Lushootseed(/lʌˈʃuːtsiːd/luh-SHOOT-tseed),[3][a]historically known asPuget Salish, Puget Sound Salish,orSkagit-Nisqually,is a CentralCoast Salish languageof the Salishan language family. Lushootseed is the general name for thedialect continuumcomposed of two main dialects,Northern LushootseedandSouthern Lushootseed,which are further separated into smaller sub-dialects.
Lushootseed | |
---|---|
dxʷləšucid,txʷəlšucid,xʷəlšucid | |
Native to | United States |
Region | North WesternWashington,around thePuget Sound |
Ethnicity | Lushootseed-speaking peoples |
Extinct | 2008[1] |
Revival | 472 L2 speakers (2022)[2] |
Salishan
| |
Early form | |
Dialects | |
Latin(NAPA) | |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | Variously:lut – Lushootseedslh – Southern Lushootseed (covered by [lut])ska – Skagit (covered by [lut])sno – Snohomish (covered by [lut]) |
Glottolog | lush1251 |
ELP | Lushootseed |
Lushootseed is classified as Critically Endangered by theUNESCOAtlas of the World's Languages in Danger | |
Lushootseed was historically spoken across southern and westernPuget Soundroughly between modern-dayBellinghamandOlympiaby alarge number of Indigenous peoples,numbering 12,000 at its peak.[4][5]Today, however, it is primarily a ceremonial language, spoken for heritage or symbolic purposes, and there are about 472 second-language speakers.[2]It is classified as Critically Endangered by theUNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger[citation needed]and classified as Reawakening by Ethnologue.[6]Despite this, many Lushootseed-speaking tribes are attempting to revitalize their language in daily use, with several language programs and classes offered across the region.[7][8][9][10][11]
Name
editLushootseed has been historically known as Niskwalli/Nisqually, Puget Sound Salish, Puget Salish, Pugué, Squaxon,[6]Skagit, and Skagit-Nisqually.
The name of the language in Lushootseed is pronounced (and spelled) variably across different dialects. In the northern dialects, the language is calleddxʷləšucid.In most southern dialects, it istxʷəlšucid,whereas in the Muckleshoot dialect it is pronouncedxʷəlšucid.[citation needed]The southern pronunciationtxʷəlšucidis derived from the original by de-voicingdintotand switching the position oflandə.[12]
The English name "Lushootseed" is derived fromdxʷləšucid.The prefixdxʷ-along with the suffix-ucidmeans "language." The meaning of the root word,ləš,has been debated. According to linguist Thom Hess,ləšis an old word for "people," related to the word "Salish."[13]
Phonology
editLushootseed has a complex consonantal phonology and 4 vowel phonemes. Along with more commonvoicingandlabializationcontrasts, Lushootseed has a plain-glottalic contrast, which is realized aslaryngealizedwithsonorants,ejectivewith voiceless stops or fricatives.
Consonants
editLabial | Alveolar | (Alveolo-) palatal |
Velar | Uvular | Glottal | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
plain | sibilant | plain | lab. | plain | labio. | |||||
Stop | voiced | b | d | dz | dʒ | ɡ | ɡʷ | |||
voiceless | p | t | ts | tʃ | k | kʷ | q | qʷ | ʔ | |
ejective | pʼ | tʼ | tsʼ | tʃʼ | kʼ | kʷʼ | qʼ | qʷʼ | ||
lateral ejective | tɬʼ | |||||||||
Fricative | ɬ | s | ʃ | xʷ | χ | χʷ | h | |||
Approximant | plain | l | j | w | ||||||
laryngealized | l̰ | j̰ | w̰ |
Lushootseed has nophonemicnasals.However, the nasals[m],[m̰],[n],and[n̰]may appear in some speech styles and words as variants of/b/and/d/.[14]
Vowels
editFront | Central | Back | |
---|---|---|---|
High | i~e | u~o | |
Mid | ə | ||
Low | æ~ɑ |
Syntax
editThis sectionneeds additional citations forverification.(December 2023) |
Lushootseed can be considered a relativelyagglutinatinglanguage, given its high number of morphemes, including a large number of lexical suffixes. Word order is fairly flexible, although it is generally considered to beverb-subject-object(VSO).[17]
Lushootseed is capable of creating grammatically correct sentences that contain only a verb, with no subject or object. All information beyond the action is to be understood by context. This can be demonstrated inʔuʔəy’dub'[someone] managed to find [someone/something]'.[18]Sentences which contain no verb at all are also common, as Lushootseed has nocopula.An example of such a sentence isstab əw̓ə tiʔiɫ'What [is] that?'.[19]
Despite its general status as VSO, Lushootseed can be rearranged to be subject-verb-object (SVO) and verb-object-subject (VOS). Doing so does not modify the words themselves, but requires the particleʔəto mark the change. The exact nature of this particle is the subject of some debate.
