Theiling Online    Sitemap    Conlang Mailing List HQ   

Re: OT: Posession (was OT: Re: What? the clean-shaven)

From:Nik Taylor <yonjuuni@...>
Date:Wednesday, May 21, 2003, 2:49
Tim May wrote:
> If anyone can supply details of a natlang making a more specific > possessive distinction than this, I'd be very interested to hear of it.
According to the Austronesian Languages section of The World's Major Languages: Like most Oceanic languages, Fijian distinguished more than one relation within what is broadly called "possession". In standard Fijian there are four possessive categories. Familiar (inalienable) possession includes the relation between whole and part, including parts of the body, and most kin relations. ... Edible and drinkable possession, not surprisingly, include the relation of a possessor to something which is eaten or drunk: na ke-mu dalo "Your taro", na me-dra tii "Their tea". Eating and drinking are of course culturally defined, so that tobacco counts as edible, whereas various watery foods such as oysters, oranges and sugar cane are drinkable. The edible category also includes certain intrinsic properties and relations of association: na ke-na balavu "its length, his height", na ke-na tuuraga "its (e.g. a village's) chief". (This appears to be the result of the merger of two historically distinct categories, rather than any conceptual association of such relations with eating.) The fourth category, neutral, includes relations not covered by the three more specific types: na no-qu vale "My house", na no-mu cakacaka "your work" Certain nouns tend to occur typically with certain possessive types because of their typical relation to possessors in the real world. And there are certain cases of apparently arbitrary assignment: na yate-na "his liver" [familiar] but na no-na ivi "his kidneys" [edible]. Nevertheless, the system cannot be explained as a simple classification of nouns. There are numerous examples of the same noun in two different possessive relations, with the appropriate difference of meaning: na no-qu yaqona [neutral] "My kava (which I grow or sell)", na me-qu yaqona [drinkable] "My kava (which I drink)"; na no-na itukutuku [neutral] "Her story, the story that she tells", na ke-na itukutuku [edible] "Her story, the story about her" -- "There's no such thing as 'cool'. Everyone's just a big dork or nerd, you just have to find people who are dorky the same way you are." - overheard ICQ: 18656696 AIM Screen-Name: NikTaylor42