7.3 Verb classes and irregular verbs 399
in the perfective. The subtype '(skin) dry' is therefore the "productive" pattern
among this smallish set of verbs.
All three verbs in (395) have medial ο in the perfectives. As indicated in
the parallel PerfP -sedobaen- 'marry' (§7.3.1.7), we seem to have a stem-wide
<L> melody here, with L combining with lexical u to give mid-height ο by
V-Height Compromise (§3.5.7).
The <L H> short imperfective melody for 'move out' (395), though valid
for only two of the verbs covered here, resembles the regular <L H> short
imperfective melody in other non-augment V-final verbs, including light
V-final verbs of the α/ι subclass (§7.3.1.3), heavy V-final verbs (§7.3.1.5), and
-u(C)Cu- verbs (§7.3.1.15).
In (396) I present parallel cases involving e instead of ο in the perfectives.
The basic form is -CiCu- with medial i. I know of no cases with
C,-Gemination. The two verbs in (396) have identical stem paradigms, except
for the variant short imperfectives for 'be balanced'.
(396) -CiCu- Stems with Medial e in Perfectives
'be in agony' 'be balanced'
-nisu- -misu-
a. perfective system
PerfP -senesa- -aemesa-
Reslt -aenesa- -aemesa-
PerfN -senesa- -jemesa-
b. short imperfective system
Shlmpf -aenas (/-senasi-/)
Imprt nas
c. long imperfective system
LoImpfP -t-anasa-
LoImpfN -t-snisi-
Prohib -t-senasa-
-semas (/-aemasi-/)
[variant -amis-]
mas
[variant mis]
-t-amasa-
-t-smisi-
-t-semasa-
d. nominalization
VblN a-nis a-mis
The e in the perfective is parallel to the ο of (395), and can be explained as
L plus lexical i plus V-Height Compromise. The usual short imperfective
melody is
There is a variant short imperfective
strong association of lexical i with imperfective