< Reconstruction:Proto-Mongolic

Reconstruction:Proto-Mongolic/-sun

Proto-Mongolic

Alternative forms

  • *-sün

Etymology

Unclear meaning. Doerfer and Poppe suggests it was a singularity marker for countable concepts in Pre-Proto-Mongolian since it was dropped when the plural affix *-d was added in words such as *nugasun (duck). [1] However, it is also present in many uncountable words, especially after a monosyllabic root such as *cïsun (blood), *casun (snow), and *hüsün (hair), leading to its interpretation as a collective suffix by Han Nugteren or a class suffix for uncountable homogeneous substances by Juha Janhunen. [2] [3]

Most likely a Mongolic morphological innovation since it is only present in Mongolic languages and absent in Para-Mongolic languages, compare Khitan (u, water) vs. *usun (water), Tuoba tʰaʁ (dirt, soil, earth) vs. *toxusun (dust), and Xianbei 俟汾 (ɨbun, grass) vs. *ebesün (grass). [4] Lexical correspondences in neighboring languages also suggest Mongolic innovation such as in Proto-Turkic *bialïk (city, fortress) vs. *balgasun (city), Manchu ᡶ᠋ᡠᡨ᠋ᠠ (futa, rope; string) vs. *hutasun (string), and Manchu ᠠᠨᠵᠠ (anja, plough) vs. *anǰasun (plough). [5]

Suffix

*-sun

  1. Suffix creating noun
  • *anja-sun (plough)
  • *ara-sun (skin)
  • *burga-sun (elm)
  • *ca-sun (snow)
  • *cï-sun (blood)
  • *dabu-sun (salt)
  • *dara-sun (wine)
  • *ebe-sün (grass)
  • *gada-sun (stake)
  • *kadaa-sun (nail)
  • *huta-sün (string)
  • *hüne-sün (ash)
  • *hü-sün (hair)
  • *möl-sün (ice)
  • *nï-sun (snot)
  • *neüre-sün (coal)
  • *noxa-sun (wool)
  • *nuga-sun (duck)
  • *to-sun (oil)
  • *u-sun (water)
  • *ü-sün (milk)
  • *ya-sun (blood)
  • *ye-sün (nine)
  • *yo-sun (custom, habit)
  • *ara-sun (skin)

References

  1. Gruntov, I. A., and O. M. Mazo. "A comparative approach to nominal morphology in Transeurasian: Case and plurality." The Oxford Guide to the Transeurasian Languages. 2020. p. 523
  2. Hans Nugteren LOT. Mongolic phonology and the Qinghai-Gansu languages. Netherlands Graduate School of Linguistics, 2011. https://www.lotpublications.nl/Documents/289_fulltext.pdf
  3. Janhunen, Juha, and Uluhan Özalan. "On the fluidity of bones in Mongolic and beyond." Altai hakpo (2021). https://www.academia.edu/50918222/On_the_fluidity_of_bones_in_Mongolic_and_beyond
  4. Shimunek, Andrew. Languages of ancient Southern Mongolia and North China: A historical-comparative study of the Serbi or Xianbei branch of the Serbi-Mongolic language family, with an analysis of Northeastern Frontier Chinese and Old Tibetan phonology. BoD–Books on Demand, 2015. p. 453-454
  5. Shimunek, Andrew. Languages of ancient Southern Mongolia and North China: A historical-comparative study of the Serbi or Xianbei branch of the Serbi-Mongolic language family, with an analysis of Northeastern Frontier Chinese and Old Tibetan phonology. BoD–Books on Demand, 2015. p. 454-456
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