Prepositions in Lushootseed are almost entirely handled by one word,ʔal,which can mean 'on, above, in, beside, around' among a number of potential other meanings. They come before the object they reference, much like in English. Examples of this can be found in the following phrases:
- stab əw̓ə tiʔiɫʔal tə stuləkʷ'What is thatin the river?'
- ʔuyayus ti dbadʔal tudiʔ'My father is workingover there.'
- šəqabac ʔal ti piit'On top of the bed.'
Pronouns
editLushootseed has four subject pronouns:čəd'I' (first-person singular),čəɬ'we' (first-person plural),čəxʷ'you' (second-person singular), andčələp'you' (second-person plural). It does not generally refer to the third person in any way.
First Person | Second Person | Third Person | |
---|---|---|---|
Singular | čəd | čəxʷ | ∅ |
Plural | čəɬ | čələp | ∅ |
The subject pronoun always comes in the second position in the sentence:
dxʷləbiʔčəxʷʔu'Are you Lummi?' xʷiʔčədlədxʷləbiʔ'I am not Lummi.'
Here, negation takes the first position, the subject pronoun takes the second, and 'Lummi' is pushed to the end of the sentence.[18]
Negation
editNegation in Lushootseed takes the form of an adverbxʷiʔ'no, none, nothing' which always comes at the beginning of the sentence that is to be negated. It is constructed in two possible ways, one for negatives of existence, and one for negatives of identity. If taking the form of a negative of identity, a procliticlə-must be added to the sentence on the next adverb. If there are no further adverbs in the sentence, the proclitic attaches to the head word of the predicate, as in the sentencexʷiʔ čəxʷ sixʷ ləbakʷɬ'Don't get hurt again'.[18]
Morphology and verbs
editThis sectionneeds additional citations forverification.(December 2023) |
Verb prefixes
editAlmost all instances of a verb in Lushootseed (excluding the zero copula) carry a prefix indicating theirtenseand/oraspect.Below is a (non-exhaustive) list of these prefixes, along with their meanings and applications.
Prefix | Usage |
---|---|
ʔəs- | Imperfective present |
lə- | Imperfective present |
ʔu- | Completed telic actions |
tu- | Past |
ɬu- | Future |
ƛ̕u- | Habitual |
gʷ(ə)- | Subjunctive/future |
The prefixʔəs-is one of the most common. It indicates an imperfective aspect-present tense (similar to English '-ing') for verbs that do not involve motion. More specifically, a verb may useʔəs-if it does not result in a change of position for its subject. It is commonly known as a "state of being":
ʔəsƛ̕ubil čəd.'I am feeling fine.' or 'I am in good health.'
If a verb does involve motion, theʔəs- prefix is replaced withlə-:
ləƛ̕a čəd ʔálʔal.'I'm going home.'
Completed ortelicactions use the prefixʔu-. Most verbs withoutʔəs- orlə-will useʔu-. Some verbs also exhibit a contrast in meaning betweenlə-andʔu-, and only one of them is correct:
ʔusaxʷəb čəxʷ.'You jump(ed).'
The verbsaxʷəbliterally means 'to jump, leap, or run, especially in a short burst of energy', and is correctly used withʔu-. In contrast, the verbtəlawil,which means 'to jump or run for an extended period of time', is used withlə-:
lətəlawil čəxʷ.'You are jumping.'
Possession
editThere are five possessive affixes, derived from the pronouns:
First Person | Second Person | Third Person | |
---|---|---|---|
Singular | d- | ad- | -s |
Plural | -čəɬ | -ləp | (none) |
The third person singular-sis considered marginal and does not work with an actual lexical possessor.
