Salishan languages
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- This article is about the Salish/Salishan language. For the Tacoma, Washington, neighborhood, see Salishan, Tacoma, Washington.
| Salishan | |
|---|---|
| Geographic distribution: |
Western Canada, Pacific Northwest of the United States |
| Genetic classification: |
Indigenous languages of the Americas |
| Subdivisions: | |
| ISO 639-2 and 639-5: | sal |
Pre-contact distribution of Salishan languages (in red). |
|
The Salishan (also Salish) languages are a group of languages of the Pacific Northwest (the Canadian province of British Columbia and the American states of Washington, Oregon, Idaho and Montana). They are characterised by agglutinativity and astonishing consonant clusters—for instance the Nuxálk word xłp̓x̣ʷłtłpłłskʷc̓ (IPA: [xɬpʼχʷɬtɬpɬːskʷʦʼ]) meaning "he had had a bunchberry plant" has 13 consonants in a row with no vowels.
The terms Salish and Salishan are used interchangeably by Salishan linguists and anthropologists. The name Salish is actually the endonym of the Flathead Nation. The name was later extended by linguists to refer to other related languages. Many languages do not have self-designations and instead have specific names for local dialects as the local group was more important culturally than larger tribal relations.
All Salishan languages which are not extinct are endangered—some extremely so with only three or four speakers left. Practically all languages only have speakers who are over sixty years of age, and many languages only have speakers over eighty. Salish is most commonly written using the International Phonetic Alphabet to account for the various vowels and consonants that do not exist in most modern alphabets.
Contents |
[edit] Family division
The Salishan language family consists of twenty-three languages. Below is a list of Salishan languages, dialects, and sub-dialects. This list is a linguistic classification that may not correspond to political divisions. Many Salishan groups consider their variety of speech to be a separate language rather than a dialect.
I. Bella Coola
- 1. Nuxálk (a.k.a. Bella Coola, Salmon River)
II. Coast Salish
- A. Central Coast Salish (a.k.a. Central Salish)
- 2. Comox
- 3. Halkomelem
- Island (a.k.a. Hulʼq̱ʼumiʼnumʼ, həl̕q̓əmín̓əm̓)
- Downriver (a.k.a. Hunqʼumʔiʔnumʔ)
- Upriver (a.k.a. Upper Sto:lo, Halqʼəméyləm)
- Chehalis (Canada)
- Chilliwack
- Tait
- Skway
- 4. Lushootseed (a.k.a. Puget Salish, Skagit-Nisqually, Dxʷləšúcid)
- Northern
- Southern
- Duwamish-Suquamish (a.k.a. Dxʷduʔabš)
- Puyallup (a.k.a. Spuyaləpubš)
- Nisqually (a.k.a. Sqʷaliʔabš)
- 5. Nooksack (a.k.a. Nooksack ɬə́čələsəm, ɬə́čælosəm) (†)
- 6. Pentlatch (a.k.a. Pənƛ̕áč) (†)
- 7. Sháshíshálh (a.k.a. Sechelt, Seshelt, Shashishalhem, šášíšáɬəm)
- 8. Sḵwxwú7mesh snichim (a.k.a. Squamish, Sqwxwu7mish, Sḵwx̱wú7mesh, sqʷx̣ʷúʔməš)
- i. Straits Salish group (a.k.a. Straits)
- 9. Klallam (a.k.a. Clallam, Nəxʷsƛ̕áy̓emúcən)
-
- Becher Bay
- Eastern
- Western
-
- 10. Northern Straits (a.k.a. Straits)
- 9. Klallam (a.k.a. Clallam, Nəxʷsƛ̕áy̓emúcən)
- 11. Twana (a.k.a. Skokomish, Sqʷuqʷúʔbəšq, Tuwáduqutšad) (†)
- B. Tsamosan (a.k.a. Olympic)
- i. Inland
- 12. Cowlitz (a.k.a. Lower Cowlitz, Sƛ̕púlmš) (†)
- 13. Upper Chehalis (a.k.a. Q̉ʷay̓áyiɬq̉) (†)
- ii. Maritime
- 14. Lower Chehalis (a.k.a. ɬəw̓ál̕məš) (†)
- 15. Quinault (a.k.a. Kʷínayɬ)
- i. Inland
- C. Tillamook
- 16. Tillamook (a.k.a. Hutyéyu) (†)
- Siletz
- Tillamook
- 16. Tillamook (a.k.a. Hutyéyu) (†)
III. Interior Salish
- A. Northern
- 17. Shuswap (a.k.a. Secwepemctsín, səxwəpməxcín)
- Eastern
- Kinbasket
- Shuswap Lake
- Western
- Canim Lake
- Chu Chua
- Deadman's Creek–Kamloops
- Fraser River
- Pavilion-Bonaparte
- Eastern
- 18. Stʼatʼimcets (a.k.a. Lillooet, Lilloet, St'át'imcets)
-
- Lillooet-Fountain
- Mount Currie–Douglas
-
- 19. Thompson River Salish (a.k.a. Nlakaʼpamux, Ntlakapmuk, nɬeʔkepmxcín, Thompson River, Thompson Salish, Thompson, known in frontier times as the Hakamaugh, Klackarpun, Couteau or Knife Indians)
-
- Lytton
- Nicola Valley
- Spuzzum–Boston Bar
- Thompson Canyon
-
