated C2 and those not found in the Fika dialect. Of the total 117, 107 are in Class A2 (the morphological correspondent to Class A1 non-pluractionals) and 10 are in Class B2 (the morphological correspondent to Class B non-pluractionals). What is particularly striking is the proportion of CVGV verbs in the verbal lexicon. The total number of verbs with two distinct root consonants (C2 = singleton or geminate) is 302. Thus, over one third of all biconsonantal roots have a geminated C2. Additionally, there are 38 verbs of the type CVGV that have a transparent connection to existing CVCV roots. Below are some examples of Bole CVGV roots. Where available, we have included cognates from the Yaya dialect of Ngamo (Ng) and Karekare (Ka) to show that Bole has not inherited geminate consonants in these verbs from an ancestral language.1 The forms are cited in the completive, marked by a suffix that comes from earlier *-kò. In some cases the verbs belong to different classes (A1, A2, B) in the different languages. 1 Cognate items with the same meanings are more readily available between Bole and Ngamo than between Bole and Karekare because Ngamo is linguistically closer to Bole than is Karekare. In the Yaya dialect of Ngamo, Class A2 verbs in the completive end in -ô, sometimes pronounced -o’ò < *-u-kò. Class B verbs end in -â, sometimes pronounced -a’à < *-a-kò. 1 Class A2 verbs boækku-wo¥yi daæppu-wo¥yi fioæppu-wo¥yi goæjju-wo¥yi goællu-woæ kaæppu-wo¥yi kuænnu-wo¥yi mbìttu-wo¥yi noæssu-woæ oæppu-wo¥yi oæssu-wo¥yi poæ&&u-woæ poæyyu-woæ roækku-wo¥yi suærru-wo¥yi tuæbbu-wo¥yi ‘burn, roast’ ‘gather, collect’ ‘follow’ ‘buy’ ‘for dawn to break’ ‘plant, sow’ ‘thank’ ‘extinguish (fire)’ ‘spend time, rest’ ‘dig’ ‘grind’ ‘dry up’ ‘break, shatter’ ‘drive away’ ‘fry’ ‘push” Class B2 verbs baætta\-wo¥yi bìtta\-wo¥yi kaæbba\-woæ maæssa\-woæ sìfifia\-wo¥yi ‘trick, scare’ ‘expand an opening’ ‘swell’ ‘remain, be left’ ‘wipe, wipe off’ Ng baæka] Ng da¥fo] Ng fia¥fo] Ka fia¥fu-kaæu Ng kaæja] Ng gol-kò Ka gàl-kâu ‘spend the day’ Ng kap-kò (Ngamo kuænno] bor. from Bole)2 Ng mbit-kò Ka mbìtu-kàu Ng nas-kò Ng op-kò Ka aæfa\-kaæu Ng es-kò Ka &yaæsu-kaæu Ng ho&i-koæ Ng hoi-kò Ng ràkâ Ka ràku-kàu Ng sur-kò Ka sìr-ka]u Ng tu¥bo] Ng kàbâ (also Bole kaæwa\- ‘be sated’) Ng sa&a-koæ ¶safi-koæ¶ ‘rub’ The distinction between frozen pluractionals and “active” geminate pluractionals is blurry. Among active pluractionals we have included some verbs where there is a clear form and meaning relationship between an underived verb and a verb with geminate C2, but where one or both verbs have shifted in meaning such that the geminated form does not bear a canonical pluractional relationship to the simple form. Consider the following examples. Class A1 verb ga&yu-woæ go∫-wo¥yi moyu-wo¥yi pulu-woæ washu-wo¥yi ‘feel sudden pain’ ‘sip’ ‘observe, look’ ‘boil; be angry’ ‘nip off’ Class A2 verb gaæ&y&yu-wo¥yi goæ∫∫u-wo¥yi moæyyu-wo¥yi puællu-wo¥yi waæccu-wo¥yi 2 ‘chop’ ‘consume liquid with hand’ ‘wait for’ ‘abuse’ ‘trim (e.g. hair)’ Bole has had considerable influence on Ngamo. The fact that Ngamo has few words with geminate consonants and does not form pluractionals with gemination makes it certain that this word is borrowed. Most Yobe State languages have borrowed the Hausa root gode to mean ‘thank’. 