翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Ok (volcano)
・ Ok Alright a Huh Oh Yeah
・ OK Bartender
・ OK Baytong
・ OK Bear
・ Ojibway Club
・ Ojibway Nation of Saugeen First Nation
・ Ojibway Prairie Complex
・ Ojibway Provincial Park
・ Ojibways of Hiawatha First Nation
・ Ojibways of Onegaming
・ Ojibways of Onigaming First Nation
・ Ojibways of the Pic River First Nation
・ Ojibwe
・ Ojibwe dialects
Ojibwe grammar
・ Ojibwe language
・ Ojibwe phonology
・ Ojibwe writing systems
・ Ojie Edoburun
・ Ojigi
・ Ojigi (Oyo)
・ Ojiji
・ Ojika Airport
・ Ojika, Nagasaki
・ Ojika-Kōgen Station
・ Ojili
・ Ojima Domain
・ Ojima lactam
・ Ojima, Gunma


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Ojibwe grammar : ウィキペディア英語版
Ojibwe grammar

The Ojibwe language is an Algonquian American Indian language spoken throughout the Great Lakes region and westward onto the northern plains. It is one of the largest American Indian languages north of Mexico in terms of number of speakers, and exhibits a large number of divergent dialects. For the most part, this article describes the Minnesota variety of the Southwestern dialect. The orthography used is the Fiero Double-Vowel System.
Like many American languages, Ojibwe is polysynthetic, meaning it exhibits a great deal of synthesis and a very high morpheme-to-word ratio (e.g., the single word for "they are Chinese" is ''aniibiishaabookewininiiwiwag'', which contains seven morphemes: elm-PEJORATIVE-liquid-make-man-be-PLURAL, or approximately "they are leaf-soup (tea ) makers"). It is agglutinating, and thus builds up words by stringing morpheme after morpheme together, rather than having several affixes which carry numerous different pieces of information.
Like most Algonquian languages, Ojibwe distinguishes two different kinds of third person, a ''proximate'' and an ''obviative''. The proximate is a traditional third person, while the obviative (also frequently called "fourth person") marks a less important third person if more than one third person is taking part in an action. In other words, Ojibwe uses the obviative to avoid the confusion that could be created by English sentences such as "John and Bill were good friends, ever since the day he first saw him" (who saw whom?). In Ojibwe, one of the two participants would be marked as proximate (whichever one was deemed more important), and the other marked as obviative.
==Gender==
Rather than a gender contrast such as masculine/feminine, Ojibwe instead distinguishes between animate and inanimate. Animate nouns are generally living things, and inanimate ones generally nonliving things, although this is not a simple rule due to the cultural understanding as to whether a noun possesses a "spirit" or not (generally, if it can move, it possesses a "spirit"). Objects which have great spiritual importance for the Ojibwe — such as rocks — are very often animate rather than inanimate, for example. Some words are distinguished purely by their noun class; for example, ''mitig'' can mean either "tree" or "stick:" if it is animate (plural ''mitigoog''), it means "tree," and if it is inanimate (plural ''mitigoon''), it means "stick."

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Ojibwe grammar」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.