A Concise Dictionary of Minnesota OjibweU of Minnesota Press - 288 pages "Presented in Ojibwe-English and English-Ojibwe sections, this dictionary spells words to reflect their actual pronunciation with a direct match between the letters used and the speech sounds of Ojibwe. Containing more than 7,000 of the most frequently used Ojibwe words."--P. [4] of cover. |
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Page xvi
John D. Nichols. Key to Entries xvi has a third - person singular subject and means ' one who is X , does X , is ... pronoun . Many of these are reciprocal verbs , the reciprocal or mutual ac- tion of which is typically expressed by ...
John D. Nichols. Key to Entries xvi has a third - person singular subject and means ' one who is X , does X , is ... pronoun . Many of these are reciprocal verbs , the reciprocal or mutual ac- tion of which is typically expressed by ...
Page xvii
... pronoun ' it ' when the subject is singular . Since the subject of such a verb is always inanimate and thus third person , there are no first - person forms . The singular partici- ple form follows the gloss . Inanimate intransitive ...
... pronoun ' it ' when the subject is singular . Since the subject of such a verb is always inanimate and thus third person , there are no first - person forms . The singular partici- ple form follows the gloss . Inanimate intransitive ...
Page xxi
... singular personal pronoun Entries for Prefixes ( pf ) . The entries for personal prefixes begin with a prefix given with a trailing equal sign , indicating that the prefix is a word part , not a word . When written in a full word ...
... singular personal pronoun Entries for Prefixes ( pf ) . The entries for personal prefixes begin with a prefix given with a trailing equal sign , indicating that the prefix is a word part , not a word . When written in a full word ...
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Expressions et termes fréquents
aadizookaan ag na animate anishinaabe ashore BIRCH BARK blown boat carry s.t. certain place consider s.o. cook s.t. CRADLE BOARD dance drag s.t. drive dubitative face fire fish follow s.o.'s foot or body hang s.t. head word heard HIDE hold s.t. inanimate Indian Ojibwe inside lay s.t. liquid look midaaswi midewiwin mineral na-pt noun one's back oon ni PADDLE person prefix person singular personal prť prt aug pull s.t. put s.t. road or trail s.o. with hands s.t. by hand s.t. with foot set s.t. sheet-like singular personal pronoun smell speed stem stick string-like SUITE CARD take s.t. things throw s.t. turn s.t. vai GO vai2 verb vii LIE vta make s.o. vta put vta take vta tell vta throw vti2 vti2 TAKE WEAR wild rice wood-like write s.t.
Fréquemment cités
Page xii - Nouns in the animate gender include a number of non-living things (eg, mitts, nets, and playing cards) as well as words identifying humans, animals, trees, and spirits.
Page xxiv - Vowels are nasalized before ns, nz, and nzh. The n is then omitted in pronunciation. A few examples are: gaawiin ingikendanziin 'I don't know it...
Page 41 - Isg indazhinge; prt endazhinged dazhishimo vai dance in a certain place; hg indazhishim; prt endazhishimod dazhishin vai lie in a certain place, be buried in a certain place...