Athabaskan language family

Athabaskan language family
Athabaskan also spelled  Athabascan , or (in Canada)  Athapaskan , or  Athapascan 

      one of the largest North American Indian language (North American Indian languages) families, consisting of about 38 languages. Speakers of Athabaskan languages often use the same term for a language and its associated ethnic group (similar to the use of ‘English' for both a language and a people), typically naming these with some form of ‘person' or ‘human,' as with Navajo (Navajo language) diné. The Athabaskan family is a branch of the Athabaskan-Eyak subgroup of the Na-Dené language phylum (Na-Dené languages), which was named for the words for ‘person' in Tlingit and Athabaskan.

      The languages in this family are spoken in three discontinuous geographic regions: the Pacific Coast, the southwestern United States, and northwestern Canada and the Alaskan interior. The languages of the Pacific Coast subgroup were spoken in northern California and southern Oregon by peoples including the Hupa, Mattole, Kato, Tututni, Galice, and Tolowa. Of these, only two languages, Hupa and Tolowa, are still spoken. The southwestern United States is home to the Apachean subgroup, which includes Navajo (Navajo language) and the languages spoken by the Apache peoples. The Apachean languages are spoken mainly in Arizona and New Mexico. The languages spoken in the interior of Alaska and northwestern Canada include those of the Carrier, Dene Sų{lbelt}iné (formerly Chipewyan), Dogrib, and Slave peoples. Most Athabaskan languages are in danger of becoming extinct. The languages with the greatest number of speakers are currently Navajo, Western Apache, Slave, Dogrib, and Dene Sų{lbelt}iné.

      The Proto-Athabaskan Urheimat, or original homeland, is thought to have been a northern area with a watershed that drained into the Pacific Ocean, such as eastern Alaska or western Yukon. Three lines of evidence support this assumption. First, the kinds of words that can be reconstructed for Proto-Athabaskan (e.g., ‘mountain,' ‘snowshoe,' ‘travel by boat,' ‘caribou,' ‘loon,' ‘Chinook salmon') suggest familiarity with a northern landscape. Second, the other languages to which Athabaskan is related, Eyak and Tlingit, are also northern languages; they are spoken around the mouth of the Copper River in Alaska and the Alaska panhandle, respectively. Finally, some northern Athabaskan languages that are located adjacent to one another are linguistically very different; the deep differentiation of neighbouring languages suggests a long occupation of a territory.

      A variety of loanwords, almost all of them nouns, have entered Athabaskan languages. Some have been adopted from neighbouring indigenous languages. The Witsuwit'en (spoken in British Columbia) words kw'əsdəde ‘chair' and həda ‘moose' were borrowed from the Carrier kw'ətszda and the Sekani xəda, respectively. Gitksan, a Tsimshianic language spoken to the west, contributed xwts'a:n or pts'a:n (‘totem pole'), which became ts'an in Witsuwit'en. The Witsuwit'en ləmes ‘mass' is from the French la messe; məsin ‘copper' is from the English machine. All extant Athabaskan languages use some English loanwords. French terms are mostly limited to the northern subgroup and were perhaps transmitted through Chinook Jargon or from another Athabaskan language (Carrier, in the case of Witsuwit'en). Other Indo-European sources have included Russian (for the northern languages) and Spanish (for the Apachean languages).

      Athabaskan languages typically contain large inventories of consonants (consonant) (often 30 or more) and smaller inventories of vowels (vowel) (usually 5–7). Somewhat fewer than half of the languages have developed tonal contrasts from original syllable final glottalization; e.g., Proto-Athabaskan *te{lbelt}š{lbelt} ‘mat' > Tsek'ene tèl, where indicates an unattested form, {lbelt} represents glottalization, and [è] is a low-tone vowel. Nouns are classified by their number, shape, and animacy; for certain types of verbs these characteristics are reflected in the choice of verb stem. For example, Witsuwit'en verb stems include stəy ‘it (animate) lies'; stan ‘it (rigid) is (in position)'; sə{lbelt}coz ‘it (clothlike, flexible) is'; səqay ‘it (shallow container) is'; sə{lbelt}dzəγ ‘it (liquid) is'; sət{lbelt}εγ ‘it (mushy) is'; sə'ay ‘it (general 3-dimensional object, abstract, nonmaterial) is'; səle ‘it (ropelike),' or ‘they (nonhuman) are'; and sədzec ‘they (granular) are.'

