Social:Cupeño language
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Cupeño | |
---|---|
Kupangaxwicham Pe'me̲melki | |
Region | Southern California , United States |
Ethnicity | Cupeño |
Extinct | 1987, with the death of Roscinda Nolasquez |
Uto-Aztecan
| |
Latin | |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | cup |
Glottolog | cupe1243 [1] |
The Cupeño is an extinct Uto-Aztecan language, formerly spoken by the Cupeño people of Southern California , United States.
Roscinda Nolasquez (d. 1987) was the last native speaker of Cupeño.[2] The Cupeño people now speak English. The native name Kupangaxwicham means 'people from the sleeping place' referring to their traditional homeland, prior to 1902, of Ktipa (at the base of Warner's Hot Springs).[3][4] A smaller village was located to the south of Ktipa, named Wildkalpa.
Throughout the 1890s it was debated whether or not the Cupeño peoples should be allowed to continue living on traditional Cupeño territory.[3] After many years of public protests the California Supreme Court decided to relocate the Cupeño people to the Pala Reservation.[3][4][when?]
Cupeño has linguistic influence from both the languages that preceded it and the Yuman-speaking Ipai, who share their southern border.[3]
Region
The language was originally spoken in Cupa, Wilaqalpa, and Paluqla, San Diego County, California, and later around the Pala Indian Reservation.
Morphology
Cupeño is an agglutinative language, where words use suffix complexes for a variety of purposes with several morphemes strung together. Cupeño is dominantly head-final, with a mostly strict word order (SOV)[2] for some constituents, e.g. genitive-noun constructions. But some contexts allow departure from the SOV word order, this may include shifting verbs to be the initial part of a sentence or moving arguments to follow verbs.[2]
Nouns
Nouns (as well as demonstratives, determiners, quantifiers, and adjectives) in Cupeño are marked for case and number and agree with each other in complex nominal constructions.[2]
Verbs
Cupeño inflects its verbs for transitivity, tense, aspect, mood, person, number, and evidentiality.
Evidentiality is expressed in Cupeño with clitics, which generally appear near the beginning of the sentence. =kuʼut 'reportative' (mu=kuʼut 'and it is said that...') =am 'mirative' =$he 'dubitative'
There are two inflected moods, realis =pe and irrealis =eʼp.
Tense-Aspect system
Future simple verbs are unmarked. Past simple verbs have past-tense pronouns; past imperfect add the imperfect modifier shown below.
Present | Imperfect | Fut. Imp | Customary | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Singular | -qa | -qal | -nash | -ne |
Plural | -we | -wen | -wene | -wene |
Pronouns
The pronominals of Cupeño appear in many different forms and structures. The following appear attached only to past-tense verbs.
Singular | Plural | |
---|---|---|
1st person | ne- | chem- |
2nd person | e- | em- |
3rd person | pe- | pem- |
Phonology
Vowels
Front | Central | Back | |
---|---|---|---|
High | i, iː | u, uː | |
Mid | ɛ, ɛː | ə, əː | o, oː |
Low | a, aː |
/ɛ/ and /o/ appear largely in Spanish loanwords, but also as allophones of /ə/ in native Cupeño words.
/i/ can also be realized as [ɪ] in closed syllables, and [e] in some open syllables.
/u/ may reduce to schwa in unstressed syllables.
/ə/ also appears as [ɨː] when long and stressed, [o] after labials and [q], and as [ɛ] before [w].
/a/ is also realized as [ɑ] before uvulars.
Consonants
Bilabial | Coronal | Palatal | Velar | Uvular | Glottal | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
laminal | apical | plain | labial. | ||||||
Nasal | m | n | ɲ | ŋ | |||||
Plosive | p | t | (t)ʃ[lower-alpha 1] | k | kʷ[lower-alpha 2] | q | ʔ | ||
Fricative | voiceless | s | ʂ | x ~ χ[lower-alpha 3] | xʷ | h | |||
voiced | v[lower-alpha 4] | ð[lower-alpha 4] | ɣ | ||||||
Approximant | j | w | |||||||
Lateral | l | ʎ | |||||||
Trill | ɾ[lower-alpha 4] |
Lexicon
English | Cupeño |
---|---|
one | suplawut |
two | wiʼ |
three | pa |
four | wichu |
five | numaqananax |
man | naxanis |
woman | muwikut |
sun | tamyut |
moon | munil |
water | pal |
See also
- Survey of California and Other Indian Languages
References
- ↑ Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds (2017). "Cupeño". Glottolog 3.0. Jena, Germany: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History. http://glottolog.org/resource/languoid/id/cupe1243.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Hill, Jane H. (2005-10-18). A Grammar of Cupeño. UC Publications in Linguistics. 136. University of California Press. http://escholarship.org/uc/item/2mz6t67j.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 Sturtevant, William C. (1978). Handbook of North American Indians. 8. California: Smithsonian Institution.
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 "Did you know Cupeño is awakening?" (in en). http://www.endangeredlanguages.com/lang/2009.
- ↑ "Cupeno Words". http://www.native-languages.org/cupeno_words.htm.
External links
- The Cupeño language[Usurped!], Four Directions Institute
- Cupeño language, Survey of California and Other Indian Languages
- OLAC resources in and about the Cupeño language
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cupeño language.
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