pah-
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slot# 3 2 1
morpheme p- -a- -h-
gloss 1S.AN.AG PRES 3S.INAN.PAT
There is a set of causatives and desideratives that go in slots 4-5 (i.e., further to the left) and look something like this:
desiderative prefix: i-
causative: Cë-, where C is the relevant person affix of the new instigatory subject
ipahtos 'I want to look at it'.
tëpahtos 'You make me look at it'.
I'm thinking that I want to be able to 'refocus' my desiderative, in a similar way to the causative, so that the desiring is no longer being done by the original subject. This is done by adding the relevant person affix in slot 5:
tipahtos 'You want me to look at it'.
I'm then thinking that I want to be able to 'retense' these forms, so that the causation and the desiring do not have to occur in the same time frame as the original action. So far tense is being indicated in slot 2 of the prefix (the 'a' of pah-), with a simple 3-way distinction (a present, i future, u past).
The problem is I can't take this approach, because the same infixes already have different roles in slot 4. -i-, obviously, is signifying the desiderative already, whilst in this slot -a- signifies a progressive, and -u- a prohibitive. So I'm currently plumping for the creation of a new slot before this one, with the same patterns as slot 2, which would enable forms like:
tuipahtos 'You wanted me to look at it'.
I can't help but feel though that this is an unlikely strategy, since I was already planning on some two-way combinations of desiderative, prohibitive and progressive being possible indicated in much the same way. For instance, in that scheme, the above example could mean 'You must not want me to look at it.' (A bit obscure, I know, but better examples could be found). With the two slots 4 and 5 being right next to each other and both using exactly the same three infixes, it feels wrong to assign them completely different values. I could just change the infixes, but phonotactically I'm running out of options; I think it might be even weirder to have two sets of infixes for the same roles, just in different slots; and I've been trying to keep the actual number of infixes used as low as possible (plus I've simplified matters for this post: most other vowels have roles in these slots too). I could of course make all the infixes longer than a single phoneme and thus easier to distinguish from one another, but I'm trying to create something fairly concise...
My question: does anyone have any insights into how polypersonal systems handle causatives and desideratives and the like - are they often refocused and retensed in this way, and do they run into any similar issues? Where might I be best to look for some inspiration/help?