< Reconstruction:Proto-Algonquian
Reconstruction:Proto-Algonquian/nye·wi
Proto-Algonquian
Etymology
Compare Wiyot ram- (“four”), riyáʔw- (diyáʔw-) (“?”) and Yurok cho'one'- (“four”), to'on- (“four”) (chr'rnr'ryhl (“four (animals or birds)”), chr'rnr'r'y (“four (animals of birds)”), tr'rnrpi' (“four (tools, etc.)”)).
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".[1]
Descendants
- Abenaki: iaw (“four”)
- Arapaho: yein (“four”)
- Cheyenne: neve (“four”)
- Cree: nêwo / ᓀᐓ (newo, “four”)
- Fox: nyêwi (“four”)
- Gros Ventre: yāni (“four”)
- Malecite-Passamaquoddy: new (“four”)
- Menominee: ni·w (“four”)
- Miami: niiwi (“four”), niiyanwi (“four times”)
- Mohegan-Pequot: yáw (“four”)
- Ojibwe: niiwin (“four”)/niiyin (“four”)
- Powhatan: yowgh, yeough (“four”)
- Unami: newa (“four”)
References
- Hewson (1993)
- Costa, David J. (2003) The Miami-Illinois Language (Studies in the Native Languages of the Americas), Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, →ISBN
- 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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