(1) UNBOUND BOUND neqa 'woman, a woman' neqaa 'the woman' peke 'bone, a bone' pekee 'the bone' tawitu 'horn, a horn' tawituu 'the horn' anki 'fish, a fish' ankii 'the fish'
(2) BOUND UNBOUND /pite/ pipte [pifte] pipitee [piviDee] /palata/ palalta [paralda] palalataa [pararaDaa]Semantically, the paucal refers to a small collection of objects which can be grouped together. For objects normally occuring in pairs, the paucal is understood as a dual; thus, pipte is best translated as 'a pair of eyes'.
(3) BOUND UNBOUND /pite/ pitepte [piDefte] pitepitee [piDeviDee] /palata/ palatalta [paraDalda] palatalataa [paraDaraDaa]Semantically, the distributive plural denotes 7 or 8 objects or more where a state or event is predicated of each object individually, rather than of the collection as a whole. Thus a distributive reading of the sentence 'The men were running around.' denotes that each individual man was running around independently of the others.
(4) BOUND UNBOUND /pite/ pikte [pixte] pikitee [pi3iDee] /palata/ palakta [paraxta] palakataa [para3aDaa]Semantically, the collective plural denotes 7 or 8 objects or more where a state or event is predicated of the group as a collection, implying some kind of internal structure or coherence to the group. This is especially common when referring to a group of animals, and thus serves the same function as English expressions such as 'a flock of' or 'a herd of'.
CV roots: Since there is a prohibition in the language on words consisting of only a single light syllable, CV roots are lengthened in speech (and in the orthography) to CVV. To form the paucal or distributive plural, the root is first copied. For unbound phase, the medial consonant is geminated (doubled), and for bound phase, the final vowel is lengthened; this is illustrated with the roots /tu/ 'dog' and /ye/ 'egg'.
(5) UNBOUND BOUND /tu/ tuttu [tuttu] tutuu [tuDuu] /ye/ yeyye [yeyye] yeyee [yeyee]To form the collective plural of CV roots, the rule given in 3.2.3. applies to this reduplicated form:
(6) UNBOUND BOUND /tu/ tuktu [tuxtu] tukutuu [tu3uDuu] /ye/ yekye [ye3ye] yekeyee [ye3eyee]CVX roots: The second type of monosyllabic roots are those roots which contain a long vowel, diphthong, or are closed by /n/; the cover symbol 'X' represents the second part of the long vowel, the glide of the diphthong and final /n/. The following schema illustrates the formation of the paucal or distributive plural of these roots:
(7) ROOT UNBOUND BOUND /CVX/ CVXCV CVCVXThis is demonstrated below with the roots /tee/ 'foot', /lei/ 'star' and /pen/ 'child'.
(8) UNBOUND BOUND /tee/ teete [teeDe] tetee [teDee] /lei/ leile [leire] lelei [lerei] /pen/ penpe [pembe] pepen [pevee~]The collective plural is formed according to the following schema:
(9) ROOT UNBOUND BOUND /CVX/ CVXkV CVkVXThis is demonstrated below with /tee/, /lei/ and /pen/.
(10) UNBOUND BOUND /tee/ teeke [tee3e] tekee [te3ee] /lei/ leike [lei3e] lekei [le3ei] /pen/ penke [peqge] peken [pe3ee~]
(11) CVXCV-XCVwhere 'X' is a cover symbol for vowel length, a glide, or /n/. This is demonstrated for the root /sunpa/ 'belly'.
(12) /sunpa/ -> sunpa-npa [sumbamba]As in 3.1., lengthening the final vowel gives the bound phase form:
(13) /sunpa/ -> sunpanpaa [sumbambaa].
(14) wa- 'first person' ku- 'second person' ne- 'third person'Note that there is no distinction in number for the possessor; that is, possession by a single first person is not marked differently on the noun from possession by a non-singular first person. Possessed nouns will always be bound in phase, since they are always definite in reference. Adding a possessive prefix to a CV root creates a disyllabic form which is inflected for number as shown above. This is illustrated below with the root /tu/ 'dog'.
(15) watuu 'my/our dog' wawatuu 'my/our dog:PAUC' watuwatuu 'my/our dogs:DIST' wakatuu 'my/our dogs:COLL'Go back to the introduction.