2 Class B verb bìfia\-wo¥yi kuæla\-wo¥yi zuæla\-woæ ‘untie’ ‘widen pot mouth’ ‘protrude’ Class B2 verb bìfifia\-wo¥yi kuælla\-wo¥yi zuælla\-wo¥yi ‘untangle’ ‘scrape out’ ‘glare at’ (protrude eyes?) In some of these verb pairs, it is difficult to see what is “pluractional” in meaning about the geminated form. Thus, while the relationship of goæ∫∫u-wo¥yi ‘consume liquid with hands’ to go∫u-wo¥yi ‘sip’ could be understood as “taking repeated sips”, it is not so obvious how puællu-wo¥yi ‘abuse’ could be understood as “repeated boilings” or “repeated angerings” from pulu-wò. As for frozen CVGV pluractionals with no extant CVCV counterpart, most have no obvious element of plural action. Although some verbs like kaæppu-wo¥yi ‘plant’ or oæssu--wo¥yi ‘grind’ involve repetitive action and thus could credibly have their origin in pluractional derived forms, no such natural relationship to plural action holds for fioæppuwo¥yi ‘follow’, suærru-wo¥yi ‘fry’, kaæbba\-woæ ‘swell’, or, in fact, most of the 117 CVGV verbs that we have identified. Bole has numerous morphological environments that create geminate consonants (see for example, ##, ##, ##). It seems that Bole has a Sprachgefühl that welcomes gemination. Once Bole developed gemination as a method of pluractional formation, some of these geminate pluractionals became the primary verbs and the underived bases were lost, obscuring the origin in pluractionality. The door was then opened to geminating C2 of certain verbs just because it “sounded good”, without the requirement that plural action be a necessary semantic corollary.3 1.2. CVGVCV verbs (G = geminate consonant). In modern Bole, the only active geminate pluractionals are based on class!A1 and class!B verbs, i.e. verbs with root structure CV¨C-. Likewise, most underived verbs that have the same form as geminate pluractionals (CVGV) have just two root consonants. There are, however, a few verbs with three root consonants where C2 is geminate. Since both comparative Chadic and internal Bole evidence point away from inheritance of underived geminate consonants, these CVGVCV roots suggest that geminate pluractional formation may have at one time applied to a larger set of verbs than just those of classes A1 and B. The list below is exhaustive for currently available materials. bìccìru-wo¥yi fiuækkuæru-wo¥yi gìccìyu-woæ koællìmi (noun) kuæsshìmu-wo¥yi ‘expand s.th. circular, e.g. fan’ ‘knead, form into balls’ ‘be crooked, be tilted’ ‘drumming’ ‘wad up’ 3 = fiuækku-wo¥yi cf. kòlmò ‘praise singing’ A few Bole CVGV verbs may come from *C1VC2C3V, with assimilation of C2 to C3, e.g. Bole shàttu- ‘uproot’—cf. Ngamo shapto ‘extract, pull out’. However, nearly all Bole CVGV verbs with identified cognates in other languages correpond to CVC- roots in those languages. Moreover, the most common way for Bole to resolve undesirable consonant sequences is epenthesis, e.g. Bole yaæ∫ìru- ‘scatter’, Ngamo ya∫ro. 3 laækkìleæ (noun) lìkkìtu-woæ loækkìfiu-woæ muækkuæfiu-wo¥yi muæmmusu-wo¥yi taækkìlu-woæ toæggìfiu-wo¥yi yaækkìnu-wo¥yi zuæ&y&yìru-wo¥yi “jacks” (a game involving flipping and catching a stone) ‘descend en masse, e.g. flock of birds’ ‘become entangled’ = loækku-wo¥yi ‘stuff the mouth with food’ ‘rub back and forth between palms’ = muærmuæsu-wo¥yi ‘become flustered’ ‘stitch’ ‘recognize’ ‘purse the lips (to show disdain)’ Most of these verbs involve inherent plural action of some sort—repetitive action and/or action by several individuals—reinforcing the notion that they are frozen pluractionals. A couple have the form of verbal nouns but the source verb, if there ever was one, is no longer in use. Two of the verbs (‘knead’ and ‘become entangled’) are related to verbs of the CVGV type. Bole, like other West Chadic languages, has a number of “remnant verbal affixes” (##)—non-productive suffixes of uncertain function. For the two verbs in question, it is hard to say whether the affixes -r- and -fi- have been attached to a CVGV stem or the medial consonant of the affixed verb was geminated. Another verb pair not included in the table is goæjju-wo¥yi ‘buy’ vs. goæjjìtu-wo¥yi ‘sell’. In this case, we know that a semiproductive causativizing affix -t- (##) has been added to a CVGV stem. In the case of the verb meaning ‘rub back and forth between palms’ it is hard to be sure whether this is a CVGVCV verb or a verb with an infixed copy of the initial CV, described in §3. 