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Weather verbs
cowan@marob.masa.com (John Cowan) sez:
> In article <1990Nov27.125756.1178@vax5.cit.cornell.edu> you write:
> >Does anyone know of a language or languages in which weather verbs
> >(rain,snow...) take "real" subjects.
> >
> >If there are such languages is there any correlation with a belief in weather
> >Gods?
In Turkish, "It's raining." is "G\"ok ya\ug\iyor.", which means "The
sky is raining.". "It's snowing." is "Kar ya\ug\iyor.", which means
"Snow is raining." A better translation for "ya\ug\iyor" is "is
precipitating", since the sentence "Ya\ugmur ya\ug\iyor." (literally
"Rain is raining.") also means "It's raining." I think hail and sleet
are also possible subjects.
Before the Turks converted to Islam (around 1500 I think), the main
deity was Te\ngri ("tanr\i" in modern Turkish, meaning "deity"), a sky
god.
Funny letters:
\"o o-umlaut pronounced as in German
\ug "soft g" almost silent, voiced velar fricative
sometimes just lengthens the preceding vowel.
\i dotless i high back unrounded vowel, occurs in some
varieties of Amer. "Yeucch!"
\ng ng as in "sing"
Stephen