      The formation of verb words is complex in Athabaskan languages. A single verb may contain many prefixes. Moreover, groups of verb prefixes with the same meaning may not necessarily be adjacent to each other in a verb word. For example, the Witsuwit'en verb wec'ontəzisyin' ‘I'm not going to pick berries' contains three prefix sequences: we-s-' negative (wec'ontəzisyin'), u-yin ‘pick berries' (wec'ontəzisyin'), and t-i- future (wec'ontəzisyin'), among other components. General syntactic characteristics of Athabaskan languages include subject-object-verb word order. For example, in the Tsek'ene sentence Sųs Alec dzidniiyòòt ‘The black bear scared Alec,' the noun sųs ‘black bear' is the subject, Alec is the object, and dzidniiyòòt ‘he/she/it scared him/her/it' is the verb. Wh- questions are often formed with in situ wh- question words—i.e., with the wh- word in the position expected of a corresponding noun or adverbial. For example, the Tsek'ene question Tlįį ma nàghìì'àdla? ‘Whom did the dog bite?” (tlįį ‘dog' + ma ‘whom' + nàghìì'àdla ‘he/she/it bit-wh') is related to the sentence Tlįį Alec nàghìì'àdl ‘The dog bit Alec.' Note that ma ‘whom' in the question occurs in the same position relative to subject and verb as does Alec in the corresponding sentence.

Sharon Hargus
 

* * *


Universalium. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно решить контрольную?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Athabaskan languages — Infobox Language family name=Athabaskan altname=Athabascan, Athapascan, Athapaskan region=Western North America familycolor=Dené Yeniseian fam2=Na Dené fam3=Athabaskan Eyak child1=Northern Athabaskan child2=Pacific Coast Athabaskan… …   Wikipedia

  • Athabaskan — Die athapaskischen oder athabaskischen Sprachen (kurz Athapaskisch oder Athabaskisch) sind eine im westlichen Nordamerika verbreitete Sprachfamilie. Die etwa 40 athapaskischen Sprachen werden in Alaska, dem Nordwesten Kanadas sowie im Südwesten… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • language — /lang gwij/, n. 1. a body of words and the systems for their use common to a people who are of the same community or nation, the same geographical area, or the same cultural tradition: the two languages of Belgium; a Bantu language; the French… …   Universalium

  • Athabaskan — n. family of Indian languages spoken by tribes in the western United States and southwestern Canada (includes Apache, Navajo, and Chipewyan) n. member of an Indian tribe that speaks an Athabaskan language …   English contemporary dictionary

  • Chilcotin language — Chilcotin Tŝinlhqut’in Spoken in Canada Region Chilcotin Country, Central Interior of British Columbia Ethnicity Chilcotin people …   Wikipedia

  • Hän language — Hän Häɬ goɬan Spoken in Canada, United States Region Yukon, Alaska Ethnicity Hän people …   Wikipedia

  • Northern Athabaskan languages — Northern Athabascan Ethnicity: Dene Geographic distribution: Alaska, Yukon Linguistic classification: Dené–Yeniseian Na Dené Athabaskan–Eyak …   Wikipedia

  • Pacific Coast Athabaskan languages — Pacific Coast Athabaskan is a geographic (and possibly genetic) grouping of the Athabaskan language family.California Athabaskan: 1. Hupa (a.k.a. Hoopa Chilula):: dialects:::* Hupa::* Chilula Whilkut::: Chilula::: Whilkut: 2. Mattole Bear River …   Wikipedia

  • Tsuut’ina language — Tsuut’ina (also Sarcee, Sarsi, Tsuu T’ina, Tsu T’ina) is a language spoken by Native Americans. It belongs to the Athabaskan language family, which also include the Navajo and Chiricahua of the south, and the Dene Suline and Tłįchǫ of the north.… …   Wikipedia

  • Tolowa language — The Tolowa (Taa Laa Wa) language (also called Smith River) is a member of the Pacific Coast subgroup of the Athabaskan language family. It is spoken in southern Oregon. There are only a handful of remaining fully fluent native speakers, like… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”