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Interrogative Pronouns

Use an Interrogative pronoun to ask a question about:

Interrogative Pronouns for Places

Observation
ᑖᓐ ᒋᒪᔅᒋᓯᓐ᙮ taan chimaschisin. Where is your shoe?

The interrogative pronoun ᑖᓐ taan is used for asking where something or someone is. It is used with a noun, or alone, and means ‘where?’.

ᑖᓐ ᒋᒪᔅᒋᓯᓐ᙮ taan chimaschisin. Where is your shoe?
ᑖᓐ taan. Where?

Like other pronouns, ᑖᓐ taan takes inflection:

Proximate Obviative
singular plural singular plural
Animate ᑖᓐ ᑖᓂᒌ ᑖᓂᔫᐦ ᑖᓂᔫᐦ
taan taanichii taaniyuuh taaniyuuh
Inanimate ᑖᓐ ᑖᓂᔫᐦ ᑖᓂᔫ ᑖᓂᔫᐦ
taan taaniyuuh taaniyuu taaniyuuh
ᑖᓂᐦᐄᐦ
taanihiih

Examples:

ᑖᓐ ᑰᑖᐹᓈᔅᒄ᙮ taan kuutaapaanaaskw. Where is your toboggan?
ᑖᓂᒌ ᑰᑖᐹᓈᔅᑯᒡ᙮ taanichii kuutaapaanaaskuch. Where are your toboggans?
ᑖᓂᔫᐦ ᐅᑖᐹᓇᔅᑯᐦ᙮ taaniyuuh utaapaanaskuh. Where is/are her toboggan/s?
ᑖᓂᔫᐦ / ᑖᓂᐦᐄᐦ ᒋᒪᔅᒋᓯᓐᐦ᙮ taaniyuuh chimaschisinh. Where are your shoes?
ᑖᓂᔫᐦ / ᑖᓂᐦᐄᐦ ᒋᒪᔅᒋᓯᓐᐦ᙮ taanihiih chimaschisinh. Where are your shoes?
ᑖᓂᔫ ᐅᒪᔅᒋᓯᓐ᙮ taaniyuu umaschisin. Where is his shoe?
ᑖᓂᔫᐦ ᐅᒪᔅᒋᓯᓐᐦ᙮ taaniyuuh umaschisinh. Where are his shoes?

For emphasis, the adverbial form ᑖᓂᑌᐦ taaniteh is used. It does not take inflection and is always used with a verb. [See demonstrative adverbials]:

ᑖᓂᑌᐦ ᐁ ᐃᐦᑕᑯᐦᐧᑳᐤᐦ ᒋᒪᔅᒋᓯᓐᐦ᙮ taaniteh e ihtakuhkwaauh chimaschisinh. Where are they, your shoes?

[See also the interrogative particle taan and the quantifier taan tahtw]