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Jicarilla (Jicarilla Apache: Abáachi mizaa) is an Eastern Southern Athabaskan language spoken by the Jicarilla Apache.

Jicarilla
Abáachi mizaa
Native toUnited States
RegionNew Mexico
Ethnicity3,100 Jicarilla Apache (2007)[1]
Native speakers
510 (2015 census[citation needed])[1]
Language family
Dené–Yeniseian?
  • Na-Dene
Language codes
ISO 639-3apj
Glottologjica1244
ELPJicarilla Apache
Jicarilla Apache is classified as Severely Endangered by the UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger
This article contains IPA phonetic symbols. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters. For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA.

History


The traditional homelands of the Jicarilla Apache (Tinde) were located in the northeast and eastern regions of New Mexico. The Jicarilla Apache expanded over the Texas and Oklahoma panhandles and into the southeast section of Colorado and southwest corner of Kansas. The area supported the Jicarilla Apache with Plains Indian lifestyle. The tribe was divided among in this homeland by two clans: White Clan and Red Clan. The Jicarilla Apache went through multiple battles that led them to leave this homeland and were forced to relocate on a reservation in present day Dulce, NM.


Language revitalization


680 people reported their language as Jicarilla on the 2000 census.[2] However, Golla (2007) reported that there were about 300 first-language speakers and an equal or greater number of semi-speakers (out of a total ethnic population of 3,100);[1] the census figures therefore presumably include both fluent and semi-speakers. In 2003, the Jicarilla Apache Nation became the first Tribe in New Mexico to certify community members to teach a Native American language.[3] By 2012, revitalization efforts had included the compilation of a dictionary, classes, and seasonal camps for young people.[4][5][6][7]


Phonology




Consonants


Jicarilla has 34 consonants:

Labial Alveolar Palatal Velar Glottal
plainsibilantlateral plainlabial
Nasal m n
Stop voiced d
voiceless p t ts k ʔ
aspirated tsʰ tɬʰ tʃʰ kʷʰ
ejective tsʼ tɬʼ tʃʼ
Fricative voiceless s ɬ ʃ x h
voiced z ʒ ɣ ɣʷ
Approximant l j

Aspirated Stops

The consonant //, occurring in most other Athabaskan languages, only occurs alone in a few forms in Jicarilla and has mostly merged with //. This consequently has made most of the aspirated stops in Jicarilla velar.[8]


Fricatives and Approximants


Nasals


Syllabic /n/ in Jicarilla

The consonant /n/ can appear as a syllable and bear a high or low tone, but not a falling tone.[10] High-toned /ń/ actually represents an underlying syllable, /nÍ/.[10] There are four possible contours for Vowel-/n/ and /n/-/n/ combinations: Low-high, High-low, High-high, and Low-low. The contours are illustrated in the following table:[10]

Contour Vowel-/n/ Combination Gloss /n/-/n/ Combination Gloss
Low-High héenkés'' 'What time is it?' Nńde 'stand up'
High-low Ánł’íí 'You (sg.) are doing something, trying' ńnshé 'You sheared it'
High-high ’igo’áń 'hole' Ha’ńń 'whoever'
Low-low ‘ágonlaa 'You (sg.) made something' Bił nnzíí 'You got sleepy'

(Modified from Tuttle & Sandoval 2002, p. 109)

/n/ may occur between /t/, /ʔ/, or /n/ and any stem-initial consonant, but when /n/ occurs alone before a stem-initial consonant, it forms a syllable of its own.[11] When preceded by another prefix consonant, /n/ may or may not be judged to form a syllable by native speakers of Jicarilla.[11]


Vowels


Jicarilla has 16 vowels:

  Front Central Back
short long short long short long
Close oral i (ɪ)        
nasal ĩ (ɪ̃) ĩː (ɪ̃ː)        
Close-mid oral e     o (ʊ)
nasal ẽː     õ õː
Open oral     a (ə)    
nasal     ã ãː    

All vowels may be

The long high front oral vowel is phonetically higher than its nasal and short counterparts ([iː] vs. [ɪ, ɪ̃, ɪ̃ː]). The short back vowel is higher than its long and nasal counterparts ([ʊ] vs. [oː, õ, õː]). The short low vowel is higher than its long and nasal counterparts ([ə] vs. [aː, ã, ãː]).

Nasal vowels are indicated by underlining in the Jicarilla orthography.


Tone


Jicarilla has three different tones: high, low, and falling.

High tone is indicated with an acute accent. Low tone is unmarked. Falling tone is indicated by a sequence of acute-accented vowel and an unmarked vowel.


Syllables in Jicarilla



Syllable Structure

Syllables may be constructed as CV, CVC, or CV:C (C – Consonant; V – Vowel) depending on the morphology of a sequence. Onset may be any consonant, but coda consonants are limited to /ʔ/, /l/, /ɬ/, /ʃ/, /h/, /s/and /n/.[11]


Syllable Duration

A study of the durational effects of Jicarilla Apache show that morphology and prosody both affect and determine the durational realization of consonants and syllables.[12] It was found that in a recording of a passage read by native speakers stem, suffix, and particle syllables were found to be longer than prefix syllables, but there is not enough a distinction to see difference in duration.[12] Syllables at the end of phrases were lengthened differently from syllables lengthened because of stress; this is in regards to a ratio of onset lengthening to rhyme lengthening.[12] This study was only a beginning to analysis of Apachean language prosody.[12]


Morphophonology


The Athabaskan morphophonological process known as the "d-effect" occurs when 1st pl/dual iid- is prefixed to a verb stem. The following examples are taken from Phone, Olson and Martinez 2007: 39:

