A Grammar of Madurese

(singke) #1

Morphophonemic processes 49


environments. For example, it is possible to find the following forms with the
iterative suffix (64).


(64) nɔɔp + ɛ  [nɔɔpi] ~ [nɔɔpɛ] ‘cover’


ɲɛmprɔ + ɛ  [ɲɛmprɔi] ~ [ɲɛmprɔɛ‘spray’


ɔbɤ + ɛ  ɔbɤi] ~ ɔbɤɛ ‘give medicine to’


For other speakers, this aspiration never occurs, so the forms in (63) surface
rather than those in (65).


(65) nɔɔp + a  [nɔɔpa] ‘open (irr.)’


nɔlak + a  [nɔlaka] ‘refuse (irr.)’
sɛmprɔ + an  [sɛmprɔan] ‘spray’


maka + ɛ  [makaɛ] ‘leave often’


maək + ɛ  [maəkkɛ ‘strike repeatedly’


Gemination. Two suffixes induce gemination of a stem-final consonant. The
benefactive/causative suffix -aki, underlying /ak/, copies the final consonant


of the stem as the onset of the first syllable of the suffix. This is illustrated in
(66).^33


(66) -aki


ɛrra ‘clear’ [nɛrraaki] ‘explain’


jakɛn ‘sure’ akɛnnaki] ‘convince’
kapɤr ‘news’ apɤrrɤki] ‘spread the news’


ɛrɛm ‘send’ [ɛrɛmmaki] ‘send for’


nɔlɛs ‘write’ [nɔlɛssaki] ‘write for’


ɲɛmprɔ ‘spray’ [ɲɛmprɔɤki] ‘spray for’


nakəp ‘catch’ [nakəppɤki] ‘catch for’


Note that the derivatives of [ɲɛmprɔt] ‘spray’ and [nakəp] ‘catch’ trigger the
aspiration of the stem-final voiceless stop, which creates the environment for a


(^33) The fully derived forms in (66) are all verbs in the Actor Voice. The result of affixa-
tion of -aki is always a transitive verb form, canonically represented in Actor Voice. In
the last four cases in (66), -aki is affixed to a transitive verb stem, which is already
presented in Actor Voice form and thus occur with the nasal prefix. For the first three
forms, [ɛrra] ‘clear’, [jakɛn] ‘sure’, and [kapɤr] ‘news’, which are not transitive
verbs, the Actor Voice nasal prefix is added as part of the derivation of the causative
forms.

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