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Mono (/ˈmn/ MOH-noh) is a Native American language of the Numic group of Uto-Aztecan languages, the ancestral language of the Mono people. Mono consists of two dialects, Eastern and Western. The name "Monachi" is commonly used in reference to Western Mono and "Owens Valley Paiute" in reference to Eastern Mono.[2] In 1925, Alfred Kroeber estimated that Mono had 3,000 to 4,000 speakers. As of 2010 only about 40 elderly people spoke Mono as their first language.[2] It is classified as critically endangered by UNESCO.[3] It is spoken in the southern Sierra Nevada, the Mono Basin, and the Owens Valley of central-eastern California. Mono is most closely related to Northern Paiute; these two are classified as the Western group of the Numic branch of the Uto-Aztecan language family.[2][4]

Mono
Native toUnited States
RegionCalifornia
EthnicityMono and Owens Valley Paiute
Native speakers
(37 cited 1994)[1]
Language family
Uto-Aztecan
Language codes
ISO 639-3mnr
Glottologmono1275
ELPMono (United States)

Western Mono


Story in Mono recorded by the UCLA Phonetics Lab in 1984

The number of Native speakers in 1994 ranged from 37 to 41. The majority of speakers are from the Northfork Rancheria and the community of Auberry. The Big Sandy Rancheria and Dunlap have from 12 to 14 speakers.[1] The Northfork Mono are developing a dictionary, and both they and the Big Sandy Rancheria provide language classes. While not all are completely fluent, about 100 members of Northfork have "some command of the language."[5] In the late 1950s, Lamb compiled a dictionary and grammar of Northfork Mono.[6] The Western Mono language has a number of Spanish loanwords dating to the period of Spanish colonization of the Californias,[7] as well as loanwords from Yokuts and Miwok[8][9]


Owens Valley Paiute


In the mid-1990s, an estimated 50 people spoke the Owens Valley Paiute language, also known as Eastern Mono.[1] Informal language classes exist and singers keep native language songs alive.[5] Linguist Sydney Lamb studied this language in the 1950s and proposed the name Paviotso, but that was not widely adopted.[10] [11]


Phonemes


Below is given the phoneme inventory of Northfork Western Mono as presented by Lamb (1958).


Vowels


front back
unrounded rounded
High i y[lower-alpha 1] u
Non-High e a o
  1. Represented phonemically as /y/ by Lamb, but is described as being phonetically [ɨ] after front consonants and [ʉ] after back consonants.

Consonants


Bilabial Coronal Palatal Velar Uvular Glottal
plainlab. plainlab.
Nasal mn
Plosive ptkq[lower-alpha 1]ʔ
Affricate ts
Fricative sxh
Semivowel jw
  1. /k/ and /q/ are in semi-complementary distribution: /k/ occurs before /i/ and /e/, /q/ occurs before /o/ and /u/. They contrast only before /a/.

Suprasegmental


Lamb (1958) also described four suprasegmental features that he ascribed phonemic status.


Morphology


Mono is an agglutinative language, in which words use suffix complexes for a variety of purposes with several morphemes strung together.


See also



References


  1. Hinton, 30
  2. "Mono." Survey of California and Other Indian Languages, University of California, Berkeley. 2009-2010 (retrieved 6 May 2010)
  3. "UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in danger".
  4. Sheldon Klein. 1959. Comparative Mono-Kawaiisu. International Journal of American Linguistics. Vol. 25, No. 4 (Oct., 1959), pp. 233-238
  5. Hinton, 31
  6. Miller 101
  7. Paul V. Kroskrity and Gregory A. Reinhardt. 1985. On Spanish Loans in Western Mono International Journal of American Linguistics Vol. 51, No. 2 (Apr., 1985), pp. 231-237
  8. Loether, Christopher. 1998. "Yokuts and Miwok Loan Words in Western Mono" in The Life of Language: Papers in Linguistics in Honor of William Bright. Jane H. Hill, P. J. Mistry, Lyle Campbell (eds). Walter de Gruyter, 1998
  9. Loether, Christopher. 1993. "Nɨ-ɨ-mɨna Ahubiya: Western Mono Song Genres". Journal of California and Great Basin Anthropology Vol. 15, No. 1 (1993), pp. 48-57
  10. Miller, 98
  11. The Handbook of Indians of California, by A. L. Kroeber (1919) says that the Owens Valley Paiutes Are Northern Paiute or Mono/Bannock.

Sources



Further reading



Language revitalization





На других языках


- [en] Mono language (California)

[es] Idioma mono

El mono o monachi es una lengua uto-azteca hablada en los Estados Unidos por la tribu mono del centro-este de California y que en la actualidad está prácticamente extinta.

[fr] Mono (langue uto-aztèque)

Le mono est une langue uto-aztèque de la branche des langues numiques parlée aux États-Unis, en Californie dans la Sierra Nevada.

[ru] Моно (индейский язык)

Моно — индейский язык, относится к нумийской ветви юто-ацтекской семьи языков. Распространён в южной части гор Сьерра-Невада, в восточной Калифорнии. Наиболее близкородственен северному паюте, более отдалённо родственен языкам: шошоне, команче, тимбиша, уте.



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