Pite Sámi or Arjeplog Sámi (bidumsámegiella, Swedish: pitesamiska, Norwegian: pitesamisk) is a Sámi language traditionally spoken in Sweden and Norway. It is a critically endangered language[2] that has only about 25–50[1] native speakers left and is now only spoken on the Swedish side of the border along the Pite River in the north of Arjeplog and Arvidsjaur and in the mountainous areas of the Arjeplog municipality.
Pite Saami is classified as Critically Endangered by the UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger
Classification
Pite Sámi is a part of the Western Sámi group, together with Southern Sámi and Ume Sámi to the south, Lule Sámi and Northern Sámi to the north. Of these, Pite Sámi shows closest affinity to Lule Sámi, but a number of features also show similarity to Ume and Southern Sámi.
Phonology
Consonants
The Pite Sámi consonant inventory is very similar to that found in neighbouring Lule Sámi, but lacks contrastive voicing of stops and affricates entirely.
Pite Sámi consonants
Labial
Dental
Alveolar
Palatal
Velar
Nasal
m
n
ɲ
ŋ
Plosive / Affricate
p
t
t͡s
t͡ʃ
k
Fricative
voiceless
f
s
ʃ
h
voiced
v
(ð)
Semivowel
j
Lateral
l
Trill
r
Stops before a homorganic nasal (pre-stopped nasals) are realised as unreleased stops.
/v/ is realised as a labiodental fricative [v] in the syllable onset (before a vowel), and as bilabial [w] in the syllable coda (in a consonant cluster).
/ð/ is present only in the language of some elderly speakers. It is otherwise replaced by /r/ or /t/, depending on dialect.
Vowels
The Pite Sámi vowel inventory has a relative lack of phonemic diphthongs, compared to other Sámi languages and particularly neighbouring Lule Sámi. Instead, there are more vowel height distinctions.
The close vowels /i/ and /u/ are realized as laxer [ɪ] and [ʊ] respectively, in unstressed positions.
Close-mid /e/ and /o/ are diphthongized to [ie̯] and [uo̯] respectively, when stressed.[disputed– discuss]
/ɔ/ contrasts with /ɔː/ in near-minimal pairs such as båhtet/ˈpɔːhtet/ "to come" vs båhtjet/ˈpɔht͡ʃet/ "to milk".
/ɛ/ does not occur in unstressed syllables.
/ɔ/ can occur in unstressed syllables, but only when a preceding stressed syllable contains /ɔ/.
Sammallahti[4] divides Lule Sámi dialects as follows:
Northern dialects: Luokta-Mávas in Sweden
Central dialects: Semisjaur-Njarg in Sweden
Southern dialects: Svaipa in Sweden
Features of the northern dialects are:
Lack of /aː/ → /eː/ umlaut.
Voicing in quantity 3 of plain stops (thus strong /bː.b/ ~ weak /p.p/ etc.), like in Lule Sámi.
/t/ as the outcome of Proto-Samic *đ.
Features of the southern dialects are:
/r/ as the outcome of Proto-Samic *đ.-->
Orthography
For a long time, Pite Sámi was one of the four Sámi languages without an official written language. A working orthography was developed in 2008–2011 by the Sámi Association of Arjeplog;[5] this version was described by Joshua Wilbur and implemented in the dictionary Pitesamisk ordbok samt stavningsregler, published in 2016.[6] On August 20, 2019, an official orthography was approved for the language.[7][8] The orthography closely resembles the orthography of neighbouring Lule Sámi.
A number of (re)sources exist with extensive collections of Pite Sámi lexical items, including grammatical and (morpho)phonological information to various extents. These include:
Ignácz Halász published a collection of Pite Sámi lexical items in 1896 with Hungarian and German translations in the book Pite lappmarki szótár és nyelvtan.[9] Pite Sámi words are written in using a UPA-type standard.
Eliel Lagercrantz published a two-volume collection of Sámi lexical items in 1939 titled Lappischer Wortschatz with German translations.[10] Many of the entries include Pite Sámi forms, which are marked with the abbreviation Arj (for Arjeplog, as Pite Sámi is often referred to as "Arjeplog Sámi" as well[11]). Pite Sámi words are written in using a UPA-type standard.
Just Knud Qvigstad created a wordlist of Pite Sámi words in his Lappisk ordliste: Arjeplog-dialekt (Beiarn–Saltdal–Rana). This handwritten manuscript is from around 1928 and can be found on the Norwegian National Library website[12]
Israel Ruong's collection of handwritten note cards and other materials with Pite Sámi lexical items is archived at the Swedish Institute for Language and Folklore in Uppsala.
Although not intended primarily as a lexicographic collection, Israel Ruong's 1943 dissertation Lappische Verbalableitung dargestellt auf Grundlage des Pitelappischen[13] is in fact a rich source of derived verbs. These are presented in a somewhat simplified UPA-type transcription with explanations and translations in German.
Arjeplogs sameförening (the Arjeplog Sámi association) carried out a project called Insamling av pitesamiska ord (Collection of Pite Sámi words) between 2008 and 2012, written in a preliminary version of the current standard orthography. This wordlist includes translations into Swedish and Norwegian.[14][15]
A Pite Sámi dictionary and set of orthographic rules was published in 2016 as Pitesamisk ordbok samst stavningsregler in the book series Samica.[16] This collection is based on the wordlist created by Arjeplogs sameförening (cf. previous item), but with significant editing and additions covering grammatical and phonological information by the editor (J. Wilbur). It includes translations into Swedish and English, and uses a preliminary version of the current standard orthography. A website with these orthographic rules can be found at Pitesamiska stavningsregler.
