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Achumawi language

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Achumawi
ís siwa wó disi
Native toUnited States
RegionnortheastCalifornia
Ethnicity1,000Achumawi people
Extinct2013
Revival[1]
Hokan?
Language codes
ISO 639-3acv
Glottologachu1247
ELPAchumawi
Achumawi is classified as Extinct by theUNESCOAtlas of the World's Languages in Danger

TheAchumawi language(alsoAchomawiorPit River language) is theindigenous languagespoken by thePit River peoplein the northeast corner of present-dayCalifornia.The term Achumawi is an anglicization of the name of the Fall River band,ajúmmááwí,fromajúmmá"river". Originally there were nine bands, withdialectdifferences primarily between upriver (Atwamwi, Astariwawi; Kosalektawi, Hammawi, Hewisedawi dialects) and downriver (Madesiwi, Itsatawi, Ilmawi, and Achumawi (proper) dialects), demarcated by theBig Valley mountainseast of the Fall River valley.

Genetic relationships

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Together, Achumawi andAtsugewiare said to comprise thePalaihnihanlanguage familyseparate from the adjacent and relatedShastanfamily. The basis of this grouping is weakened by poor quality of data. David Olmsted's data dictionary[2]depends almost entirely upon de Angulo, and carelessly includesPomovocabulary from a manuscript in which he (de Angulo) set out to demonstrate that Achumawi and Pomo are not related.[3]William Bright[4]and Shirley Silver[5]questioned Olmsted's results and methods of reconstruction. Kroeber (1925:279) acknowledged that

there would have been almost as much justification for separating Atsugewi from Achomawi and erecting it into a separate family as for keeping Achomawi and Shasta apart, as ethnologists did for half a century. What lay at the bottom of this inconsistence was that the Atsugewi live in a region topographically tributary to the larger Achomawi habitat; that the two tribes were in close association and friendly; and that they followed very similar customs.

The phenomenon of non-reciprocal intelligibility[6][7]is a matter of bilingualism in the smaller and more dependent of two exogamous communities; Kroeber (1925:308) estimated that the Achumawi were ten times more numerous than the Atsugewi.[8]

Phonology

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Achumawi has 29 consonants. The stops and affricate (aside from the marginally contrastiveglottal stop) are in three series, plain, aspirated, andlaryngealizedorglottalized.Theaspiratedseries is contrastive only syllable-initially and probably derives historically from the voiceless-released first member of a consonant cluster, as in the neighboring and possibly relatedYana language.This is seen morphophonemically in e.g.it"I, me",itʰˑú"my, mine".[9]

Bilabial Alveolar Palato-
Alveolar
Velar Uvular Epiglottal Glottal
central lateral
Stop plain p t k q ʔ
aspirated tʃʰ
laryngealized tʃʼ
Fricative s ʜ h
Sonorant plain m n l j w
glottalized

The plain-aspirated distinction is neutralized and realized with voiceless release in syllable-final position and before another consonant; the aspirates are much more fortis than this voiceless release. Syllable-initial plain stops are voiceless (without voiceless release) after long vowel or when geminate (long), and voiced elsewhere. The laryngealized stops are similar in articulation to theejectiveglottalizedstops of neighboring languages, but morelenis,that is, not "popped" unless an unusual effort is made at articulating the distinction.[9]

The language has a 5-vowel system /i e a o u/. Two degrees of length are contrastive for both vowels and consonants. Long vowels are typically more peripheral and short vowels more centralized, phonetically [ɪ ɛ ʌ ə ʊ]. The mid vowels /e o/ are probably of secondary origin historically, as inYanaandAtsugewi.A short centralized vowel [ə ɨ] appears epenthetically between the consonants of certain prefixes, as inlhúpta"let's go!". Vowel length assimilates the next successive laryngeal state, that is, the secondmoraof a long vowel is devoiced before a plain or aspirated consonant (preaspiration) and word finally before silence, and islaryngealizedbefore a laryngealized consonant. In upriver dialects vowels and plain stops are more fully voiced. In downriver dialects, utterance-final syllables may be devoiced or whispered, especially under interrogative intonation.[9]A light syllable consists of a consonant and vowel (CV), and a heavy syllable either contains a long vowel (CVˑ) or is closed with a second consonant (CVC).

Unlike the neighboring and related languageAtsugewi,Achumawi has contrastive high and low tones.[9][10]

Morphology

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The Achumawi language does not have gender but it has two forms of the copula ( "to be" ) distinguishing animate and inanimate. The verb stem comprises one or more verb roots plus optional adverbial affixes. Inflectional affixes on verbs distinguish singular, dual, and plural number, and suffixes may optionally express severality and plurality of nouns. Many nouns and adjectives are derived from verb stems or participles, and some verb stems are formed by noun incorporation. The language has independent adjectives and numerals.[9][11]

Current status

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An elderly Ahjumawi Indian woman, ca. 1920

Today, the Achumawi language is extinct.[12]Out of an estimated 1500 Achumawi people remaining in northeastern California, perhaps ten spoke the language in 1991, with only eight in 2000. The last speaker died in 2013.

As of 2013, amobile appwas planned for the language.

Louise Davis, who lives in northern California, is almost tearful when she describes hearing people using the language of her Pit River tribe in conversation for the first time. It happened years ago when an older man from another part of the state met up with her grandmother.

