< Reconstruction:Proto-Algonquian
Reconstruction:Proto-Algonquian/nekwetwi
Proto-Algonquian
Etymology
From Proto-Algic *nekwet- (“one”), whence also Yurok kohta'r (“one (straight thing)”), kohtoh (“one (round thing)”) and Wiyot go't (“one (person)”), which (like Unami) lost the prefix ne-.[1] The Proto-Algic root may have been borrowed from or into Proto-Salish; see *nekwet- for more.
It has been observed that "the numbers from ‘one’ to ‘five’ all contain a semantically empty initial (root) *ny-, realized as *ne- before a consonant".[2]
Synonyms
- *pe·šekwi (“one”)
Derived terms
- *nekwetwa·šika (“six”)
Descendants
- Abenaki: negwed- (“one in a series”)
- Algonquin ningo (“one (used with measures)”)
- Cheyenne: no'k- (“one, alone”), naest- (“all in one place”)
- Fox: nekoti (“one”)
- Malecite-Passamaquoddy: neqt (“one”)
- Massachusett: nequt (“one”)
- Menominee: nekot (“one”)
- Miami: ninkoti (“one”)
- Mohegan-Pequot: nuqut (“one”)
- Ojibwe ningo-, ningodw- (“one”)
- Penobscot: nəkʷt-,nəkʷət- (“one, lone”)
- Potawatomi: ngot (“one”)
- Powhatan: nekut (“one”)
- Quiripi: nukqútte (“either”) (Quiripi), naqúut (“one”) (Unquachog)
- Shawnee: nekoti (“one”)
- Unami: kwëti (“one”)
- Munsee: ngwúti (“one”)
References
- Bloomfield (1946)
- Siebert (1975)
- Richard Rhodes and David Costa, The History of Algonquian Number Words
- Proulx (1984)
- Essays in Algonquian, Catawban, And Siouan Linguistics →ISBN, 2003), page 98: "the numbers from ‘one’ to ‘five’ all contain a semantically empty initial (root) *ny-, realized as *ne- before a consonant (PA *nye- and *ni- do not occur), and *-w-i is descriptively segmentable."
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