LING2009 Languages of the World 8

The Americas

1. Classification of native American languages

1.1 Traditional comparison (Sapir: 6 families)

            Eskimo-Aleut:  Yupik, Inuktitut... (Arctic regions)
            Algic:   Cree…  (Cental and Eastern Canada)
            Mosan:  Nootka, Salish… (Western Canada, Pacific northwest)
            Hokan-Siouxan: Lakhota… (Central USA)
            Aztec-Tanoan: Nahuatl… (South America)
            Na-Dené: Navajo...   (Southwest)

          1.2 Long-range comparison (Greenberg, Ruhlen, Starostin)

Greenberg (Language in the Americas, 1997): 3 families arriving in three separate migrations from Siberia to Alaska via Bering strait/land bridge:

[1]  Eskimo-Aleut (from 4-5000 BP)

[2]         Na-Dené  (from 6-7000 BP)
         /         |        \
? Haida  Tlingit  Athabaskan-Eyak
(isolate?)               /                 \
                     Athabaskan      Eyak (extinct c. 1992)
               (Navajo, Apache...)

[3] Amerind (from 12-14,000 BP or earlier):: all native American languages except Na-Dené and Eskimo-Aleut (!)
1.2.1 Evidence for the Amerind family
 
 Personal 
 pronouns:
 Sahaptin 
 (Oregon)
 Wintu
 (California)
 Pipil 
 (Mexico)
   1 n-    in   ni  nu- (noun prefix)
    2 m-    im   ma:  mu- (noun prefix)

Kinship terms: Proto-Amerind *T’A?NA ‘child, sibling’  (t’ = glottalic stop)
Compare Nootka  t’an’a  “child”, Tsimshian luk-taen “grandchild”,  Cheyenne tatan-  “older brother”, Coeur D'Alene tune “niece”, Miskito  tuk-ytan “child, boy”, “older brother”, Atoroi dan “baby, son”

1.2.2 Na-Dené: distant relationships with language families of Eurasia?

The  Dené-Caucasian hypothesis

                                Dené-Caucasian
            _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _|_______________
           |                     |                    |                    |
?N.Caucasian  ?Sino-Tibetan  Yeniseian    Na-Dené
                                                 (Ket)      (Navajo, etc)

 Evidence linking Ket (Siberia) with Athabaskan and Tlingit (Canada):

Basic vocabulary items   Ket     Tlingit
                   I                 ad        xad
                  he               du        du
                  it                bi < wi  bi < wi
                 go               qut/ka   gut/ka   (suppletive forms -- strong evidence for genetic relationship)
                people          de’ng    Lin    (as in Dené)

2. Typological diversity of native American languages

    tonal: Navajo, Mazatec
    polysynthetic: Mohawk, Yupik, Nootka
    ergative: Mayan languages

    SOV: Athabaskan languages  (Northwestern Canada, Southwestern USA)
    VSO, VOS: Wakashan languages (British Columbia), Mayan languages (Guatemala)
    OVS: Carib languages (e.g. Hixkaryana, Brazil)

Panare:   pi?  kokampö unkï?
             child washes  woman
          "The woman washes the child"

3. Native American languages today

3.1 North America

Eyak: extinct in 1990s (a possible missing link in Dené-Caucasian)
Catawba: extinct 1996 (last spoken by “Red Thundercloud”)
Yurok: < 10 speakers in California
Squamish: < 20 speakers in British Columbia, Canada
Cahuilla: c.20 speakers (Southern California; replaced by Apache in film Geronimo)
Lakhota: spoken on reservations in South Dakota (used in film Dances with Wolves)

3.2 Central America

Speakers of native American languages (1973 census):
    Mexico:  3.1 million (6.5%)
    Guatemala:  2.2 Million  (43%)

3.3. South America

    Quechua: 7 million speakers in Argentina, Bolivia, Ecuador, Peru
    Guarani: 3 million speakers; official language (with Spanish) in Paraguay; also spoken in Brazil, Argentina

3.4 Rescuing endangered languages:

4. Navajo

 Navajo 'nation': c. 200,000 including c. 100,000 Navajo speakers
 Navajo reservation land: 25,000 square miles in Southwestern states of USA: Arizona, New Mexico, Utah
 The Navajo call themselves Diné  ("The People", hence the term: Na-Dené)

Use as code by US army in World War II

Baker's Code Talker Paradox (2001): how can languages be so different that they can serve as unbreakable codes, yet so similar that they can encode the same information?

Navajo as an SOV language (like Japanese): postposition after noun

    [[ 'éé'        biih PP ]    náásdzá VP]
    clothing       into        I-got-back
    'I got back into (my) clothes'

Navajo as a head-marking language (unlike Japanese): possessive relationship marked on head noun

    [chidí    [bi-jáád]]                [[kuruma-no]  sharin]
     car        its-leg                     car - POSS  wheel
    'The wheel of a car'             'the wheel of a car'

Navajo songs (recorded at Canyon de Chelly, Arizona, 1975)

1. The potato song: Bilaga’ana Ni’masiitsoh [track 6]

    A white man planted some big potatoes
    When he saw the white blossoms he said 'Hallo, Jaani!'     (Ja'ani = Navajo person)

2. Moccasin song: a squaw dance about “a husband making pretty moccasins for his wife to go walking” [6]

3. Shi’naasha’ ("I Am Going"): composed when the Navajos were released from internment to return to their homeland in 1868 [6]

    Ho’zho’ni’  “beauty”

4. K’adnikini’ya’ “I’m leaving”: ceremonial song to close the last night of the Squaw Dance [6]

    Hozhon’go “beautiful, holy”

5. Bluebird song [9]

    Bluebird said to me, 'get up, my grandchild. It is dawn', it said to me.



3rd assignment for 4th tutorial: Hixkaryana and language typology (p.393-5) or Huave Morphology and Syntax (p. 396).
Answers due in class or tutorial on Nov. 29, tutorials from Tuesday Nov. 29-Monday Dec. 5.