Jump to content

b-

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

Ahtna

[edit]

Alternative forms

[edit]

Etymology

[edit]

Compare Navajo bi-, Western Apache bi-.

Prefix

[edit]

b-

  1. marks a third person possessor; his/her/their
    b- + ‎-taʼ (father) → ‎utaʼ (his/her/their father)
    b- + ‎-adae (older sister) → ‎badae (his/her/their older sister(s))
  2. marks a third person object of a postposition
    b- + ‎-e (against) → ‎be (against him/her/them)
    b- + ‎-kʼe (on) → ‎ukʼe (on him/her/them)

Usage notes

[edit]
  • Takes the form u- before a consonant

See also

[edit]
Ahtna possessive/prepositional object prefixes
singular plural
1st person s- ne-
2nd person ne- nhw-
3rd person b-, y- ku-, hw-
Reflexive de- hde-
Indefinite cʼe-
Areal (postpositional only) ko-
Reciprocal nił-

References

[edit]
  • Kari, James (1990), Ahtna Athabaskan Dictionary, Fairbanks, Alaska: Alaska Native Language Center, →ISBN, page 35

Middle English

[edit]

Prefix

[edit]

b-

  1. (in certain words) alternative form of bi-

Old Irish

[edit]

Prefix

[edit]

b- (class A infixed pronoun)

  1. you (plural object pronoun)
    no- + ·tá (there is) + ‎b- → ‎nob·tá (there is to you, i.e. you have)

Derived terms

[edit]

See also

[edit]
Old Irish affixed pronouns
See Appendix:Old Irish affixed pronouns for details on how these forms are used.
Note that the so-called “infixed” pronouns are technically prefixes, but they are never the first prefix in a verbal complex.
person infixed suffixed
class A class B class C
1 sg m-L dom-L, dam-L -um
2 sg t-L dot-L, dat-L, dut-L, dit-L -ut
3 sg m a-N, e-N d-N id-N, did-N, d-N -i, -it
3 sg f s-(N) da- -us
3 sg n a-L, e-L d-L id-L, did-L, d-L -i, -it
1 pl n- don-, dun-, dan- -unn
2 pl b- dob-, dub-, dab- -uib
3 pl s-(N) da- -us

L means this form triggers lenition.
N means this form triggers nasalization (eclipsis)
(N) means this form triggers nasalization in some texts but not in others.