-зе
Moksha
Etymology 1
The objective template V + IO + IT + IS with all the slots filled in is expected to yield a Common-Mordvinic *kunda-s-aj2-zə (using кундамс (kundams) as an example) "he/she/it caught him/her/it." In Erzya this produced кундызе (kundiźe) and in Moksha — кундазе (kundaźe). Both via intermediary *kundajzə. In conclusion: this suffix is of subject marking origin.[1]
Suffix
-зе • (-źe)
- objective conjugation ending indicating that he/she/it carried out actions involving a singular 3rd person object
Derived terms
See also
- -зень (-źeń) (he/she/it carried out actions involving a plural 3rd person object)
Etymology 2
The Erzya counterpart -м (-m) traces back to *-mV. The Moksha counterpart is an anomaly. Based on the dialectal form -nze, it is possible that this suffix represents fusion of *-m (or -н (-n)) and ся (śa, “that”).[2]
There is variation in the dative form of this suffix, compare кудозти (kudozťi) (Poljakov) and прязенди (pŕaźenďi) (Golenkov), Poljakov also gives кудозенди (kudoźenďi).
Suffix
-зе • (-źe)
- 1st person singular possessive suffix in nominative, genitive and dative with one possession
- O. Je. Poljakov (1993) Russko-mokšanskij razgovornik [Russian-Moksha phrasebook], Saransk: Mordovskoje knižnoje izdatelʹstvo, →ISBN
- кудозе — кудозень — кудозти
- kudo źe — kudo źe ń — kudo z ťi
- my house — of my house — to/for my house
- O. Je. Poljakov, KULʹTURA I JaZYK DRJeVNJeJ MORDVY (PRJeDKOV MOKŠI I ERZI), PDF
- датив — мокш. кудозенди/кудозти
- daťiv — mokš. kudo źe nďi/kudo z ťi
- dative — to/for my house
- O. Je. Poljakov (1993) Russko-mokšanskij razgovornik [Russian-Moksha phrasebook], Saransk: Mordovskoje knižnoje izdatelʹstvo, →ISBN
Derived terms
See also
- -н (-n) (the possessive suffix elsewhere in the paradigm, closer to the expected Uralic form)
References
- Serebrennikov, B. A. (1967) Istoričeskaja morfologija mordovskix jazykov [Historical morphology of the Mordvinic languages] (in Russian), Moskva, page 196
- Serebrennikov, B. A. (1967) Istoričeskaja morfologija mordovskix jazykov [Historical morphology of the Mordvinic languages] (in Russian), Moskva, page 55