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Re: CHAT: History of «ir»

From:Mark J. Reed <markjreed@...>
Date:Tuesday, July 3, 2007, 22:20
...and Italian andare.  And there's Latin "Quo vadis?", but I don't
remember the dictionary forms of that verb.  Nor does the
v-stem+andare stuff explain the Iberian infinitive form...

On 7/3/07, Mark J. Reed <markjreed@...> wrote:
> ... And I just remembered that French «aller» has similar forms mixed > into the same tense, with singular v- vs. plural all-. So the verb > conflation must date to sometime before the Franco-Spanish linguistic > split... > > On 7/3/07, Mark J. Reed <markjreed@...> wrote: > > This should probably be tagged differently, but I don't know with > > what. The question concerns the historical development of a natlang. > > Specifically Spanish. How did the verb «ir» develop? The usual Latin > > root for "go" seems to have become «andar», while the everyday word > > comes elsewhence and arrives in an odd set of forms. Was there a > > merger, like with English "go" and "wend"? Did the present tense come > > from some verb which, had its infinitive survived, would now be > > *«var»? > > > > This question occurred to me while I was trying to > > remember/reconstruct the polite imperative for «dar», since the two > > verbs have several parallel forms. (Though *«daya» is not one of > > them). The other thing that occurred to me is that > > _The_Dar_Imperative_ would be a good name for a science fiction > > thriller. And/or a rock band. > > > > -- > > Mark J. Reed <markjreed@...> > > > > > -- > Mark J. Reed <markjreed@...> >
-- Mark J. Reed <markjreed@...>

Reply

Elliott Lash <erelion12@...>History of «ir»