Siuslaw language
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Siuslaw Template:IPAc-en[2] was the language of the Siuslaw people and Lower Umpqua (Kuitsh) people of Oregon. It is also known as Lower UmpquaTemplate:Efn. The Siuslaw language had two dialects: Siuslaw proper (Šaayušƛa) and Lower Umpqua (Quuiič).[3]
Classification
Siuslaw is currently considered to be a language isolate.[4] It may be part of a Coast Oregon Penutian family together with Alsea and the Coosan languages, although the validity of this family is still controversial. Proponents of the disputed Penutian phylum usually include Siuslaw as part of it, together with the other Coast Oregon Penutian languages.[1]
Documentation
Published sources are by Leo J. Frachtenberg who collected data from a non-English-speaking native speaker of the Lower Umpqua dialect and her Alsean husband (who spoke it as a second language) during three months of fieldwork in 1911,[5][3][6] and by Dell Hymes who worked with four Siuslaw speakers in 1954.[7]
Further archived documentation consists of a 12-page vocabulary by James Owen Dorsey,[8] a wordlist of approximately 150 words taken by Melville Jacobs in 1935 in work with Lower Umpqua speaker Hank Johnson,[9] an audio recording of Siuslaw speaker Spencer Scott from 1941, hundreds of pages of notes from John Peabody Harrington in 1942 based on interviews with several native speakers,[10] and audio recordings of vocabulary by Morris Swadesh in 1953.
Phonology
Consonants
Cluster of stops/affricates + glottal stop are realized as ejective consonants: [[[:Template:IPAlink]], Template:IPAlink, Template:IPAlink, Template:IPAlink, Template:IPAlink, Template:IPAlink].
Vowels
Vowels are noted as /i æ a u ə o/.[7]
Notes
References
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- ↑ a b Script error: No such module "Citation/CS1".
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- ↑ a b Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
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- ↑ Frachtenberg, Leo. (1914). Lower Umpqua texts and notes on the Kusan dialect. In Columbia University contributions to Anthropology (Vol. 4, pp. 151–150).
- ↑ Frachtenberg, Leo. (1922). Siuslawan (Lower Umpqua). In Handbook of American Indian languages (Vol. 2, pp. 431–629).
- ↑ a b Hymes, Dell. (1966). Some points of Siuslaw phonology. International Journal of American Linguistics, 32, 328-342.
- ↑ Dorsey, James Owen. (1884). [Siuslaw vocabulary, with sketch map showing villages, and incomplete key giving village names October 27, 1884]. Smithsonian Institution National Anthropological Archives.[1]
- ↑ Melville Jacobs papers, 1918-1978, University of Washington Special Collections, Seattle WA.
- ↑ Harrington, John P. 1942. "Alsea, SIuslaw, Coos, Southwest Oregon Athapaskan: Vocabularies, Linguistic Notes, Ethnographic and Historical Notes." John Peabody Harrington Papers, Alaska/Northwest Coast. National Anthropological Archives, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC.
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External links
Template:Penutian languages Template:Language families Template:Languages of Oregon Template:North American languages
- Pages with script errors
- Language articles with unreferenced extinction date
- Coast Oregon Penutian languages
- Language isolates of North America
- Indigenous languages of the Pacific Northwest Coast
- Penutian languages
- Indigenous languages of Oregon
- Extinct languages of North America
- Languages extinct in the 1970s
- 1970s disestablishments in Oregon