Ojibwe Grammar - Nouns

Nouns

Nouns distinguish plurality, animacy, obviation, and case with suffixes. Animacy is only overtly marked on plural nouns. There are no core cases to distinguish categories such as "subject" or "object", but rather various oblique cases, including a locative (e.g., wiisiniwigamig, "restaurant", wiisiniwigamigong, "in the restaurant") and a vocative plural (e.g., Ojibwedog, "(you) Ojibwes!"). Other suffixes are: pejorative (e.g., jiimaan, "canoe", jiimaanish, "worthless canoe"), diminutive (e.g., zhooniyaa, "money", zhooniyaans, "coin"), contemptive (e.g., odaabaan, "car", odaabaanenh, "just some old car"), preterit (which marks a deceased or no-longer existent person or object, e.g. nookomis, "my grandmother", nookomisiban, "my late grandmother"), and preterit-dubitative (which marks a deceased or no-longer existent person or object which was never known by the speaker, e.g. a'aw mindimooyenh, "that old woman", a'aw mindimooyenyigoban, "that late old woman I never knew").

Some nouns are considered "dependent" and cannot be presented by themselves. Instead, these dependent nouns are presented with pronoun prefixes/suffixes attached to them. An example of a dependent noun is nookomis ("my grandmother") where the dependent root -ookomis- ("grandmother") must be presented with a pronoun affix, which in this case is n-.

Other nouns are derived from verbs by transforming them to their participle form. Of the choices, third person (and thus third person plural) is the most common form. Though each class of verbs may have their own pariciple-forming patterns, for simplicity, only the VAI neutral mode, positive participles are shown in the example, again, using nibaa ("sleep").

Note: C and V are used in some of the tables below to indicate a consonant or a vowel, respectively.

Subject VAI Neutral Mode, Positive Participles
Conjugation Example Gloss
Niin 0 * yaan nebaayaan "Sleeper"
Giin 0 * yan nebaayan "Sleeper"
Wiin 0 * d1 nebaad1 "Sleeper"
Obviative 0 * nijin nebaanijin "Sleeper"
Indefinite 0 * ng nebaang "Sleeper"
Niinawind 0 * yaang nebaayaang "Sleepers"
Giinawind 0 * yang nebaayang "Sleepers"
Giinawaa 0 * yeg nebaayeg "Sleepers"
Wiinawaa 0 * jig nebaajig "Sleepers"

Read more about this topic:  Ojibwe Grammar

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