- 17. Shuswap (a.k.a. Secwepemctsín, səxwəpməxcín)
- B. Southern
- 20. Coeur d’Alene (a.k.a. Snchitsuʼumshtsn, snčícuʔumšcn)
- 21. Columbian (a.k.a. Columbia, Nxaʔamxcín)
-
- Chelan
- Entiat
- Columbia-Moses
- Wenatchee (a.k.a. Pesquous)
-
- 22. Colville-Okanagan (a.k.a. Okanagan, Nsilxcín, Nsíylxcən, ta nukunaqínxcən)
- Northern
- Quilchena & Spaxomin [1]
- Head of the Lakes
- Penticton
- Similkameen
- Vernon
- Southern
- Lakes-Colville-Inchelium
- Methow
- San Poil–Nespelem
- Southern Okanogan
- Northern
- 23. Spokane-Kalispel-Flathead (a.k.a. Kalispel)
Pentlatch, Nooksack, Twana, Lower Chehalis, Upper Chehalis, Cowlitz, and Tillamook are now extinct. Additionally, the Lummi, Semiahmoo, Songhees, and Sooke dialects of Northern Straits are also extinct.
[edit] Genetic relations
No relationship to any other language is well established. The most plausible connection is with the language isolate Kutenai (Kootenai), which is generally considered not unlikely but not solidly established.
Edward Sapir suggested that the Salishan languages may be related to the Wakashan and Chimakuan languages in a hypothetical Mosan family. This proposal persists primarily due to Sapir's stature. There is little evidence for it and no progress has been made in reconstructing such a family.[citation needed]
The Salishan languages, principally Chehalis, contributed greatly to the vocabulary of the Chinook Jargon.
[edit] Family features
- post-velar harmony (more areal)
- presence of syllables without vowels
- grammatical reduplication
- nonconcatenation (infixes, metathesis, glottalization)
- tenselessness
- nounlessness (controversial)
| This section requires expansion. |
[edit] External links
- Bibliography of Materials on Salishan Languages (YDLI)
- University of Montana Occasional Papers in Linguistics (UMOPL) (Native languages of the Northwest)
- Coast Salish Culture: an Outline Bibliography
- Coast Salish Collections
- International Conference on Salish and Neighboring Languages
- The Salishan Studies List (Linguist List)
- Native Peoples, Plants & Animals: Halkomelem
- Saanich (Timothy Montler's site)
- Klallam (Timothy Montler's site)
- A Bibliography of Northwest Coast Linguistics
- Classification of the Salishan languages reflecting current scholarship
- Ethnologue classification for Salishan
- Nkwusm Salish Language Institute
- Tulalip Lushootseed Language Web Site
- Recordings of Montana Salish Wordlists with phonetic transcription by Peter Ladefoged
[edit] Bibliography
- Boas, Franz, et al. (1917). Folk-Tales of Salishan and Sahaptin Tribes. Memoirs of the American Folk-lore Society, 11. Lancaster, Pa: American Folk-Lore Society.
- Czaykowska-Higgins, Ewa; & Kinkade, M. Dale (Eds.). (1997). Salish languages and linguistics: Theoretical and descriptive perspectives. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. ISBN 3-11-015492-7.
- Flathead Culture Committee. (1981). Common Names of the Flathead Language. St. Ignatius, Mont: The Committee.
- Kroeber, Paul D. (1999). The Salish language family: Reconstructing syntax. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press in cooperation with the American Indian Studies Research Institute, Indiana University, Bloomington.
- Kuipers, Aert H. (2002).Salish Etymological Dictionary. Missoula, MT: Linguistics Laboratory, University of Montana. ISBN 1879763168
- Liedtke, Stefan. (1995). Wakashan, Salishan and Penutian and Wider Connections Cognate Sets. Linguistic data on diskette series, no. 09. Munchen: Lincom Europa,z\v1995.
- Pilling, James Constantine. (1893). Bibliography of the Salishan Languages. Washington: G.P.O..
- Pilling, James Constantine (2007). Bibliography of the Salishan Languages. Reprint by Gardners Books. ISBN 9781430469278
- Thompson, Laurence C. (1973). The northwest. In T. A. Sebeok (Ed.), Linguistics in North America (pp. 979-1045). Current trends in linguistics (Vol. 10). The Hague: Mouton.
- Thompson, Laurence C. (1979). Salishan and the northwest. In L. Campbell & M. Mithun (Eds.), The languages of native America: Historical and comparative assessment (pp. 692-765). Austin: University of Texas Press.