Related languages and current status
editLushootseed, like its neighborsTwana,Nooksack,Klallam,and theNorth Straits Salish languages,are in the Central Coast Salish subgroup of theSalishanfamily of languages.[20]The language is spoken by many peoples in thePuget Soundregion, including theDuwamish,Suquamish,Squaxin,Muckleshoot,Snoqualmie,Nisqually,andPuyallupin the south and theSnohomish,Stillaguamish,Upper Skagit,andSwinomishin the north.
Ethnologuequotes a source published in 1990 (and therefore presumably reflecting the situation in the late 1980s), according to which there were 60 fluent speakers of Lushootseed, evenly divided between the northern and southern dialects.[6]On the other hand, the Ethnologue list of United States languages also lists, alongside Lushootseed's 60 speakers, 100 speakers for Skagit, 107 for Southern Puget Sound Salish, and 10 for Snohomish (a dialect on the boundary between the northern and southern varieties).[6]Some sources given for these figures, however, go back to the 1970s when the language was less critically endangered. LinguistMarianne Mithunhas collected more recent data on the number of speakers of various Native American languages, and could document that by the end of the 1990s there were only a handful of elders left who spoke Lushootseed fluently. The language was extensively documented and studied by linguists with the aid of tribal elderVi Hilbert,d. 2008, who was the last speaker with a full native command of Lushootseed.[1]There are efforts at reviving the language, and instructional materials have been published.
In 2014, there were only five second-language speakers of Lushootseed. As of 2022, although there were not yet native speakers, there were approximately 472 second-language Lushootseed speakers, according to data collected by thePuyallup Tribe.By their definition, a "speaker" includes anyone who speaks in Lushootseed for at least an hour each day.[2]
Language revitalization
editAs of 2013[update],theTulalip Tribes' Lushootseed Language Department teaches classes in Lushootseed,[7][8]and its website has Lushootseed phrases with audio.[21]The Tulalip Montessori School also teaches Lushootseed to young children.[9]Tulalip Lushootseed language teachersalso teach at the Tulalip Early Learning Academy, Quil Ceda-Tulalip Elementary in the Marysville School District, Totem Middle School, and Marysville-Getchell, Marysville-Pilchuck and Heritage High Schools. Since 1996, the Tulalip Lushootseed Department has hosted the annualdxʷləšucid sʔəsqaləkʷ ʔə ti wiw̓suʔ,a summer language camp for children. Teachers also offer family classes in the evening every year, making Lushootseed a family experience.[citation needed]
Wa He Lut Indian Schoolteaches Lushootseed to Native elementary school children in their Native Language and Culture program.[citation needed]
As of 2013[update],an annual Lushootseed conference is held atSeattle University.[11]A course in Lushootseed language and literature has been offered atEvergreen State College.[22] Lushootseed has also been used as a part of environmental history courses atPacific Lutheran University.[1]It has been spoken during the annualTribal Canoe Journeysthat takes place throughout theSalish Sea.
There are also efforts within the Puyallup Tribe. Their website and social media, aimed at anyone interested in learning the language, are updated often.[10]
To facilitate the use of Lushootseed in electronic files, in 2008 the Tulaip Tribes contracted type designer Juliet Shen to createUnicode-compliant typefaces that met the needs of the language. Drawing upon traditional Lushootseed carvings and artwork, she developed two typefaces: Lushootseed School and Lushootseed Sulad.[23][24]
In the summer of 2016, the first ever adult immersion program in Lushootseed was offered at theUniversity of Washington's Tacoma campus.It was sponsored by The Puyallup Tribal Language Program in partnership with University of Washington Tacoma and its School of Interdisciplinary Arts and Sciences.[25]A similar program is scheduled to be offered in August 2019, with the instructors Danica Sterud Miller, Assistant Professor ofAmerican Indian Studiesat theUniversity of Washington Tacoma,and Zalmai Zahir, a PhD student oftheoretical linguisticsat theUniversity of Oregon.[26]
Dialects
editLushootseed consists of two main dialect groups,Northern Lushootseed(dxʷləšucid) andSouthern Lushootseed(txʷəlšucid~xʷəlšucid). Both of these dialects can then be broken down into subdialects:[27]
- Northern Lushootseed
- Southern Lushootseed