2. Frozen Pluractionals with an Infix -KiChapter ##, §2.1 describes pluractional verb formation by infixation of a syllable -gi- in the Fika dialect, e.g. &yoærangoæ ‘they stopped’, pluractional &yoægìrangoæ ‘they stopped one by one’. That section also mentions that the Gadaka dialect productively forms pluractionals of Class A1 and B verbs by infixing -ki-/-ku-/-k- (quality of vowel or absence of vowel determined by context). Bole has numerous verbs with an internal syllable -Ki- (K!= a velar stop, “i”!= [i], [u], or in a few cases, Ø) which formally resemble infixed pluractionals and many of which, like the geminated verbs described in §1.2, involve inherent plural action. The lists below are exhaustive for currently available materials, omitting pronunciation variants. Those on the left are formally identical to active infixed pluractionals, i.e. the -Ki- syllable is sandwiched in a frame CV__CV. Those on the right have an additional consonant abutting the -Ki- syllable. We have grouped the latter verbs according to the consonant that precedes the -Ki- syllable. CVKiCV baægìdu-wo¥yi buækuælu-wo¥yi joægìlu-wo¥yi CVCKiCV baængìlu-woæ deæænkìfiu-wo¥yi dìnkìfiu-woæ ‘pound grain 2nd time’ ‘roll along’ ‘stir a thin substance’ 4 ‘become confused’ ‘stuff into’ ‘be crowded’ juæguælu-wo¥yi leækìtu-wo¥yi moækìtu-wo¥yi njeækì∫u-woæ pìktun-go 4 ruæguæzu-wo¥yi sìkìtu-wo¥yi taækuæmnu-wo¥yi5 toækìlu-wo¥yi yaækìlu-wo¥yi zoægìnu-wo¥yi zuækuælu-wo¥yi ‘churn milk’ ‘disperse; spread (news, etc.)’ ‘get wet; moisten’ ‘become sloppy’ ‘come to (after fainting)’ ‘raze, destroy’ ‘reduce in amount’ ‘chew’ ‘stir with small motions’ ‘lack’ ‘toss, flip’ ‘stir thin subtance’ za¥gìru-woæ ‘shout’ fiaængìlu-wo¥yi fiaængìlu-woæ fiìngìmu-woæ laænkìnu-wo¥yi rìnkì∫u-woæ shaænkìlu-wo¥yi suænkuænu-wo¥yi zuænkuænu-wo¥yi baærgìlu-woæ bìrkìtu-wo¥yi buærgìlu-wo¥yi ∫oærkìtu-wo¥yi maærkìfiu-wo¥yi pìrkìtu-wo¥yi baæskìnu-wo¥yi muæskuæfiu-woæ paæskìfiu-wo¥yi wìlkìfiu-wo¥yi ‘cling to, adhere to’ ‘put on airs’ ‘submerge’ ‘rinse’ ‘be well dressed’ ‘rinse’ ‘sniff at, smell’ ‘singe’ ‘dislocate, become sprained’ ‘confuse, become confused’ ‘stir with swizzle stick’ ‘locate a gap or soft spot’ ‘wring out, twist’ ‘make hole by prodding’ ‘curse’ ‘feel nauseous’ ‘translate’ ‘pick apart, pick open’ At our current state of knowledge, we cannot be sure that all of these are frozen pluractionals with a -Ki- infix rather than a root that happened to have a velar stop as one of its consonants. For example, corresponding to buærgìlu- ‘stir with swizzle stick’ is Gadaka buærgu-, which may or may not be a borrowing from Hausa burga¥. The verb fiaængìlu- ‘put on airs’ may be related to fiìngu-woæ ‘have a concave back’ (referring to the posture of someone who puts on airs?). Note also that the final consonants of the verbs in the lists above comprise a restricted set of the Bole consonant inventory, esp. l (14 cases!), n, t, and fi. These are among the most frequent “remnant affix” consonants (##) and hence could be additions to a CV(C)KV- root rather than being the original final consonant of a root containing an infixed -Ki-. Still, there is evidence that at least some of these do derive from infixation. The verb maærkìfiu- ‘wring out’ coexists with maærfiu- in the same meaning. The verb muæskuæfiu- ‘feel nauseous’ has a Gadaka dialect counterpart muæsfiu-. The verb wìlkìfiu- ‘pick apart, pick into’ may be related