bookish forms rarely used: sundartara,sundartama etc)
Dear Chinmay,
The facts, and the evidently non-random correlation between them seem
very interesting. This line of research may have a lot of promise. Try
posting your query on the Linguist List, so that linguists speaking
diverse languages get to see and respond to it. I myself do not have
that kind of encyclopediac knowledge.
Best, G.
hotz, hotzage, hotzena, hotzege 'too cold'.
Hungarian, a FennoUgric language, uses a vowel harmonic -abb/ebb suffix on adjectives -- and nouns -- to form a comparative. Thus
Janos - NOM magas-abb mint Istvan-NOM. 'Janos tall-er than Istvan.'
An alternative form uses the harmonic suffix -nal/-nel on the noun that refers to the standard, as in
Janos magasabb Istvan-nal..
This suffix is the adessive case and means 'nigh unto, close to', so what the latter (there's a comparative with the -er suffix) sentence means literally is 'Janos is tall-er near to Istvan.'
Hungarian can also derive a comparative adjective from a noun with the -abb/ebb suffix. The noun meaning 'fox' is roka. The sentence Janos rokabb Istvanal. means literally 'Janos fox-er Istvan-next to [is].', i.e. 'Janos is foxier than Istvan.'
Now, I believe that comparative Uralicists have evidence to reconstruct this kind of system for *ProtoFinnoUgric, and possibly for *ProtoUralic. So it may have once been more widespread.
But the -tero suffix meaning 'opposite, alternate' is etymologically related to the comparatives of adjectives in some IE languages. In Greek and Indoiranian it came to mark the comparative degree, and in Irish Gaelic the equative degree, as in luath 'swift' but luathither 'as swift'. This suffix may be cognate with the -ed suffix in Welsh used for the equative degree, as in gwyn, gwynned, gwynnach, gwynnaf 'white, as white, whiter, whitest', but I do not know that it is.
U of Cincinnati
Department of Anthropology
Kindly comment to this mail.
I'm still not sure I am following your questions or proposals, but I'll try. Comments are inserted below after what they are commenting on.
At 12:51 PM 1/23/2007, you wrote:
Sir,
thank you so much for your edifying reply.
what I mean by:
"some relation between the duals and the comparative degree forms"
is:
Note that comparative form is nothing but a way to compare between two.
But actually, in many languages the comparative and superlative are not formally distinguished in any way.
And what about other degrees of comparison, excessive, insufficientive, equative, superlative, absolutive ( e.g. outermost in English.).
And even so, that does not mean there has to be a morphological or syntactic relationship, either synchronically or diachronically (historically) between the two. Dual marks a noun. Comparision of adjectives is a rather different device.
Why such special treatment by giving morphological (against analytical) suffixation in case of adjectives(Sanskrit:sundaratara,uttara,uttungatara etc.) or pronouns (anyatara,itara etc) for comparison between two?
Well, that's like asking why Khoisan languages have clicks since others don't or why a few languages have VOS order when most others don't. In general, we don't know. Some things that are rare nonetheless do exist. We would like to know why but usually it is difficult or impossible to find out why. And remember that in science, why really means "how it came to be". But as I noted, morphological suffixation to form the comparative and superlative, and equative (Celtic) or excessive (Basque) is not confined to Indoeuropean languages. Hungarian and some other Ugric languages have it, Basque has it. It does seem to be confined to Europe and Western Siberia.
Interestingly and obviously enough, such forms are found in the
languages-- Pro-to of which had duals....do u have any such example...when pro-to doesn't have duals but the modern developments of which have separate comparative form?
No, I dont happen to have any such examples. But that does not mean that dual number and suffixed forms of adjectival comparison are related phenomena. Dual number is fairly widespread. A number of languages in several different language families have it or have had it. But special suffixed forms of adjectives for degrees of comparison is far less common than dual grammatical number. (Incidentally, I don't think Basque has a dual number, but whether it did in the past I dont know and doubt if anybody does.) So having dual number is certainly not a sufficient cause for a language to develop suffixed degrees of comparison. Proto Uralic and Proto Indoeuropean both apparently had dual number. But it has been lost in Modern Hungarian but the suffixation of adjectives is very much alive. The same is true for Indoeuropean languages -- the dual number is much more restricted and vestigial but in the languages that have a suffix showing degrees of adjectival comparison, it is very much alive and productive (English, Russian, German &c. ) So one is very suspicious of positing a relationship between dual number, much of which once was, and suffixed comparison of adjectives, which very much still is. One is particularly hesitant to posit such a relationship when the sample size of languages with suffixed comparison morpheme is so very small and geographically proximate. It's just not a big enough sample to build much of a theory on.
( If so it is exceptionally interesting?)This is precisely what I mean by 'some relation'.To rephrase in other words:
Existence of morphologically affixed comparative forms for adjectives has direct relation with the existence of dual number for nouns.
But you have to have evidence that there in fact is such a relationship. You dont have any such evidence that I can see. Or,if you have, it is very weak. You have two language families -- Indoeuropean and Uralic -- in which there was a grammatical dual and in which there is found morphological marking of degrees of comparison of adjectives -- not just the comparative degree, but other degrees too. But there are many languages in which grammatical dual is found. The only other language in which there are suffixes showing adjectival degrees of comparison that I know of is Basque. That's not enough of a sample rule out coincidence as a likely explanation.
Also if this is not jabbering of mine:
With this as a point of departure we can trace the evolution of
counting numbers from 1,2 and their traces left in existence of duals and/or comparative forms.
I'm sorry, I don't follow this at all. We can find out about the development of words for numerals in lots and lots of languages. The occurrence of particular forms of nouns with particular numeral words may be an indication that there was an old partitive in a previous stage of the language, an old dual, or some other phenomenon.
And keep in mind that a few languages have a grammatical trial or paucal (a few) number in addition to a dual and a plural.
Joseph F Foster
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