Dubitative mood (Eskimo)

In Eskimo–Aleut languages, the dubitaive mood (abbreviated DUB) is a verb form used for dependend adverbial clauses with the meaning 'whether'. The following example is from North Alaskan Inupiaq:[1]

taatna-tun qasruniq-mi   nutqaŋa+kmaŋaata   qiñiq+iaq+naq+tut
thatway-SIM.S   eddy-LOC.S stop+DUB.3P   see-go.to.V-should.be.Ved-IND.3P
|- |'You should go to see whether they [salmon] have stopped at the eddy like that.'

Due to the broader meaning of the term mood in the context of Eskimo grammar, the dubitative can be considered outside of the proper scope of grammatical mood. Also, its meaning is not related to that of the dubitative moods of non-Eskimo languages.

References

  1. Nagai 2006, pp. 97–98.

Bibliography


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