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Re: Observations on Ancient Greek Voice (LONG!)
- To: b-greek@virginia.edu
- Subject: Re: Observations on Ancient Greek Voice (LONG!)
- From: Rolf Furuli <furuli@online.no>
- Date: Wed, 28 May 1997 13:28:27 +0000
Dear Carl,
Thank you for your excellent discussion of reflexive/passive verbs.
A Scandinavian example: In old Norse the reflexive pronoun is "sik"
(equivalent to French "se" and German "sich"). We have the same
reflexive pronoun in Norwegian, written "seg". However, we also have a
passive form which is distinguished by the letter "s", and this "s"
can be traced back to the first letter of the old Norse reflexive
pronoun "sik"
Norwegian:
Active: Han vasker (= he cleans/is cleaning)
Reflexive: Han vasker seg (= he cleans/is cleaning himself)
Passive: Han vaskes (= he is being cleaned).
In Norwegian, therefore, a reflexive construction was original and it
evolved into a passive one.
Regards
Rolf
Rolf Furuli
Ph.D candidate in Semitic languages
University of Oslo
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