Mo, do, so, da – duortnussámi dovdomearkan?
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/28281Dato
2022-08-30Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Antonsen, LeneSammendrag
In this article, I examine the dialect forms of a set of North Saami pronouns – mo, do, so, da (‘I, you, he/she,
it’; standardized forms: mon, don, son, dan). More specifically, I investigate where the forms are in use and
how the forms have developed. The material shows that the final -n has changed in a number of stages before
it disappeared completely. I suggest that these pronominal forms are a dialect mark of the Torne Saami dialect
group (named after the Torne river valley on the border between Sweden and Finland). The pronominal forms
are used throughout this dialect area, and the use continues north to Kvænangen in Norway, which in turn
belongs to the Sea Sami dialect group. In the Kvænangen dialect there are also a couple of other characteristics
that are typical for some of the Torne Saami dialects.
Forlag
Septentrio Academic PublishingSitering
Antonsen. Mo, do, so, da – duortnussámi dovdomearkan?. Nordlyd. 2022;46(1):9-17Metadata
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