to yùllu‘investigate’. The verbs sùnkùnu- ‘sniff at’ and tàkùmnu- ‘chew’ look to be cognate with Hausa sansaæna\ and tamna¥ (= tauna¥ in “Standard” Hausa) respectively. Note in the right hand column that the range of consonants that precede putative infix -Ki- is restricted to the alveolar sonorants (n, r, l) and s. In the left hand column, all the 4 The stem pikt- is used only with the ventive extension (##), parallel to Hausa fa®fafio\, with the same meaning. Furthermore, the Hausa verb is pluractional in form with no transparently related simple stem in current use. The typological parallel of verbs in certain meanings having the form of frozen pluractionals holds between Bole and Hausa (and undoubtedly for other Chadic languages) for a number of verbs. Note in the lists here, for example, Bole suænkuænu-, Hausa sansaæna\ ‘sniff at’ (with a cognate root) and Bole zuænkuænu-, Hausa babbaæke\ ‘singe’, the latter cognate with Bole bòkku- ‘burn, roast’, which has the form of a frozen CVGV pluractional. 5 This verb has an additional final stem consonant, probably a remnant affix (##). 5 verbs except za¥gìru- ‘shout’ have short vowels in the intial syllable. We return to the significance of these skewings in section 4. 3. Verbs of the form C1VC1iC2V Several verbs have what appears to be an infixed -Ci- syllable, where C = repetition of the first stem consonant rather than K. The lists below are exhaustive for currently available data. In addition to verbs, there are a few nouns that looka as if they could be verbal nouns. C1V|C1iC2V bÏbìyu-wo¥yi gÏgìyu-wo¥yi ja¥jìnu-wo¥yi ka¥kìlu-wo¥yi ko¥kìlu-wo¥yi mu¥muæsu-wo¥yi ngu¥nguæru-wo¥yi pÏpìlu-wo¥yi pu¥puæru-wo¥yi rÏrìmu-wo¥yi sa¥sìlu-wo¥yi so¥suwu-wo¥yi su¥suæwu-wo¥yi te¥tìyu-wo¥yi la¥luæmoæ pu\puro ro¥rìyoæ C1VC2C1iC3V buæmbuælu-wo¥yi muærmuæsu-wo¥yi ngìrngìru-wo¥yi ‘swing around, whirl’ ‘tie rope tightly around’ ‘groom a horse’ ‘suck particles from teeth’ ‘gnaw’ ‘roll thing around’ ‘mumble, murmur’ ‘nibble at’ ‘shake dirt loose from roots’ ‘become quite, abate’ ‘touch lightly’ ‘touch lightly with hand’ ‘whisper’ ‘try hard’ ‘dried guinea corn leaves’ ‘lumps of flour in atti’ ‘trembling, shivering’ ‘roll on the ground’ ‘rub between palms’ ‘cling to’ Like CVGVCV verbs described in §2.1 and CV(C)KiCV verbs described in §3, most of the verbs with infixed -Ci- involve inherent plural action of some kind, and though we have not yet found relationships between any of these verbs and CVCV stems, some of them have meanings that other languages express with verbs that are pluractional in form—cf.ko¥kìlu- ‘gnaw’ with Hausa gwêgwìya\ in the same meaning. 4. Historical Perspective on Bole Pluractional Formation Frozen pluractional morphological types are in near complementary distribution corresponding to the structure of the hypothetical bases from which the pluractionals were derived: 6 6 In labializing environments, a few of the frozen pluractionals have -u- in the infixed syllable rather than the -i- in the schemata below. We list only patterns for verbs with two or more original base consonants. There apparently are no frozen pluractionals derived from monoconsonantal bases. 