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- Newsgroups: sci.lang
- Path: sparky!uunet!munnari.oz.au!titan!hal!jbm
- From: jbm@hal.trl.OZ.AU (Jacques Guy)
- Subject: Re: "n'ha" == "daughter of" ? Language?
- Message-ID: <1993Jan7.235358.14797@trl.oz.au>
- Sender: root@trl.oz.au (System PRIVILEGED Account)
- Organization: Telecom Research Labs, Melbourne, Australia
- References: <adamsd.725590369@crash.cts.com> <4490003@hpcc01.corp.hp.com>
- Date: Thu, 7 Jan 1993 23:53:58 GMT
- Lines: 15
-
- zornow@hpcc01.corp.hp.com (Claudia Zornow) writes:
-
-
- >The "n'ha" usage comes from Marion Zimmer Bradley's Darkover series
- >of science fiction novels. I don't know whether she made it up or
- >got it from some known language. She has a set of female characters
- >called Renunciates, or Free Amazons, who have made themselves
- >independent of the strictures normally imposed on women of Darkover,
- >and who change their names to show matrilineal descent.
-
- As someone remarked earlier on, suggesting that it might be of
- Celtic origin, there is in fact in Irish a preposition "na"
- which translates the genitive plural. So "x na y" is "x of the y's".
- Perhaps that is where Marion Zimmer Bradley drew her "n'ha" from,
- but it needs not be a conscious memory.
-