File:AndrewBlackbirdHistoryGrammarP120.JPG|right|300px|thumb|Printed text with columns of English words and corresponding Ottawa terms. Page from Andrew Blackbird's 19th-century
History of the Ottawa and Chippewa Indians of Michigan, which includes a grammatical description of the Ottawa and Southwestern Ojibwe (Chippewa) dialects of Ojibwe. Retrieved April 12, 2009, from History of the Ottawa and Chippewa Indians of Michigan: A grammar of their language, and personal and family history of the author. Ottawa shares the general grammatical characteristics of the other dialects of
Ojibwe. Word classes include
nouns,
verbs,
grammatical particles,
pronouns,
preverbs, and
prenouns. Ottawa
grammatical gender classifies nouns as either animate or inanimate. Transitive verbs encode the gender of the
grammatical object, and
intransitive verbs encode the gender of the
grammatical subject, creating a set of four verb subclasses. The distinction between the two genders also affects verbs through
agreement patterns for number and gender. Similarly,
demonstrative pronouns agree in gender with the noun they refer to.
Morphology Ottawa has complex systems of both
inflectional and
derivational morphology. Inflectional morphology has a central role in Ottawa grammar. Noun inflection and verb inflection indicate grammatical information through prefixes and suffixes that are added to word stems. Notable grammatical characteristics marked with inflectional prefixes and suffixes include: • A distinction between
obviative and
proximate third person, marked on both verbs and nouns. • Extensive marking on verbs of inflectional information concerning
person. •
Number (singular and plural). •
Tense. •
Modality. •
Evidentiality. •
Negation. Prefixes mark grammatical person on verbs, including first person, second person, and third person. Nouns use combinations of prefixes and suffixes to indicate
possession. Suffixes on nouns mark
gender,
location,
diminutive,
pejorative, and other categories. Significant agreement patterns between nouns and verbs involve gender,
singular and plural number, as well as obviation. Ottawa derivational morphology forms basic
word stems with combinations of word
roots (also called
initials), and
affixes referred to as
medials and
finals to create words to which inflectional prefixes and suffixes are added. Word stems are combined with other word stems to create
compound words. Innovations in Ottawa morphology contribute to differentiating Ottawa from other dialects of Ojibwe. These differences include: the reanalysis of person prefixes and word stems; a distinctive form for the verbal suffix indicating doubt; and a distinctive form for the verbal suffix indicating plurality on
intransitive verbs with grammatically inanimate subjects. The most significant of the morphological innovations that characterize Ottawa is the restructuring of the three person prefixes that occur on both nouns and verbs. The prefixes carry grammatical information about grammatical person (first, second, or third). Syncope modifies the pronunciation of the prefixes by deleting the short vowel in each prefix. The third-person prefix , which occurs with both nouns and verbs, is completely eliminated in Ottawa. As a result, there is no grammatical marker to indicate third-person on inflected forms of nouns or verbs. For example, where other dialects have 'a canoe' with no person prefix, and 'his/her canoe' with prefix
o-, Ottawa has meaning either 'canoe' or 'his/her canoe' (with no prefix, because of syncope). Apart from the simple deletion of vowels in the prefixes, Ottawa has created new variants for each prefix. Restructuring of the person prefixes is discussed in detail in
Ottawa morphology.
Syntax Syntax refers to patterns for combining
words and
phrases to make
clauses and
sentences. Verbal and nominal inflectional morphology are central to Ottawa syntax, as they mark grammatical information on verbs and nouns to a greater extent than in English (which has few inflections, and relies mainly on word order). Preferred
word orders in a simple
transitive sentence are verb-initial, such as
verb–object–subject (VOS) and
VSO. While verb-final orders are avoided, all logically possible orders are attested. Ottawa word order displays considerably more freedom than is found in languages such as English, and word order frequently reflects
discourse-based distinctions such as
topic and
focus. Verbs are marked for grammatical information in three distinct sets of inflectional paradigms, called
Verb orders. Each order corresponds generally to one of three main sentence types: the Independent order is used in
main clauses, the Conjunct order in
subordinate clauses, and the Imperative order in
commands. Ottawa distinguishes
yes–no questions, which use a verb form in the Independent order, from content questions formed with the Ottawa equivalents of
what, where, when, who and others, which require verbs inflected in the Conjunct order. Ottawa distinguishes two types of grammatical
third person in sentences, marked on both verbs and animate nouns. The
proximate form indicates a more salient noun phrase, and
obviative indicates a less prominent noun phrase. Selection and use of proximate or obviative forms is a distinctive aspect of Ottawa syntax that indicates the relative discourse prominence of noun phrases containing third persons; it does not have a direct analogue in English grammar. ==Vocabulary==