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Difference between revisions of "Talk:The Akan verb kɔ"

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Between the INGR for ingressive and EGR for egressive glossing of '''kɔ''', the lexical semantics of '''kɔ''' suggests an 'exiting' from the action than 'entering' into the action. I therefore think along the same lines as the contributor Mary Esther Dakubu.
 
Between the INGR for ingressive and EGR for egressive glossing of '''kɔ''', the lexical semantics of '''kɔ''' suggests an 'exiting' from the action than 'entering' into the action. I therefore think along the same lines as the contributor Mary Esther Dakubu.
  
I was wondering whether these are all the meanings associated with the use of '''kɔ''' in Akan? The reason is that '''kɔ''' can also occur in verbal compound constructions such as '''Yɛ didikɔ'''meaning we keep on eating and '''Yaw kikakɔ''' meaning Yaw keeps saying,where it does not just indicate directionality but intensity and continuity of the action?
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I was wondering whether these are all the meanings associated with the use of '''kɔ''' in Akan? The reason is that '''kɔ''' can also occur in verbal compound constructions such as '''Yɛ didikɔ''' meaning we keep on eating and '''Yaw kikakɔ''' meaning Yaw keeps saying,where it does not just indicate directionality but intensity and continuity of the action?
  
 
Secondly, I see that '''kɔ''', apart from occuring in simplex sentences as the main verb or head, it can also occur as an adjunct. For example '''bɔkɔ''' meaning '''play away''' and '''dɔkɔ''' meaning '''weed away'''.
 
Secondly, I see that '''kɔ''', apart from occuring in simplex sentences as the main verb or head, it can also occur as an adjunct. For example '''bɔkɔ''' meaning '''play away''' and '''dɔkɔ''' meaning '''weed away'''.
  
  
There are also some nominalised constructions in which '''kɔ''' occurs and the meaning it elicits is associated with an idiomatic use. An example is '''Nana no kɔakuraa''' meaning the chief is dead.
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There are also some nominalised constructions in which '''kɔ''' occurs and the meaning it elicits can be described as euphemism associated with an idiomatic use. An example is '''Nana no kɔakuraa''' literally meaning the chief is gone to the village but euphemistically means the chief is dead.

Revision as of 21:19, 22 May 2011

I think the in the cases where it occurs before the main verb and after the subject should be glossed EGR for egressive, parallelling ba INGR ingressive. In the other cases where it follows another verb it is undoubtedly an independent verb in a serial construction. (Mary Esther Dakubu)

The term sɛnkuo is used in Akan to refer to all stringed instruments(chordophones) including the piano and keyboad. sɛnkuo could therefore be used to refer to a sanza!(John Ganaah)

Between the INGR for ingressive and EGR for egressive glossing of , the lexical semantics of suggests an 'exiting' from the action than 'entering' into the action. I therefore think along the same lines as the contributor Mary Esther Dakubu.

I was wondering whether these are all the meanings associated with the use of in Akan? The reason is that can also occur in verbal compound constructions such as Yɛ didikɔ meaning we keep on eating and Yaw kikakɔ meaning Yaw keeps saying,where it does not just indicate directionality but intensity and continuity of the action?

Secondly, I see that , apart from occuring in simplex sentences as the main verb or head, it can also occur as an adjunct. For example bɔkɔ meaning play away and dɔkɔ meaning weed away.


There are also some nominalised constructions in which occurs and the meaning it elicits can be described as euphemism associated with an idiomatic use. An example is Nana no kɔakuraa literally meaning the chief is gone to the village but euphemistically means the chief is dead.