The Lower and Upper Skagit dialects have variously been categorized as being different from one another, or one in the same, but are both recognized as being distinct from the Sauk dialect.[13][27]There is no consensus on whether theSkykomish dialectshould be grouped into Northern or Southern Lushootseed.[27][28]
Dialects differ in several ways. Pronunciation between dialects is different. In Northern dialects, the stress of the word generally falls on the first non-schwa of the root, whereas in the Southern dialects, stress usually is placed on the penultimate syllable. Some words do not fit the pattern, but generally, pronunciation is consistent in those ways. Northern Lushootseed also was affected by progressive dissimilation targeting palatal fricatives and affricates, whereas Southern Lushootseed was not, leading to some words likečəgʷəš( "wife" ) being pronouncedčəgʷasin Northern dialects.[27]
Northern Lushootseed | Southern Lushootseed | English |
---|---|---|
bədáʔ | bə́dəʔ | child |
sc̓əlíč | sc̓ə́lič | backbone |
č̓ƛ̕áʔ | č̓ə́ƛ̕əʔ | rock |
dəč̓úʔ | də́čuʔ | one |
k̓ədáyu | k̓ádəyu | rat |
kʷədád | kʷə́dəd | take/hold something |
təyíl | táyil | go upstream |
ʔəcá | ʔə́cə | I, me |
Different dialects often use completely different words. For example, the word for "raccoon" isx̌aʔx̌əlusin Northern Lushootseed, whereasbəlupsis used in Southern Lushootseed.[27]
Morphology also differs between Northern and Southern Lushootseed. Northern Lushootseed and Southern Lushootseed have related, but different determiner systems. There are also several differences in utilizing the prefix for marking "place where" or "reason for," in subordinate clauses, with Northern Lushootseed usingdəxʷ-and Southern Lushootseed usingsxʷ-.[27]
SeeDeterminersfor more information on this dialectical variation.
Orthography
editAccording to work published by Vi Hilbert and other Lushootseed-language specialists, Lushootseed uses amorphophonemicwriting system meaning that it is aphonemic alphabetwhich does not change to reflect the pronunciation such as when an affix is introduced. The chart below is based on the Lushootseed Dictionary. Typographic variations such as⟨p'⟩and⟨pʼ⟩do not indicate phonemic distinctions. Capital letters are not used in Lushootseed.[29]
Some older works based on the Dictionary of Puget Salish distinguishes betweenschwasthat are part of the root word and those inserted through agglutination which are written in superscript.[30]
The Tulalip Tribes of Washington's Lushootseed Language Department created a display with nearly all the letters in the Lushootseedalphabet,sans the letter b̓, which is a rare sound which no words begin with.
Letter | Letter Name | IPA | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
ʔ | Glottal stop | /ʔ/ | |
a | /ɑ/ | ||
b | /b/ | ||
b̓ | Glottalized b | /bˀ/ | Rare, non-initial. Voiced bilabial stop with glottalized stricture[14] |
c | /t͡s/ | ||
c̓ | Glottalized c | /t͡sʼ/ | |
č | c-wedge | /t͡ʃ/ | |
č̓ | Glottalized c-wedge | /t͡ʃʼ/ | |
d | /d/ | ||
dᶻ | d-raised-z | /d͡z/ | |
ə | Schwa | /ə/ | |
g | /ɡ/ | ||
gʷ | g-raised-w | /ɡʷ/ | Labialized counterpart of/ɡ/ |
h | /h/ | ||
i | /i~e/[16] | Pronounced either as in the English "bee" or "bay."[31] | |
ǰ | j-wedge | /d͡ʒ/ | |
k | /k/ | ||
k̓ | Glottalized k | /kʼ/ | |
kʷ | k-raised-w | /kʷ/ | Labialized counterpart of/k/ |
k̓ʷ | Glottalized k-raised-w | /kʷʼ/ | Labialized counterpart of/kʼ/ |
l | /l/ | ||
l̓ | Glottalized/Strictured l | /l̰/ | |
ɫ/ɬ/ł | Barred/Belted l | /ɬ/ | Though they represent the same sound, all three variations of the letter are seen.[31][32][16] |
ƛ̓ | Glottalized barred-lambda | /t͜ɬʼ/ | |
m | /m/ | Rare due to phonetic evolution.[33] | |
m̓ | Glottalized/Strictured m | /m̰/ | Rare due to phonetic evolution.[33]Laryngealizedbilabial nasal |
n | /n/ | Rare due to phonetic evolution[33] | |
n̓ | Glottalized/Strictured n | /n̰/ | Rare due to phonetic evolution.[33]Laryngealized alveolar nasal |
p | /p/ | ||
p̓ | Glottalized p | /pʼ/ | |
q | /q/ | ||
q̓ | Glottalized q | /qʼ/ | |
qʷ | q-raised-w | /qʷ/ | Labialized counterpart of/q/ |
q̓ʷ | Glottalized q-raised-w | /qʷʼ/ | Labialized counterpart of/qʼ/ |
s | /s/ | ||
š | s-wedge | /ʃ/ | |
t | /t/ | ||
t̓ | Glottalized t | /tʼ/ | |
u | /u~o/[16] | Pronounced either as in the English "boot" or "boat."[31] | |
w | /w~ʋ/ | ||
w̓ | Glottalized/Strictured w | /w̰/ | Laryngealized high back roundedglide |
xʷ | x-w/x-raised-w | /xʷ/ | Labialized counterpart of/x/ |
x̌ | x-wedge | /χ/ | |
x̌ʷ | Rounded x-wedge | /χʷ/ | Labialized counterpart of/χ/ |
y | /j/ | ||
y̓ | Glottalized/Strictured y | /j̰/ | Laryngealized high front unrounded glide |
See theexternal linksbelow for resources.
