A Grammar of Tamashek (Tuareg of Mali)

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260 5 Noun phrase structure

gazelle', a-saerol-annet 'his/her young ram', and a-kasbor-annasm 'your-FeSg

sparrow' (from a-lsemom, a-saerol, a-kaebor).

Possessor suffixes are added to the last element in the core NP, which

includes demonstratives. Any "adjectives" or other relative clauses follow

(249).

(249) a. t-a-s-avnas-t ta-di-dsY-annsem

Fe-Sg-Instr-veil-FeSg Fe-NearDist-Anaph-2FeSgPoss

dale-t

be.green-Partpl.FeSg

'that blue veil of yours' [K]

b. w-en-dcieY-in

Ma-Dist-Anaph-lSgPoss

'as concerns me' (lit. "those of mine") [K]

See also the predicate genitive construction of type 1-nin 'it is mine' in

§9.4.

NP's of the type 'mine' (= 'the one that belongs to me', Fr le mien) can be

formed by adding the postvocalic endings in (248) to the appropriate gender-

number form of a simple demonstrative, generally MaSg w-ά 'this' (MaPl w-i,

FeSg t-ά, FePl t-ί), as in most definite relative clauses. Thus w-a-nin 'mine',

w-a-nnaek 'yours-Ma', w-a-naewaen 'yours-MaPl', etc.

5.2.3 Inalienable possessive suffixes with certain kin terms

For the most part, the pronominal possessive suffixes in §5.2.2, just above, are

used with semantically inalienable as well as alienable nouns. They occur, for

example, with body-part nouns. Among kin terms, however, there are two

morphological patterns. Some nouns take the regular possessive suffixes.

Examples in (250).

(250) Kin Terms with Regular Pronominal Possessive Sufffix

gloss stem example

'mother' άηηα, anna anna-nin 'my...'

'father' abba, abba abbä-nin 'my...'

'FaSiSo' as-bdbas ae-babas-in 'my...'

Further kin terms of this regular type are ae-bdbas 'cross-cousin', a-jaeya

'great grandson', a-daeggal 'father- or son-in-law', and α-laggas 'brother-in-

law'. This is also the pattern for "kin" terms that are just special uses of

ordinary nouns in possessed form (e.g. 'child', 'man', 'woman').
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