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The Tsuutʼina language[2] (formerly known as Sarcee or Sarsi)[3]:2 is spoken by the people of the Tsuutʼina Nation, whose reserve and community is near Calgary, Alberta. It belongs to the Athabaskan language family, which also include the Navajo and Chiricahua of the south, and the Dene Suline and Tłı̨chǫ of the north.

Tsuutʼina
Sarcee
Tsúùtʼínà
Native toCanada
RegionAlberta
EthnicityTsuutʼina
Native speakers
80 (2016 census)[1]
Language family
Dené–Yeniseian ?
Language codes
ISO 639-3srs
Glottologsars1236
ELPTsuut'ina
Sarcee 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.

Nomenclature


The name Tsuutʼina comes from the Tsuutʼina self designation Tsúùtʼínà, meaning "many people", "nation tribe", or "people among the beavers".[4] Sarcee is a deprecated exonym from Siksiká.


Phonology



Consonants


The consonants of Tsuutʼina in the standard orthography are listed below (with IPA notation in brackets):

Consonants[4]
Bilabial Alveolar Post-
alveolar
Velar Glottal
plainsibilantlateral plainrounded
Stop plain p b[lower-alpha 1] t d ts dz dl dj k g gw[lower-alpha 2] ʔ ʼ
aspirated t tsʰ ts tɬʰ tl tʃʰ tc k kʷʰ kw[lower-alpha 2]
ejective tsʼ tsʼ tɬʼ tlʼ tʃʼ tcʼ kʷʼ kwʼ
Fricative voiceless s s ɬ ł ʃ c x x h h
voiced z z ʒ j ɣ γ
Nasal m m n n
Approximant l l j y w w
  1. /p/ is only found in mimetic buꞏ 'to buzz' and borrowed buꞏs 'cat'.
  2. The phonemic status of [kʷ] and [kʷʰ] is questionable; they might be /ku, kʰu/ before another vowel. /kʷʼ/ is quite rare but clearly phonemic.

Vowels


There are four distinct vowels in Tsuutʼina - i, a, o, and u. While a and o are fairly constant, i and u can vary considerably. Vowels are also distinguished by length and tone, similar to other Athabaskan languages.

  • i varies between [i] and [e]
  • a [a]
  • o [ɒ] - The vowel o does not correspond to the sound [o].
  • u varies between [u] and [o]
  • long vowels are marked with an asterisk, e.g., a* [aː]
  • high tone is marked with an acute accent, e.g., á
  • low tone is marked with a grave accent, e.g., à
  • medial tone is marked with a macron, e.g., ā

Nouns


Nouns in Tsuutʼina are not declined, and most plural nouns are not distinguished from singular nouns. However, kinship terms are distinguished between singular and plural form by adding the suffix -ká (or -kúwá) to the end of the noun or by using the word yìná.


List of nouns



People


Nature


Words and phrases


Noun possession


Nouns can exist in free form or possessed form. When in possessed form, the prefixes listed below can be attached to nouns to show possession. For example, más, "knife", can be affixed with the 1st person prefix to become sìmázàʼ or "my knife". Note that -mázàʼ is the possessed form of the noun.

Some nouns, like más, as shown above, can alternate between free form and possessed form. A few nouns, like zòs, "snow", are never possessed and exist only in free form. Other nouns, such as -tsìʼ, "head", have no free form and must always be possessed.


Typical possession prefixes


Language revitalization


Tsuut'ina is a critically endangered language, with only 150 speakers, 80 of whom speak it as their mother tongue, according to the 2016 Canadian census.[1] The Tsuut'ina Nation has created the Tsuut'ina Gunaha Institute with the intention of creating new fluent speakers. This includes full K-4 immersion education at schools on the Nation[5] and placing stop signs in the Tsuut'ina language at intersections in the Tsuut'ina Nation.[6]


Bibliography



See also



References


  1. "Census Profile, 2016 Census: Knowledge of languages". Statistics Canada. Retrieved 18 September 2019.
  2. "Tsuutʼina Gunaha Institute". Retrieved 2018-07-29.
  3. McDonough, Joyce; O'Loughlin, Jared & Cox, Christopher (2013-06-02). An investigation of the three tone system in Tsuutʼina (Dene). International Congress on Acoustics. Proceedings of Meetings on Acoustics. Montreal: Acoustical Society of America. p. 060219. doi:10.1121/1.4800661. {{cite conference}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  4. Cook (1984: 7 ff)
  5. "New high school for Tsuut'ina Nation will have strong focus on culture and curriculum | CBC News".
  6. Tsuut’ina Nation displaying Indigenous language stop signs



На других языках


- [en] Tsuutʼina language

[fr] Sarsi

Le sarsi, ou sarcee, (autonyme : tsúùtʾínà) est une langue athapascane septentrionale parlée au Canada, au sud-est de la ville de Calgary, en Alberta. En 1984, Eung-Do Cook notait que, dans la réserve sarsi, la langue n'était plus un vecteur de communication dans la vie quotidienne et que seul un ou deux locuteurs en avaient une très bonne connaissance[1]. Selon Statistique Canada, en 2021, le sarsi est la langue maternelle de 45 personnes[2] au Canada.

[ru] Сарси (язык)

Сарси (Sarsi, Sarcee, Tsuu T’ina, Tsuut’ina, Tsu T’ina, Tsúùtínà) — почти исчезнувший атабаскский язык, на котором говорит народ сарси, проживающий в штате Альберта, около города Калгари, в Канаде. Язык принадлежит атабаскской языковой семье, в которую также входят языки навахо, мескалеро-чирикауанский апаче, чипевиан и догриб. В настоящее время почти весь народ говорит на английском языке.



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