Vocabulary
editThe Lushootseed language originates from the coastal region of Northwest Washington State and the Southwest coast of Canada. There are words in the Lushootseed language which are related to the environment and the fishing economy that surrounded the Salish tribes. The following tables show different words from different Lushootseed dialects relating to the salmon fishing and coastal economies.
Southern Lushootseed Salmonoid Vocabulary | |
---|---|
sčədadx | a word that covers all Pacific salmon and some species of trout. |
sac̓əb | Chinook or King |
c̓uwad | Sockeye salmon |
skʷǝxʷic | coho salmon |
ƛ̓xʷay̓ | chum salmon |
hədu | the pink salmon |
skʷawǝl̓ | Steelhead |
pədkʷəxʷic | coho season |
sc̓ay̓ay̓ | gills |
ɫičaʔa | nets |
ɫičaʔalikʷ | net fishing |
ʔalil tiʔiɫ ƛ̓usq̓íl | spawning season |
skʷǝɫt | tailfin |
t̓altəd | fillet knife |
sq̓ʷəlus | kippered dried salmon |
səlusqid | fish heads |
qəlx̌ | dried salmon eggs |
ƛ̓ǝbƛ̓əbqʷ | fresh eggs |
sɫuʔb | dried chum |
sxʷudᶻəʔdaliɫəd | fish with a large amount of body fat |
xʷšabus | Lightly smoked |
Northern Lushootseed/Snohomish Salmonoid Vocabulary[34] | |
---|---|
sʔuladxʷ | a word that covers all Pacific salmon and some species of trout. |
yubəč | Chinook or King |
scəqiʔ | sockeye salmon |
ƛ̓xʷayʔ | chum salmon |
skʷəxʷic | silver salmon |
Northern Lushootseed/Snohomish Aquatic Vocabulary[34] | |
---|---|
qal̓qaləx̌ič | orca/killer whale |
č(ə)xʷəluʔ | grey whale |
sq̓aƛ̓ | otter |
sup̓qs | harbor seal |
st̓əqxʷ | beaver |
sqibk̕ʷ | octopus |
ʔaləšək | turtle |
waq̓waq̓ | frog |
sk̕ʷic̕i | sea urchin |
təǰabac | sea cucumber |
q̓ʷəlačiʔ | star fish |
bəsqʷ | crab |
t̓aɬiɡʷs | rock cod |
p̓uay̓ | flounder |
kəlapx̌ʷəlč | jelly fish |
sʔax̌ʷuʔ | clam |
tulqʷ | mussel |
ƛ̓ux̌ʷƛ̓ux̌ʷ | native oyster |
c̕ubc̕ub | barnacle |
sx̌aʔaʔ | little neck steam clams |
xʷč̓iɬqs | large native oyster |
ɡʷidəq | geoduck |
stxʷub | butter clam |
sx̌əp̓ab | cockle clam |
haʔəc | horse clam |
č̓ič̓əlpyaqid/puʔps | periwinkle |
sč̓awəyʔ | any seashell |
ʔuk̕ʷs | large chiton |
x̌ald | small chiton |
Example text
editArticle 1 of theUniversal Declaration of Human Rightsin Lushootseed:
- ʔəsdiɬdiɬgʷəs ti sdᶻəw̓il ʔi ti staltalx̌ ʔə ti sbək̓ʷaʔkʷbixʷ tul̕ʔal ti sgʷəcs. ʔəstalx̌ əlgʷəʔ kʷi gʷəsx̌əčbids gʷəl ɬutabab ti bək̓ʷaʔkʷbixʷ x̌əɬ ti tə təɬ syəyaʔyaʔ.
