Klallam GrammarMain MenuKlallam GrammarAlphabet and SoundsBasicsGrammarIntroduction: How to Use This Grammar1 Transitive and Intransitive Verbs2 Past and Future Tense3 Basic Speech Acts4 Nouns and Articles5 Possessive Pronouns6 Adjectives7 Object Pronouns8 The Preposition and Word Order9 Negative Words10 More Negative Words11 Self and Each Other12 Questions: ‘Who?’ and ‘What?’13 Subordinate Subjects in Questions14 Questions: ‘Whose?’15 Focus Pronouns and Answering Questions16 Comparison17 Conjunction: ‘And/with,’ ‘but/without,’ and ‘or’18 Questions: ‘When?’19 Time Expressions20 More Time Expressions21 Time Prefixes22 Questions: ‘Where?’23 Some Place Expressions24 Source, Way, and Destination25 Serial Verbs26 Questions: ‘How?’ and ‘How much?’27 While Clauses28 Adverbial Expressions29 Intensifier Auxiliaries30 Conditional Clauses31 Passive Sentences and Shifting Vowels32 Lexical Suffixes33 Collective Plural34 Possessed Verbs35 So Then ...36 Reporting Verbs and Direct Quotes37 Indirect Quotes38 Questions: ‘Why?’39 Because40 Cause41 Speech Act Particles42 The Actual: To Be Continuing43 State, Result, and Duration44 Participant Roles and Middle Voice45 Recipient, Beneficiary, and Source Objects46 Reflexive, Noncontrol Middle, and Contingent47 Activity Suffixes48 Relative Clauses49 Verbal Prefixes50 Movement and Development Suffixes51 Nominalizing Prefixes52 Adverbial Prefixes53 More Demonstrative Articles54 Objects of Intent, Emotion, Direction, and Success55 More Reduplication Patterns56 Interjections57 Rare Suffixes58 A Fully Annotated Text59 Texts to Annotate60 ConclusionAppendicesKlallam DictionaryKlallam-English and English-Klallam sections onlyMontler, et al.1985d2520fc8efde4c2f92342f62d9a941749101
44.3. Middle with just one participant
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►1Compare these models with those in §44.1 and §44.2. ►2All of the middle forms in §44.1 and §44.2 imply two participants. The notion ‘wash,’ for example, necessarily implies that there are two things—one doing the washing and the other getting washed. ►3Each of the middle forms in the models here in §44.3 implies just one participant. The notion ‘walk,’ for example, is complete with just one person alone walking. ►4There are over two hundred verbs like this in Klallam. What they have in common is that they involve a quality or an action of the whole, single participant. ►5A two‑participant root like c̓áʔkʷ ‘wash’ in §44.1 and §44.2 can usually stand alone as a verb. In contrast, the roots of these one‑participant middles can never stand alone as verbs. ►6You can find these roots in other words without the ‑əŋ middle suffix. For example, cícɬ ‘high’ is related to cíɬəŋ ‘stand up.’ But *cíɬ by itself is not a word at all. ►7There are some nouns that can be made into one‑participant middles. For example, qʷúʔ ‘water’ becomes a one‑participant verb with the addition of the middle: qʷúʔəŋ ‘carry/fetch water.’ ►8It is possible to add another participant to these basically one‑participant verbs. To do this you must use a causative (see §40). For example, štə́ŋ ‘walk’ gets another participant with štəŋístxʷ ‘cause to walk,’ as in štəŋístxʷ cn cə sqáx̣aʔ ‘I walked the dog.’ ►9These one‑participant middles do not work like the two‑participant middles. So, for example, štə́ŋ cn ʔaʔ cə sqáx̣aʔ can only mean ‘I walked to the dog.’ It cannot mean ‘I did some walking of the dog’ or ‘I walked the dog (as usual).’ Go back to §44.2 and compare this to the two‑participant middles. ►10While most one‑participant middles refer to actions, there are many that refer to qualities, including most words referring to the sense of taste. Here are a few of them: c̓áq̓ʷəŋ ‘rotten’; c̓íxʷəŋ ‘chilly’; čúxʷəŋ ‘sour’; č̓íx̣əŋ ‘bitter’; č̓úsəŋ ‘repellent, disgusting’; ɬat̓íq̓əŋ ‘hot’; ɬákʷəŋ ‘tasteless’; ƛ̓áɬəŋ ‘salty’; pícəŋ ‘smooth, slippery’; sáqʷəŋ ‘sweet.’ ►11See Appendix H for an extended list of one‑participant middles.