Inalienability in North Saami

On the basis of corpus data (9.5M words 1997–2010) we claim that North Saami is developing a grammatical distinction between alienable and inalienable possession. In previous work we documented a language change in North Saami in which the possessive suffix as in girjji-id-easkka [book-acc.pl-3pl]...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Lene Antonsen, Laura Janda
Format: Article
Language:Northern Sami
Published: Septentrio Academic Publishing 2021-02-01
Series:Sámi dieđalaš áigečála
Subjects:
Online Access:https://septentrio.uit.no/index.php/SDA/article/view/6708
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1850031979906465792
author Lene Antonsen
Laura Janda
author_facet Lene Antonsen
Laura Janda
author_sort Lene Antonsen
collection DOAJ
description On the basis of corpus data (9.5M words 1997–2010) we claim that North Saami is developing a grammatical distinction between alienable and inalienable possession. In previous work we documented a language change in North Saami in which the possessive suffix as in girjji-id-easkka [book-acc.pl-3pl] ‘their books’ is being replaced by an analytic construction with the reflexive genitive ieža-form, as in iežaska girjjiid ‘their books’. According to typologists, alienable/inalienable distinctions arise primarily in small languages where a language change takes place, and inalienability is marked by the synthetic construction. North Saami possessive constructions comport with these features, and the possessive suffix tends to mark inalienable possession, as opposed to the more neutral and widespread ieža-form. Statistical analysis shows that word frequency cannot account for the distribution of the possessive suffix vs. ieža-form, justifying focus on semantics. North Saami shows high frequency of the possessive suffix for kinship and body part nouns associated with inalienability cross-linguistically, but there is a strong presence of the possessive suffix with words for “products”: concrete and abstract human artefacts, where the creation is inalienably possessed by its creator. Another important group marked with the possessive suffix associated with inalienable possession are words connected with identity and livelihood. Even though overall the reflexive genitive ieža-form has been taking the place of the possessive suffix the possessive suffix, continues to be productive in use with words signaling products, identity, and livelihood.
format Article
id doaj-art-773f4a73fcad4ad997664f36dcb2e19b
institution DOAJ
issn 0805-4312
1894-0498
language Northern Sami
publishDate 2021-02-01
publisher Septentrio Academic Publishing
record_format Article
series Sámi dieđalaš áigečála
spelling doaj-art-773f4a73fcad4ad997664f36dcb2e19b2025-08-20T02:58:48ZsmeSeptentrio Academic PublishingSámi dieđalaš áigečála0805-43121894-04982021-02-0110.7557/sda.6708Inalienability in North SaamiLene Antonsen0Laura Janda1UiT The Arctic University of NorwayUiT The Arctic University of Norway On the basis of corpus data (9.5M words 1997–2010) we claim that North Saami is developing a grammatical distinction between alienable and inalienable possession. In previous work we documented a language change in North Saami in which the possessive suffix as in girjji-id-easkka [book-acc.pl-3pl] ‘their books’ is being replaced by an analytic construction with the reflexive genitive ieža-form, as in iežaska girjjiid ‘their books’. According to typologists, alienable/inalienable distinctions arise primarily in small languages where a language change takes place, and inalienability is marked by the synthetic construction. North Saami possessive constructions comport with these features, and the possessive suffix tends to mark inalienable possession, as opposed to the more neutral and widespread ieža-form. Statistical analysis shows that word frequency cannot account for the distribution of the possessive suffix vs. ieža-form, justifying focus on semantics. North Saami shows high frequency of the possessive suffix for kinship and body part nouns associated with inalienability cross-linguistically, but there is a strong presence of the possessive suffix with words for “products”: concrete and abstract human artefacts, where the creation is inalienably possessed by its creator. Another important group marked with the possessive suffix associated with inalienable possession are words connected with identity and livelihood. Even though overall the reflexive genitive ieža-form has been taking the place of the possessive suffix the possessive suffix, continues to be productive in use with words signaling products, identity, and livelihood. https://septentrio.uit.no/index.php/SDA/article/view/6708North Saamipossessive constructionpossessive suffixes language changeinalienability
spellingShingle Lene Antonsen
Laura Janda
Inalienability in North Saami
Sámi dieđalaš áigečála
North Saami
possessive construction
possessive suffixes
language change
inalienability
title Inalienability in North Saami
title_full Inalienability in North Saami
title_fullStr Inalienability in North Saami
title_full_unstemmed Inalienability in North Saami
title_short Inalienability in North Saami
title_sort inalienability in north saami
topic North Saami
possessive construction
possessive suffixes
language change
inalienability
url https://septentrio.uit.no/index.php/SDA/article/view/6708
work_keys_str_mv AT leneantonsen inalienabilityinnorthsaami
AT laurajanda inalienabilityinnorthsaami