Article 1 of theUniversal Declaration of Human Rightsin English:
- All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights. They are endowed with reason and conscience and should act towards one another in a spirit of brotherhood.
Notes
edit- ^Northern Lushootseed:dxʷləšucid
Southern Lushootseed:txʷəlšucid
MuckleshootandSnoqualmiedialects:xʷəlšucid
References
edit- ^abcBrown, Drew (2003)."History professor helps keep local Native American language alive".Scene - Life of the Mind, Pacific Lutheran University.Archived fromthe originalon 2007-07-04.Retrieved2013-04-04.
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- ^Seattle Channel (Nov 2022).Lushootseed, Seattle's original language(Video). YouTube.
- ^"About dxʷləšucid Lushootseed".Lushootseed.2014-12-05.Retrieved2022-11-28.
- ^"What is Lushootseed?".The Lushootseed Language.2016-06-07.Retrieved2022-11-28.
- ^abcd"Lushootseed".Ethnologue.SIL International.ISSN1946-9675.OCLC43349556.
- ^ab"Tulalip Lushootseed".Tualip Tribes.Retrieved2013-04-04.
- ^ab Fiege, Gale (2013-03-31)."For students, Tulalip Tribes' native language a connection to the past".HeraldNet.com.Everett, WA. Archived fromthe originalon 2013-06-30.Retrieved2013-04-04.
- ^abGauld, Ben (June 24, 2015)."Voices of Youth Keep Lushootseed Language Alive".94.9 FM - Seattle News & Information.Retrieved2015-10-03.
- ^ab"haʔł sləx̌il txʷəl gʷəlapu. ʔəsx̌id čəxʷ siʔiʔab. - Puyallup Tribal Language".
- ^ab"dxʷləšucid, Lushootseed Research".Retrieved2013-04-04.
- ^Zahir, Zalmai (2009). "Foreward".A Lushootseed Analysis of a 1877 Dictionary by George Gibbs.
- ^abHess, Thom, "Introduction",Lushootseed Reader with Introductory Grammar, vol I.
- ^abcBates, Dawn; Hess, Thom; Vi, Hilbert (1994).Lushootseed Dictionary.University of Washington Press.ISBN9780295973234.Retrieved15 April2017.
- ^abBeck, David."Words and prosodic phrasing in Lushootseed narrative*"(PDF).University of Toronto.Retrieved15 April2017.
- ^abcdZahir, Zalmai (December 2018).Elements of Lushootseed Grammar in Discourse Perspective(Thesis).Retrieved15 December2022.
- ^Bates, Dawn E; Hess, Thom; Hilbert, Vi (1994).Lushootseed dictionary.Seattle: University of Washington Press.ISBN0295973234.OCLC29877333.
- ^abcHess, Thom, 1936-2009. (1995).Lushootseed reader with introductory grammar.[Place of publication not identified]: Tulalip Tribes.ISBN1879763117.OCLC79169469.
{{cite book}}
:CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^Hess, Thom; Hilbert, Vi (1995).Lushootseed Grammar Book 1.Lushootseed Press. pp. 2–4. Archived fromthe originalon 2021-02-25.Retrieved2019-06-03.
- ^Kroeber, P. D. (1999).The Salish Language Familhy Reconstructing Syntax.University of Nebraska Press. p. 3.
- ^"Lushootseed".Tulalip Tribes.Retrieved2013-04-04.
- ^Lushootseed_Syllabus_06.pdf(PDF),retrieved2013-04-04
- ^Anderson, Hans (2020-06-20)."Lushootseed, the endangered oral language of the coast Salish peoples, gets its own font".KNKX Public Radio.Retrieved2023-03-07.
- ^Shen, Juliet (Autumn 2010)."Aesthetic Innovation in Indigenous Typefaces: Designing a Lushootseed Font".Glimpse | the Art + Science of Seeing(7).