6 • *C1V¨C2V > C1VG2V (§1.1), C1V¨KiC2V (§2)—see below for further comment • *C1VC | 2V > C1V|C1iC2V (§3) • *C1VC2C3V > C1V®2KiC3V (® = n, r, l, s) (§2), C1VG2iC3V (G ≠ n, r, l, s) (§2) Gimba (2000:161) pointed out that only verbs with a sonorant or fi as the second root consonant have active infixed pluractionals (##). Most of the verbs listed in §2 likewise conform to this restriction, the only exceptions being verbs where the final consonant is t, one of the most common remnant affixes as well as being a semi-productive transitizing affix (##), and the verb ruæguæzu- ‘raze, destroy’, where the -g- may be an original root consonant rather than an infix (cf. Hausa rugu®guæza\ ‘smash; crumble’, a frozen pluractional from a base *rug(u)za). The complementarity in frozen pluractionals would cover all verbs with two or more base root consonants if the C1VG2V pattern applied only to C1V¨C2V roots where G2 is a consonant OTHER THAN a sonorant or fi. This is not the case, but in §1.1, we provided evidence that the C1VG2V pattern has taken on a life of its own, and Bole has extended this pattern lexically to many verbs where plural action is not a factor. Comparative evidence points to the path which Bole has followed to arrive at this set of pluractional patterns from a single source. In the Chadic languages of Yobe State other than Bole, the prevailing pattern for pluractional verb formation is REDUPLICATIVE INFIXATION. This is true of both the West Chadic B languages, Bade and Ngizim, and the West Chadic A languages, Karekare and Ngamo. We present data from Karekare and Ngamo (Yaya dialect), the languages most closely related to Bole within Yobe State. Boxes enclose the reduplicative infixes. KAREKARE7 Verb class A1 B A2 NGAMO8 A1 B A2 Base form fiaæfu\-si-kaæu aæsu\-si-kaæu baæsa\-si-kaæu fiìbaætu\-si-kaæu Pluractional fiaæfaæ fu\-si-kaæu aæsaæsu\-si-kaæu baæsaæ sa\-si-kaæu fiìbaætaæ tu\-si-kaæu ‘he spoke’ ‘he picked up’ ‘he shot’ ‘he sold’ nì dugo-k koæsu at-na\" nì baæsa-k ra¥yi tu¥bo-k aæmba nì aædgo-k zuægoæno nì duæ dgo-k koæsaæsaæ aækti-na\" nì baæbsa-k ra¥yaæku tuæ tu¥bo-k bìya nì aæ&aædgo-k zuægoæno ‘I killed a mouse/mice’ ‘he bit me’ ‘I shot a bird/birds’ ‘he sent a boy/peopleÆ ‘I scratched my body’ 7 In the Karekare forms, -si- is the mark of the totality extension when no object is expressed; -kàu is the completive suffix. A common feature of Yobe State languages is to use the completive plus the totality extension when translating Hausa sentences in the completive. 8 In the Ngamo forms, -k is the mark of the totality extension before nominal objects. See the previous footnote for use of the totality extension. 7 Karekare derives all pluractionals with two or more consonants by infixing -Ca- where C = the final stem consonant. Ngamo forms pluractionals of C1V¨C2V roots (i.e. verbs of Class A1 and B) by infixing a copy of C1 after the first CV. If the verb has a Ø onset, the verb infixes -k- after the first CV. For longer verbs, i.e. those of Class A2, Ngamo prefixes a copy of the first CV-, with V being short for all verbs, including those with a long vowel in the first syllable of the base. For bases wih Ø onset, glottal stop is the default onset separating the initial syllable of the base from the reduplicated syllable. Using this evidence, we hypothesize that all the frozen pluractionals in Bole as well as all active CVGV and CVKiCV pluractionals (##) derive from a pattern [XCRY]pluractional, i.e. infixation of a root consonant. The -i- that shows up in pluractionals other than the CVGV type is epenthetic. Ngamo is far more tolerant than Bole in terms of permissible consonant sequences. Bole has resolved consonant hiatus in two ways, viz. epenthesis of -i- or complete assimilation, resulting in a geminate. Epenthesis is always the choice when the syllable preceding the infixed consonant is/was heavy (C1V|C1iC2V, C1V®2KiC3V, C1VG2iC3V patterns). Current evidence also suggests that epenthesis was the choice if infixation would have resulted in a sequence [obstruent]-[sonorant],9 a sequence also disallowed in some otherwise “sequence tolerant” languages, such as Ngizim. Other consonant sequences have resulted in geminates. We reiterate the observation that at some point, Bole