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The Makah language is the indigenous language spoken by the Makah. Makah has not been spoken as a first language since 2002, when its last fluent native speaker died. However, it survives as a second language, and the Makah tribe is attempting to revive the language, including through preschool classes.[3][4] The endonym for the Makah is qʷi·qʷi·diččaq.[5]

Makah
qʷi·qʷi·diččaq
Native toUnited States
RegionNorthwestern corner of the Olympic Peninsula of Washington state, on the south side of the Strait of Juan de Fuca
Ethnicity2,220 Makah (2000 census)[1]
Extinct2002, with the death of Ruth E. Claplanhoo[2]
Language family
Wakashan
  • Southern
    • Makah
Language codes
ISO 639-3myh
Glottologmaka1318
ELPMakah
Makah is classified as Critically 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.

The Makah reside in the northwestern corner of the Olympic Peninsula of Washington on the south side of the Strait of Juan de Fuca. It is closely related to Nuu-chah-nulth and Ditidaht, which are languages of the First Nations of the west coast of Vancouver Island on the north side of the strait, in the Canadian province of British Columbia. Makah is the only member of the Wakashan language family in the United States, with the other members spoken in British Columbia, from Vancouver Island to the Central Coast region.

Makah, Nuu-chah-nulth and Ditidaht belong to the Southern Nootkan branch of the Wakashan family. The Northern Wakashan languages, which are Kwak'wala, Heiltsuk-Oowekyala and Haisla, are spoken farther north, beyond the territory of the Nuu-chah-nulth.


Phonology


The phonemes (distinctive sounds) of Makah are presented below in the Makah alphabet; if the symbol in the native alphabet differs from the IPA symbol, the IPA equivalent will be given in brackets.[6]


Consonants


Labial Alveolar Post-
alveolar
Velar Uvular Glottal
plainsibilantlateral plainlabial plainlabial
Plosive/
Affricate
voiceless p t c [ts] ƛ [tɬ] č [tʃ] k q ʔ
ejective [pʼ] [tʼ] [tsʼ] ƛ̓ [tɬʼ] č̓ [tʃʼ] [kʼ] k̓ʷ [kʷʼ] [qʼ] q̓ʷ [qʷʼ]
voiced b d
Fricative s ł [ɬ] š [ʃ] x [χ] x̌ʷ [χʷ]
Approximant l y [j] w

Rare among the world's languages, Makah has no nasal phonemes, a trait it shares with the neighboring Quileute language.


Vowels


Vowel phonemes
Front Central Back
short long short long short long
Close ɪ ʊ
Mid ɛæːə ɔ
Open aː

There are five phonologically short vowels (written ⟨a e i o u and pronounced [ə], [ɛ], [ɪ], [ɔ], and [ʊ]) and five phonologically long vowels (written ⟨a· e· i· o· u·⟩ and pronounced [a], [æ], [i], [o], and [u]). There are also and six diphthongs (written ⟨ay oy ey iy aw uy⟩, pronounced [aj], [ɔj], [e], [iː], [aw], and [uːj]).


Morphology


"Like other Wakashan languages, Makah inflects verbs for evidentiality, indicating the level and source of the speaker's knowledge about a statement. Some examples are shown in the following table:[8]

Example Translation Evidential
hi·dawʔaƛwa·d "I hear he found it" -wa·t, hearsay
pu·pu·q̓adʔi "he's blowing a whistle" -q̓adi, auditory
č̓apaccaqil "It looks like a canoe" -caqił, uncertain visual evidence, as trying to make out something at a distance
haʔuk̓aƛpi·dic "I see you ate" -pi·t, inference from physical evidence
dudu·k̓aƛx̌a·š "He's probably singing" -x̌a·-š, inferred probability

Alongside those examples, compare corresponding sentences without the evidentials: hi·dawʔal, "he found it"; č̓apac̓, "it's a canoe"; haʔuk̓alic, "you're eating"; dudu·k̓al, "he's singing"."

The Makah word encodes much information; Davidson (2002) outlines the formal word structure below (pg. 160),[5]

base core suffixes aspect peripheral suffixes aspect clitic sequence
unextended word
expanded unextended word
extended word

The 'unextended word' consists of a root (the 'base'), lexical suffixes, and aspectual suffixes. It carries the 'dictionary meaning' of the word, while the clitics represent what can be thought of as 'inflections' for other grammatical categories.[5] The unextended word,[sentence fragment]

The 'expanded unextended' word is formed by the addition of a peripheral suffix, which can change the part of speech while and often contains an aspectual value. These suffixes 'cross-cut' the core/nuclear distinction.[5] The order of the clitic sequence is as follows:[5]

=Diminutive=Temporal=Causative=Possessive=Passive-Inverse=Tense=Mood=Pronominal=Habitual=3rd Person Plural=Responsive='again'

The modal-pronominal clitics are often combined, creating a separate set of pronominal clitics for each mood.[5] Makah marks for the indicative, purposive, quotative, subordinate, inferential, mirative, conditional, relative, content interrogative and polar interrogative moods.[5]


References


  1. Makah at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
  2. LOWLANDS-L archives - August 2002, week 4 (#10)
  3. Makah Language and the Makah Indian Tribe (Kweedishchaaht, Kweneecheeaht, Macaw, Classet, Klasset)
  4. "Our Language". Archived from the original on 2009-05-08. Retrieved 2007-04-27.
  5. Davidson, Matthew (2002). Studies in Southern Wakashan (Nootkan) Grammar. Ph.D. dissertation, SUNY Buffalo, p. 94, p. 161, p. 222, p. 169, p. 320, p. 256, p. 260
  6. The phoneme inventory and Makah alphabet are from pg. 422 of Renker and Gunther (1990) and from Makah Alphabet

Bibliography





На других языках


- [en] Makah language

[fr] Makah

Le makah (qʷi·qʷi·diččaq en makah) est une langue wakashane du Sud, parlée dans le Nord de l'État de Washington aux États-Unis, le long du détroit de Juan de Fuca.

[it] Lingua makah

La lingua makah è una lingua estinta di nativi americani parlata dal popolo Makah. La lingua non è più usata come madrelingua dal 2002, quando morì l'ultima persona che la parlava fluentemente. Tuttavia, sopravvive come seconda lingua, e la tribù Makah sta tentando di far rivivere la lingua, anche attraverso l'insegnamento nelle classi prescolari.[2][3] L'endonimo per Makah è qʷi·qʷi·diččaq.[4]

[ru] Маках

Маках (Kweedishchaaht, Kwe-Nee-Chee-Aht, Makah) — вымирающий индейский язык, который принадлежит вакашской языковой семье, на котором говорит народ маках, который проживает на северной вершине полуострова Олимпик, напротив острова Ванкувер, штата Вашингтон в США. В качестве родного языка маках является вымершим языком с 2002 года, когда умерла последняя коренная жительница, для которой он был таковым. Тем не менее, маках стремятся сохранить язык, изучая его в качестве второго после английского; на 2000 год насчитывалось 2200 человек, владеющих им.



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