- ^UWT to offer Lushootseed immersion program this summerArchived2016-04-17 at theWayback Machine,Puyallup Tribal News,April 7, 2016 (retrieved April 25, 2016)
- ^"LUSHOOTSEED LANGUAGE INSTITUTE".University of Washington Tacoma.
- ^abcdefgHess, Thom (1977)."Lushootseed Dialects".Anthropological Linguistics.19(9): 403–419 – via JSTOR.
- ^Hollenbeck, Jan L.; Moss, Madonna (1987).A Cultural Resource Overview: Prehistory, Ethnography and History: Mt. Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest.United States Forest Service. p. 162.OCLC892024380.
- ^Hayward, Amber (2021-05-19).Twulshootseed Advisory Notice(PDF)(Report). Tacoma, Washington: Puyallup Tribal Language Program.Retrieved2023-04-02.
- ^Bates, Dawn; Hess, Thom; Vi, Hilbert (1994).Lushootseed Dictionary(PDF).pp. xi.
- ^abc"sƛ̓əladiʔ – Alphabet/Sounds".Tulalip Lushootseed.27 December 2016.Retrieved27 April2022.
- ^"The Alphabet".Puyallup Tribal Language.Retrieved27 April2022.
- ^abcdKroeber, P. D. (1999).The Salish Language Familhy Reconstructing Syntax.University of Nebraska Press. p. 8.
- ^ab"tiʔiʔiɬ kʷi ʔišil aquatic".Lushootseed.Tulalip Tribes.2017-03-19.Retrieved2023-03-09.
Bibliography
edit- Hess, Thom (1995).Lushootseed Reader with Introductory Grammar.Vol. I. Dallas: Tulalip Tribes.ISBN1879763117.LCCN95-060060.
Language-learning materials
edit- Bates, D., Hess, T., &Hilbert, V.(1994).Lushootseed Dictionary.Seattle: University of Washington Press.ISBN9780295973234
- Beck, David. "Transitivity and causation in Lushootseed morphology." Working Papers of the Linguistics Circle 13 (1996): 11–20.
- Browner, Tara (2009).Music of the First Nations: Tradition and Innovation in Native North America.University of Illinois Press. pp. 35–36.
- Indiana University, Bloomington (1996).Lushootseed texts: an introduction to Puget Salish narrative aesthetics.Studies in the anthropology of North American Indians. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press in cooperation with the American Indian Studies Research Institute, Indiana University, Bloomington.ISBN0803212623.
- Chamberlain, Rebecca,Lushootseed Language & Literature: Program reader.(Lushootseed language, cultural, and storytelling traditions.)
- Hess, Thom (1995).Lushootseed reader.University of Montana occasional papers in linguistics. S.l.: Tulalip Tribes.ISBN1879763141.
- Hess, Thom and Vi Hilbert.Lushootseed Book 1; The language of the Skagit, Nisqually, and other tribes of Puget Sound. An Introduction.Lushootseed Press 1995
- Hess, Thom and Vi Hilbert.Lushootseed Book 2 (Advanced Lushootseed).Lushootseed Press, 1995
- Hess, Thom (1995).Lushootseed Reader with Introductory Grammar.Missoula: University of Montana.ISBN1879763117.
- Hilbert, Vi.Haboo: Native American Stories from Puget Sound.Seattle: University of Washington, 1985
- Hilbert, Vi, Crisca Bierwest, Thom Hess.Way of the Lushootseed People; Ceremonies & Traditions of North Puget Sound's First People.Third Edition, Lushootseed Press, 2001
- dxʷlešucid xʷgʷədgʷatəd tul̓ʔal taqʷšəblu; Some Lushootseed Vocabulary from taqʷšəblu.Lushootseed Press, 1993
External links
edit- Puyallup Tribal Language Program
- The Tulalip Lushootseed Department's Website
- Keyboards and fonts for typing in Lushootseed
- Interactive alphabet app through the Tulalip Lushootseed Department
- “History professor helps keep local Native American language alive”by Drew Brown for PLU Scene Magazine
- Lushootseed | Ethnologue
- The Lushootseed Peoples of Puget Sound Country
- Lushootseed Research
- Dr. David Beck, Salishan Language specialist
- Developing a corpus for Lushootseed(archived)