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Nisenan (or alternatively, Neeshenam, Nishinam, Pujuni, or Wapumni) is a nearly extinct Maiduan language spoken by the Nisenan people of central California in the foothills of the Sierras, in the whole of the American, Bear and Yuba river drainages.

Nisenan
Southern Maidu
Native toUnited States
RegionCalifornia: Central California, scattered, foothills of the Sierras.
Extinct1980s[1]
Language family
Maiduan
  • Nisenan
Language codes
ISO 639-3nsz
Glottolognise1244
ELPNisenan
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Ethnologue states that there is only one speaker left. However, it is believed that there are a few other speakers left, although the number is not known. Most speakers also speak one or more of the different dialects.

There has recently been a small effort at language revival. Most notably the release of the "Nisenan Workbook" (three volumes so far) put out by Alan Wallace, which can be found at the California State Indian Museum in Sacramento and the Maidu Interpretive Center in Roseville.

As the Nisenan (like many of the Natives of central California) were not a unified nation but a collection of independent tribes which are grouped together primarily on linguistic similarity, there were many dialects to varying degrees of variation. This has led to some degree of inconsistency in the available linguistic data, primarily in regard to the phonemes.


Phonology


The phonology of Nisenan is similar to both Konkow and Maidu. Taking into account the various dialects, there appears to be a fair amount of allophones across the dialects.


Consonants


Bilabial Alveolar Palatal Velar Glottal
Nasal m n
Plosive voiceless p t k ʔ
ejective
implosive ɓ b ɗ d
Affricate ts ~ c
Fricative s ~ ʃ h
Approximant l j w

The single affricate consonant has been most commonly described as alveolar [ts], though some sources describe it as postalveolar [tʃ]. According to the Nisenan Workbook by Alan Wallace, [tʃ] and [ts] appear in complementary distribution. For example, the word for 'ten' is transcribed as 'maacam' (/c/ being realized as [tʃ]) in Workbook #1 and 'maatsam' in Workbook #2. Similar allophony occurs between [s] and [ʃ].

/pʼ tʼ kʼ/ have been listed as ejectives (lenis ejectives according to "Central Hill Nisenan Texts with Grammatical Sketch" by Andrew Eatough) while other sources have labeled them simply as emphatic not specifying further as to how they contrast with the plain plosives. The Nisenan Workbooks depict these in transcription, though the sound guides have yet to distinguish them from the plain plosives.

One source noted an audible click with /b/ and /d/ among some older speakers of at least one dialect of one of the Maiduan languages. The sound guides in the Nisenan Workbooks hold /b/ and /d/ as voiced plosives as in English.

Some words have a double consonant (i.e. wyttee [one], dappe [coyote], konna [girl]) but it has not been made clear as to whether this is due to gemination as the double consonants in Japanese, or just simply the same consonant being on the end of one syllable and the start of the next.


Vowels


All vowels come in long/short pairs

Front Central Back
Close i ɨ u
Mid e ə o
Open a

Long vowels are indicated by a doubling of the vowel.

/e/ is a bit lower, level with /ə/, somewhere between cardinal [e] and [ɛ]

/ɨ/ is sometimes further back, closer to cardinal [ɯ]

/u/ and /o/ are a bit lower and more centralized than the cardinal forms transcribed.


Numbers


Note: Due to dialectal variation from tribe to tribe, some sources may have different words. These are taken from the Nisenan Workbooks.

1 = wyttee
2 = peen
3 = sap'yj
4 = cyyj
5 = maawyk
6 = tymbo
7 = top'yj
8 = peencyyj
9 = peli'o
10 = maacam
11 = maacam na wyttee (lit. 10 and 1 or 10+1; 'na' = +/and)
12 = maacam na peen (etc. for 13 and up)
20 = peenmaacam (lit. 2 10 or 2x10)
30 = sap'yjmaacam (etc. for 40 and up)
100 = maawykhaapa

See also



References


  1. Nisenan at Ethnologue (24th ed., 2021)



Bibliography



На других языках


[de] Nisenan (Sprache)

Nisenan (oder auch Südliches Maidu, Neeshenam, Nishinam, Pujuni oder Wapumni) ist eine nahezu ausgestorbene Sprache der Maiduan-Sprachen innerhalb der Penuti-Sprachen. Sie wird bzw. wurde vom Volk der Nisenan (oder Südlichen Maidu usw. s. o.) in Zentralkalifornien in den Ausläufern der Sierra Nevada sowie in den Einzugsgebieten von American, Bear und Yuba River gesprochen.
- [en] Nisenan language

[fr] Nisenan

Le nisenan (de [nisenaːn] - de parmi nous, l'ethnonyme du peuple) est une langue amérindienne de la famille des langues maiduanes parlée aux États-Unis, dans le Nord de la Californie dans la région de la Sierra Nevada et de la vallée de Sacramento.

[ru] Южный майду

Южный майду (Neeshenam, Nisenan, Nishinam, Pujuni, Southern Maidu, Wapumni) — мёртвый индейский язык, на котором раньше говорил народ майду (нинесан), который проживает у подножия реки Сьеррас в штате Центральная Калифорния в США. Отличается от других майдуанских разновидностей. В настоящее время народ говорит на английском языке.



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