-iid-	+ classifier [ƚ] → [ƚ]		
ex. ‘óoƚkai’ (< /’o-iid-ƚ-kai’/) ‘we two count it’

-iid- + stem initial [ʔ] → [t’]		
ex. hit’aaƚ (< /hi-iid-‘aaƚ/) 'we two chew it’

-iid- + stem initial [m] → [h]		
ex. hiihmas (< /hi-iid-mas/) ‘we two are rolling’

-iid-	+ stem initial [n] → [h]	
ex. goohndé (< /go-iid-ndé/) 'we two shout’

-iid-	+ stem initial [y] → [d], [dz]		
ex. hiidá (< /hi-iid-yá/) ‘we two eat it’

-iid-	+ stem initial gh [ɣ] → [g]		
ex. hiigá (< /hi-iid-ghá/) ‘we two kill them’

-iid-	+ stem initial [z] → [dz]	
ex. naa’iidzii(< /naa-í-iid-zii/) 'we two work’

-iid-	+ stem initial [l] → [tƚ]		
ex. haatƚee (< /ha-iid-lee/) ‘we two pull it out with a rope’

-iid-	+ other consonant → ø (zero)	
ex. hiiká	(< /hi-iid-ká’/) ‘we two pound (a drum)’

Morphology



The verb template



Sample text


Excerpt from Wilson & Martine (1996: 125-126)
Abáchii miizaa English Translation
Shíí Rita shíízhii. Lósii’yé shii’deeshchíí shíí á’ee néésai. Shiika’éé na’iizii’íí nahiikéyaa’íí miiná’iisdzo’íí éí yaa shishíí. Shii’máá éí gé koghá’yé sidá nahaa daashishíí. Shiidádéé naakii. Dáłaa’é éí édii. Dáłaa’é éí dá aada’é miigha. Shiishdázha dáłánéé. Ałtso nada’iizii. Łe’ dá á’ee Lósii’ee daamigha. Isgwéela’yé naséyá, éí Lósii’ee naséyá dá áństs’íísédá. Łe’gó Santa Fe’yé dáłaa’é hai shee goslíí á’ee. Łe’gó Ináaso’yé éí kái’ii hai shee goslíí.... My name is Rita. I was born and grew up in Dulce. My father worked to take care of our land. My mother stayed home and took care of all of us. I had two sisters. One of them is deceased. The other lives far from here. I have many younger sisters. They all work. Some of them live in Dulce. When I was a youngster, I went to school in Dulce. Then I lived for a year in Santa Fe. Later I lived three years in Ignacio....

Jicarilla words of Spanish origin


The Jicarilla people have been in contact with Spanish-speaking and English-speaking peoples for a long time and have over time adopted loanwords that have influenced Jicarilla phonology.[13] Most of the sounds used to take in a loanword from Spanish are sounds in Jicarilla. Some sounds not occurring in Jicarilla phonology are changed into Jicarilla as follows:

*Or /l/ as in "béela" (from ‘pera’ ‘pear’)

*Or /ʔ/ as in "ga’ée" (from ‘café’ ‘coffee’) *Or /k/ as in "kéesda" (from ‘fiesta’ ‘party’)

Words of Spanish origin using /p/ in Jicarilla are the only instances where the /p/ or any other labial obstruent did not descend from a sonorant.

"Báayoo" (from ‘paño’ ‘scarf’)

"Bíił" (from ‘automóvil’ ‘automobile’)

"Bołdóon" (from ‘bulto’ ‘small haystack’)

"Gołjóon" (from ‘colchón’ ‘mattress’)

(Observations from entries in Pono, et al., p. 9-16)


See also



References


  1. Jicarilla at Ethnologue (19th ed., 2016)
  2. "Ethnologue report for language code: apj". Retrieved 2012-08-26.
  3. Diana Heil (2003-09-06). "License to Teach". Canku Ota (Many Paths) - An Online Newsletter Celebrating Native America. No. 95. Retrieved 2012-08-26.
  4. Mariann Skahan. ""You Can't Teach Kids from a Book": Seasonal Camps at the Jicarilla Apache Nation". Archived from the original on 2010-06-09. Retrieved 2012-08-26.
  5. Jicarilla Day Camp
  6. Wilhelmina Phone. Dictionary of Jicarilla Apache: Abáachi Mizaa Ilkee' Siijai. University of New Mexico Press. Retrieved 2012-08-26.
  7. Gonzales, Carolyn (2004-08-16). "Apache women linguists work to preserve Jicarilla language". Campus News, the University of New Mexico. 40 (1). Retrieved 2012-07-13.
  8. Tuttle & Sandoval, 2002, p. 106
  9. Tuttle & Sandoval, 2002, p. 108
  10. Tuttle & Sandoval, 2002, p. 109
  11. Tuttle & Sandoval, 2002, p. 110
  12. Tuttle, 2005, p. 342
  13. Pono, Vincenti, & Phone, 1976, p. 9-16

Bibliography





На других языках


- [en] Jicarilla language

[fr] Jicarilla

Le jicarilla est une langue athapascane, du groupe des langues apaches parlée au Nouveau-Mexique.

[it] Lingua jicarilla

La lingua jicarilla o Apache jicarilla, è una lingua athabaskana, del gruppo delle lingue apache, parlata nel Nuovo Messico (USA) dagli indiani Jicarilla, appartenenti alla nazione Apache.

[ru] Хикарильянский апаче

Хикарильянский апаче (Jicarilla Apache) — восточный южноатабаскский язык, на котором говорит народ апачей хикарилья, которые проживают на статистически обособленной местности Далси на севере штата Нью-Мексико в США. По состоянию на 2012 год, этот язык рассматривается как «серьёзно вымирающий».



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