A searchable lexical database is accessible online at Bidumsáme Báhkogirrje. It is maintained by linguist J. Wilbur (in collaboration with O. Utne and P. Steggo), and is regularly being updated, corrected and edited, especially checking for consistency and adherence to the standard orthography;[8] missing lexemes are also added on a regular basis.[17]
A searchable lexical database including automatically generated inflectional paradigms for a large subset of the lexical items in the Bidumsáme Báhkogirrje (cf. previous item) can be found in the Nähttadigibáhko, hosted by Giellatekno at the University of Tromsø, with collaborative development of the language technology tools for Pite Sámi by J. Wilbur. This uses the standard orthography.[8]
A mobile phone app called BidumBágo (for Android systems) is under development by Olve Utne at the Norwegian Institute of Local History and National Library of Norway (in collaboration with P. Steggo and J. Wilbur). It currently has more than 6300 entries, including references to older sources, many place names, and translations into Norwegian, Swedish, German and English. This uses the standard orthography[8][18] and can be downloaded from the Facebook group BidumBágo.
Grammar
Cases
Pite Sámi has nine cases:
Nominative
Genitive
Accusative
Inessive
Illative
Elative
Comitative
Essive
Abessive
The inflectional paradigm for the noun guolle 'fish' by Israel Ruong, archived at the Swedish Institute for Language and Folklore in Uppsala.
Verbs
Person
Pite Sámi verbs conjugate for three grammatical persons:
first person
second person
third person
Mood
Pite Sámi has five grammatical moods:
indicative
imperative
conditional
potential
optative
Grammatical number
Pite Sámi verbs conjugate for three grammatical numbers:
singular
dual
plural
Tense
Pite Sámi verbs conjugate for two simple tenses:
past
non-past
and two compound tenses:
Present perfect
Pluperfect
Negative verb
Pite Sámi, like Finnish, the other Sámi languages and Estonian, has a negative verb. In Pite Sámi, the negative verb conjugates according to mood (indicative, imperative and optative), person (1st, 2nd and 3rd) and number (singular, dual and plural). This differs from some of the other Sámi languages, e.g. from Northern Sámi, which do not conjugate according to tense and other Sámi languages, that do not use the optative.
Non-past indicative
Past indicative
Singular
Dual
Plural
Singular
Dual
Plural
1st person
iv
ien
iehp, iep
1
ittjiv
iejmen, ittjijmen
iejmeh, ittjijmeh
2nd person
ih
iehpen, ähpen, ihpen
iehpit, ihpit
2
ittjih
iejten, ittjijten
iejteh, ittjijteh
3rd person
ij
iepá, iepán
ieh
3
ittjij
iejkán, ittjijka
ittjin
For non-past indicative versions that have more than one form, the second one is from the dialect spoken around Björkfjället and the third is from the Svaipa dialect. The plurality in the other forms is due to parallel forms that are not bound by dialect.
Singular
Dual
Plural
Imperative
2nd person
ieleh
iellen
iellit
Optative
1st person
alluv
iellun, allun
iellup, allup
2nd person
alluh
ielluten, alluten
ielluteh, alluteh
3rd person
allus
ielluska, alluska
ielluseh, alluseh
Notes
At least 25 speakers in 2010 according to researcher Joshua Wilbur. At least 30 active, native speakers in 2010; at least an additional 20 native speakers who do not use the language actively according to the Pite Sámi dictionary project leader Nils Henrik Bengtsson.
Sammallahti, Pekka (1998). The Saami Languages: An Introduction. Kárášjohka: Davvi Girji.
(Wilbur 2014:18–19)
(Wilbur 2016:9-11)
Sunna, Anna; Päiviö, Anne Marit; Niia, Anna-Karin (19 August 2019). "Nu har pitesamiskan eget skriftspråk"[Now Pite Sámi has its own written language]. Sveriges radio (in Swedish). Sameradion & SVT Sápmi. Retrieved 19 August 2019.
Halász, Ignácz (1896). Pite lappmarki szótár és nyelvtan. Svéd-Lapp Nyelv. Vol.6. Budapest: Magyar tudományos akadémia.
Lagercrantz, Eliel (1926). Sprachlehre des Westlappischen nach der Mundart von Arjeplog. Suomalais-Ugrilaisen Seuran Toimituksia. Vol.25. Helsinki: Suomalais-Ugrilainen Seura.
Ruong, Israel (1943). Lappische Verbalableitung dargestellt auf Grundlage des Pitelappischen. Uppsala: Almqvist och Wiksell.
Wilbur, Joshua (2014). A Grammar of Pite Sami. Studies in Diversity Linguistics. Vol.5. Berlin: Language Science Press. ISBN978-3-944675-47-3. Retrieved 2014-10-10.
Wilbur, Joshua (2016). "Stavningsregler" In: Pitesamisk ordbok samt stavningsregler (=Samica 2), ed. by Joshua Wilbur. Freiburg: Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg. pages 123-197
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