дит
Ket
Etymology
From earlier dɨd,[1] from Proto-Ketic *dīˑɟ, ultimately inherited from Proto-Yeniseian *ɟex (“wood grouse”). Cognate with Yug дидь (dīdʲ) and probably[2] also Kott fêŋ-čer-a (“female wood grouse”, literally “female-grouse-feminine suffix”).
Noun
дит (dīt) m (pl. дэкӈ (dɛ́kŋ))
- (ornithology) wood grouse, Western capercaillie
- Ынь дэкӈ, ӄаська таяӈӷотин. (Kellog dialect)
- Ɨ̄nʲ dɛkŋ, qasʲka ttajaŋɢɔtin.
- Two grouse walking along the sandbar.
- Дэкнаӈт хай тунбес ӄоппеяӈ. (Kureyka dialect)
- Dɛknaŋt haj tunbɛs qɔppɛjaŋ.
- Grouse have goiters like that, too.
- Ат таӷайокся дит. (Sulomay dialect)
- Āt ttaʁajɔksʲa dīt.
- I'm going to shoot a grouse [for hunting.]
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): [diˑt˦]
Derived terms
- дэткит (dɛtkit, “grouse chick”)
- дэттай (dɛttaj, “a flock of grouse; grouse mating ground”)
- дэтто (dɛttɔ́, “grouse-hunt”)
- ӄирит (qirit, “male grouse”)
- хаӈдит (haŋədít, “female grouse”)
References
- ^ Werner, Heinrich (2005) “dɨd (Das Imbazkische)”, in Die Jenissej-Sprachen des 18. Jahrhunderts, Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag, →ISBN, page 44
- ^ Vajda, Edward (2024) “footnote 14”, in The Languages and Linguistics of Northern Asia: Language Families (The World of Linguistics [WOL]; 10.1)[1], volume 1, Berlin, Boston: De Gruyter Mouton, , →ISBN, page 387
- Fortescue, Michael, Vajda, Edward (2022) “4.) ~*dedʳ”, in Mid-Holocene Language Connections between Asia and North America (Brill's Studies in the Indigenous Languages of the Americas; 17)[2], Leiden, Boston: Brill, →ISBN, pages 328-329
- Kotorova, Elizaveta, Nefedov, Andrey (2015) “dīd (m., dekŋ)”, in Большой словарь кетского языка, Münich: LINCOM, →ISBN, page 147
- Werner, Heinrich (2002) “дит (I; м.) [мн. дэкӈ]”, in Словарь кетско-русский и русско-кетский: Учебное пособие для учащихся начальной школы[3], 2 edition, Saint-Petersburg: Drofa, →ISBN, page 32
- Werner, Heinrich (2002) “(1) diˑt (I; m., Pl. dɛkŋ)”, in Vergleichendes Wörterbuch der Jenissej-Sprachen, Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag, →ISBN, page 193