began extending geminate formation as a process in its own right without requiring a source form a CxCy sequence. This tendency in Bole has obscured the reconstructed source for geminates. This account has ducked two questions: why does Bole infix -Ki- rather than -CR-, and which base consonant is it that was infixed? Ngamo suggests an answer by the fact that it infixes -k- as a default for verbs with onsetless first syllables. If this was a feature of proto-Bole-Ngamo, Bole has simply extended the default pattern to all infixed syllables. Another possibility, not mutually exclusive with this one, is that -K- originally WAS one of the root consonants. In a verb like gowu- ‘beat’, the still active infixed pluractional is gògìwu-. The syllable -gi- is potentially ambiguous as to source—is it reduplication of the initial g- or is it an infix of invariable form? If Bole speakers interpreted it in the latter way, it would automatically be the pluractional marker for any verb, replacing reduplicative infixation. Both these sources for -Ki- infixation fail to answer the question as to why the infix is -k- rather than, say, -s-. We will not attempt to answer this question, since any answer would be idle and unproductive speculation. The second question raised above is which base consonant was reduplicated. Karekare reduplicates the last consonant, a type of reduplication that could account for most of the Bole forms, e.g. *pata> pa-t(V)-ta- > patta*&yoru> ’yo-r(V)-ru- > ’yogiru*pas(i)fiu- > pas-fi(i)-fiu- > paskifiu- ‘go out’ ‘stop’ ‘translate’ An advantage of this source is that it would get the common CVGV pattern directly, i.e. the geminate consonant would be, literally, a doubling of the last consonant. It would Epenthesis also applies before fi. This is not a sonorant, of course, but implosive/laryngealized consonants pattern with sonorants in a number of ways in Chadic languages and elsewhere. 9 8 be hard to understand, however, why words like ’yogiru- ‘stop repeatedly’ (from ’yoru-) would have an infix rather than a geminate *’yorru-. It seems more likely that the infixed consonant was C1, as in Ngamo. Not only is Ngamo a closer cousin of Bole than is Karekare, but also Bole still has a remnant of C1 infixation in verbs like rÏrìmu- ‘shake dirt loose’ < *rêmu-. The path for deriving the modern geminate and -Ki- pluractionals from C1 infixation would thus be as follows: *pata> pa-p(V)-ta- > patta*&yoru> ’yo-’y(V)-ru- > ’yogiru*pas(i)fiu- > pas-pi-fiu- > paskifiu- ‘go out’ ‘stop’ ‘translate’ As described in Chapter ##, the productive pattern of pluractional formation for all classes of verbs in modern Bole is initial CV- reduplication, e.g. baæsa\- ‡ baæbaæsa\- ‘shoot’. This pattern has its counterpart in Ngamo Class A2 pluractionals. The simplest explanation for why modern Bole has initial CV- reduplication for ALL verb classes is that Bole has extended a pattern that was at one time more restricted. The motivation for such an extension would be simplification of the complex system pluractional formation that had developed where some verbs formed pluractionals by gemination, some by -K- infixation, and some by C1 infixation. This suggestion raises the question, however, of where initial CV- reduplication came from in the first place. This is a restricted pattern at best in West Chadic (Hausa being one of the few languages where it is dominant). We put the answer to this question aside as a subject for future research. 9 Verbs of the following forms? jakkutu (is there a verb?) p loppinu b lobbinu b' lob'b'inu t lottinu d loddinu d' lod'd'inu z/j lozzinu, lojjinu We have examples with s, 'y, k, g, but more would be good. 10
© Copyright 2026 Paperzz