-ant: Difference between revisions

From Laenkea
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
m (Removed redundant {{Etymology}} template)
 
(4 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
==Riyan==
==Riyan==


===Etymology===
=== Etymology ===
From {{inh|ryn|ryn-o|-ant}}, a reanalysed suffix from an earlier compounding with the word {{m|ryn|skant|t=man}}. This term originally denoted a male agent, while {{m|ryn|-aor}} (from {{m|ryn|vjaor}}, "woman") denoted a female agent. However, the meaning began to shift after the Old Riyan period to refer to inanimate referents such as tools. Accommodating this, the {{m|ryn|-aor}} ending widened in scope to become amore general human agentive, losing its specific female connotation. It's thought this process was completed by around the 17th century, by which point ''-ant'' would have always been thought of as inanimate by Riyan speakers.
From {{inh|ryn|ryn-o|-ant}}, a reanalysed suffix from an earlier compounding with the word {{m|ryn|skant|t=man}}. This term originally denoted a male agent, while {{m|ryn|-aor}} (from {{m|ryn|vjaor}}, "woman") denoted a female agent. However, the meaning began to shift after the Old Riyan period to refer to inanimate referents such as tools. Accommodating this, the {{m|ryn|-aor}} ending widened in scope to become amore general human agentive, losing its specific female connotation. It's thought this process was completed by around the 17th century, by which point ''-ant'' would have always been thought of as inanimate by Riyan speakers.



Latest revision as of 14:22, 20 August 2024

Riyan

Etymology

From Old Riyan -ant, a reanalysed suffix from an earlier compounding with the word skant (“man”). This term originally denoted a male agent, while -aor (from vjaor, "woman") denoted a female agent. However, the meaning began to shift after the Old Riyan period to refer to inanimate referents such as tools. Accommodating this, the -aor ending widened in scope to become amore general human agentive, losing its specific female connotation. It's thought this process was completed by around the 17th century, by which point -ant would have always been thought of as inanimate by Riyan speakers.

Pronunciation

Suffix

-ant

  1. forms inanimate agent nouns
    șaond (“to write”) + -antșaonant (“typewriter”)

Derived terms