It was such a powerful, emotional experience that Davis is driven to useflashcardsat home with her children and do whatever it takes to preserve the language.

“You can say things in our language that you can’t say in English,” she said.

Testing out a language app in February [2013], she said she couldn’t wait to see it being used among young people in the tribe.[13]

References

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  1. ^Times, The Martha's Vineyard (2023-05-31)."Edgartown linguist helping to restore indigenous Californian language".The Martha's Vineyard Times.Retrieved2024-08-31.
  2. ^Olmsted, David L. (1966).Achumawi dictionary.University of California Publications in Linguistics. Berkeley: University of California Press.
  3. ^Gursky, Karl-Heinz (1987). "Achumawi und Pomo, eine besondere Beziehung?".Abhandlungen der Völkerkundlichen Arbsgemeinschaft.57.
  4. ^Bright, William (1965). "Review ofA history of Palaihnihan phonologyby D. L. Olmsted ".Language.41(1): 175–178.doi:10.2307/411871.JSTOR411871.
  5. ^Silver, Shirley (1966). "A History of Palaihnihan Phonology. D. L. Olmsted".International Journal of American Linguistics.32(2): 210–212.doi:10.1086/464903.
  6. ^Olmsted, David L. (1954). "Achumawi-Atsugewi non-reciprocal intelligibility".International Journal of American Linguistics.20(3): 181–184.doi:10.1086/464275.S2CID144619581.
  7. ^Voegelin, Carl (1946). "Notes on Klamath-Modoc and Achumawi dialects".International Journal of American Linguistics.12(2): 96–101.doi:10.1086/463897.S2CID145332398.
  8. ^Kroeber, Alfred L. (1925).Handbook of the Indians of California.Bureau of American Ethnology, Bulletin No. 78. The Smithsonian Institution.
  9. ^abcdeNevin, Bruce (1998).Aspects of Pit River Phonology(PDF)(Ph.D.). The University of Pennsylvania.
  10. ^Mithun, Marianne (2001).The Languages of Native North America.Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 24.ISBN978-0-521-29875-9.
  11. ^de Angulo, Jaime; Freeland, L. S. (1930). "The Achumawi Language".International Journal of American Linguistics.6(2): 77–120.doi:10.1086/463788.JSTOR1263305.S2CID143822451.
  12. ^ Moseley, Christopher, ed. (2010).Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger.Memory of Peoples (3rd ed.). Paris: UNESCO Publishing.ISBN978-92-3-104096-2.Retrieved2015-04-11.
  13. ^"American Indian tribes turn to technology in race to save endangered languages".Washington Post.2013-04-17.Retrieved2013-04-19.[dead link]

Bibliography

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  • Bright, William.(1965). "[Review ofA history of Palaihnihan phonologyby D. L. Olmsted]. "Language,41(1), 175–178.
  • Bauman, James. 1980. Introduction to the Pit River language and culture. Anchorage, AK: National Bilingual Materials Development Center, University of Alaska.
  • Good, Jeff. (2004). "A sketch of Atsugewi phonology."Boston, Massachusetts.(Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Society for the Study of the Indigenous Languages of the Americas, January 8 – January 11).
  • Good, Jeff, Teresa McFarland, and Mary Paster. (2003). "Reconstructing Achumawi and Atsugewi: Proto-Palaihnihan revisited."Atlanta, Georgia.(Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Society for the Study of the Indigenous Languages of the Americas, January 2 – January 5).
  • Kroeber, Alfred L. 1925.Handbook of the Indians of California.Smithsonian Institution, Bureau of American Ethnology, Bulletin No. 78.
  • Mithun, Marianne.(1999).The Languages of Native North America.Cambridge:Cambridge University Press.ISBN0-521-23228-7(hbk);ISBN0-521-29875-X.
  • Nevin, Bruce E. (1991). "Obsolescence in Achumawi: Why Uldall Too?". Papers from the American Indian Languages Conferences, held at the University of California, Santa Cruz, July and August 1991. Occasional Papers on Linguistics 16:97–127. Department of Linguistics, Southern Illinois University at Carbondale.
  • Nevin, Bruce E. (1998).Aspects of Pit River phonology.Ph.D. dissertation, University of Pennsylvania, Department of Linguistics.
  • Nevin, Bruce E. (In review). "Why Proto-Palaihnihan is neither". 10.13140/RG.2.2.33917.20966.
  • Olmsted, David L. (1954). "Achumawi-Atsugewi non-reciprocal intelligibility."International Journal of American Linguistics,20,181–184.
  • Olmsted, David L. (1956). "Palaihnihan and Shasta I: Labial stops."Language,32(1), 73–77.
  • Olmsted, David L. (1957). "Palaihnihan and Shasta II: Apical stops."Language,33(2), 136–138.
  • Olmsted, David L. (1959). "Palaihnihan and Shasta III: Dorsal stops."Language,35(4), 637–644.
  • Olmsted, David L. (1964). "A history of Palaihnihan phonology."University of California Publications in Linguistics(Vol. 35).Berkeley:University of California Press.

Dictionaries

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  • Bauman, James. Ruby Miles, and Ike Leaf. Pit River Teaching Dictionary. Anchorage, AK: National Bilingual Materials Development Center, University of Alaska.
  • Olmsted, D. L. 1966. Achumawi dictionary. Berkeley: University of California Press.
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