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Reconstruction:Proto-Finnic/e-

    From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
    ThisProto-Finnic entry containsreconstructed terms and roots. As such, the term(s) in this entry are not directlyattested, but are hypothesized to have existed based oncomparative evidence.

    Proto-Finnic

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    Etymology

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    FromProto-Uralic*e- ~*ä- ~*a- (negative verb stem). Cognate withProto-Samic*i- (whenceNorthern Samiii). The imperative forms are from theProto-Uralic negative imperative verb stem*älä-.

    Verb

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    *e- (stem*e-)

    1. Thenegative verb,not

    Inflection

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    Used as an auxiliary verb; the main verb is then inflected in a special connegative form. The negative verb seems to only have inflected in indicative and imperative moods (with the former used for other moods).

    For the indicative mood, a separate past tense stem*es- existed, which survives only in Võro, Livonian and some Estonian dialects (e.g. Kodavere). In other descendants, the present forms are used instead with the connegative form replaced by the past active participle. Since a corresponding past tense negative verb stem can be found in many other Uralic languages, from Sámi to Samoyedic, a common root of *-(ń)ś- can be reconstructed.

    The imperative mood stem*älä- is suppletive; many descendants show partial levelling to*elä-.

    presentpastimperative
    1st sing.*en*esin
    2nd sing.*et*esit*äläk
    3rd sing.*epi
    *epä
    *esi*älägäsen
    1st plur.*ekmek
    *ekmäk
    *esimek
    *esimäk
    *älägätemek
    *älägätämäk
    2nd plur.*ektek
    *ektäk
    *esidek
    *esidäk
    *älägäte
    *älägätä
    3rd plur.*ebät
    *epi
    *esi*älägäsen

    Besides the listed forms, an active present participle form*epä can be reconstructed. It usually survives as a prefix or in further derived forms (such as the third-person plural), but seems to have become the standard third-person singular form in Livonian, Votic and some dialects of Estonian. The final-i in the other third-person singular forms probably originates from*epi (seemingly regularly shifted, if unstressed, from earlier*epä, compare*-pi and*-mpi), but has in the past also thought to come from the agent suffix*-ja.

    Derived terms

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    Descendants

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    The following entries are for the third-person singular indicative (present) form.

    Further reading

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    • Itkonen, Erkki, Kulonen, Ulla-Maija, editors (1992–2000),Suomen sanojen alkuperä [The Origin of Finnish Words]‎[1] (in Finnish) (online version; note: also includes other etymological sources; this source is labeled "SSA 1992–2000"), Helsinki: Institute for the Languages of Finland/Finnish Literature Society,→ISBN
    • ei”, in[ETY] Eesti etümoloogiasõnaraamat [Estonian Etymological Dictionary] (in Estonian) (online version), Tallinn: Eesti Keele Sihtasutus (Estonian Language Foundation),2012
    • Kallio, Petri (2020–), “*e-pä”, inYhteissuomalainen sanasto [Common Finnic Vocabulary]‎[2] (in Finnish)
    • Grünthal, Riho. 2022.Varhaisen metallikauden kielellisiä jälkiä Volgan yläjuoksulta itäiselle Suomenlahdelle - Monographs of the Archaeological Society of Finland; No. 10.
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