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Denaʼina language

Denaʼina /dɪˈnnə/, also Tanaina, is the Athabaskan language of the region surrounding Cook Inlet. It is geographically unique in Alaska as the only Alaska Athabaskan language to include territory which borders salt water. Four dialects are usually distinguished:

  1. Upper Inlet, spoken in Eklutna, Knik, Susitna, Tyonek
  2. Outer Inlet, spoken in Kenai, Kustatan, Seldovia
  3. Iliamna, spoken in Pedro Bay, Old Iliamna, Lake Iliamna area
  4. Inland, spoken in Nondalton, Lime Village
Denaʼina
Denaʼina Qenaga, Denaʼinaqʼ
Native toUnited States
RegionAlaska (Cook Inlet region, Lake Clark, Lake Iliamna)
Ethnicity900 Denaʼina people (2007)[1]
Native speakers
5 (2020)[1]
Latin (Denaʼina alphabet)
Official status
Official language in
 Alaska[2]
Language codes
ISO 639-3tfn
Glottologtana1289
ELPDena'ina
Tanaina is classified as Severely 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.
PersonDena
PeopleDenaʼina
LanguageDenaʼina Qenaga
CountryDena'ina Ełnena

Of the total Denaʼina population of about 900 people, only 75–95 members still speak Denaʼina. James Kari has done extensive work on the language since 1972, including his edition with Alan Boraas of the collected writings of Peter Kalifornsky in 1991. Joan M. Tenenbaum also conducted extensive field research on the language in the 1970s.

Ethnonym edit

The word Denaʼina is composed of the dena, meaning 'person' and the human plural suffix ina. While the apostrophe which joins the two parts of this word ordinarily indicates a glottal stop, most speakers pronounce this with a diphthong, so that the second syllable of the word rhymes with English 'nine' (as in the older spelling Tanaina).

Phonology edit

Denaʼina is one of seven Alaska Athabaskan languages which does not distinguish phonemic tone.

Consonants edit

The consonants of Denaʼina in practical orthography, with IPA equivalents.

Labial Dental Palatal Velar Uvular Glottal
plain lateral sibilant
Nasal m ⟨m⟩ n ⟨n⟩
Plosive and
Affricate
plain (p ⟨b⟩) t ⟨d⟩ t͡ɬ ⟨dl⟩ t͡s ⟨dz⟩ t͡ʃ ⟨j⟩ k ⟨g⟩ q ⟨gg⟩ ʔ ⟨'⟩
aspirated ⟨t⟩ t͡ɬʰ ⟨tl⟩ t͡sʰ ⟨ts⟩ t͡ʃʰ ⟨ch⟩ ⟨k⟩ ⟨q⟩
ejective ⟨t'⟩ t͡ɬʼ ⟨tl'⟩ t͡sʼ ⟨ts'⟩ t͡ʃʼ ⟨ch'⟩ ⟨k'⟩ ⟨q'⟩
Fricative voiceless (f ⟨f⟩) ɬ ⟨ɬ⟩ s ⟨s⟩ ʃ ⟨sh⟩ x ⟨x⟩ χ ⟨h⟩ h ⟨ĥ⟩
voiced v ⟨v⟩ z ⟨z⟩ ʒ ⟨zh⟩ ɣ ⟨ŷ⟩ ʁ ⟨gh⟩
Approximant l ⟨l⟩ (ɹ ⟨r⟩)[a] j ⟨y⟩ (w ⟨w⟩)
  1. ^ [ɹ] is only found in English loanwords.

Vowels edit

The 4 vowels of Denaʼina. Note that close vowels are more open in the environment of a uvular consonant.

Generally, the vowels i, a, and u are considered 'long' vowels and are fully pronounced in words, however the e is considered a reduced vowel similar to the English schwa.

Syllable structure edit

In the Inland dialect, syllables at the end of a semantic unit are often longer, lower in pitch, and have longer rhymes. The onset of a syllable has consonant clusters of up to three, such as CCCVC, though these are rare and more commonly, a syllable onset is one or two consonants.

Writing Systems edit

Dena'ina uses a variant of the Latin alphabet, though a Dena'ina artist, Argent Kvasnikoff, created a custom alphabet for the language.[3]

Morphology edit

Denaʼina is a polysynthetic language where a single word can mean the entirety of an English sentence.

ex:
nuntnghel'ił

nu-

again-

n-

you-

t-

FUT-

n-

see-

gh-

FUT-

sh-

I-

l-

CL-

'ił

see/FUT

nu- n- t- n- gh- sh- l- 'ił

again- you- FUT- see- FUT- I- CL- see/FUT

"I will see you again."

Verbs are the most elaborate part of speech in the Denaʼina language, which vary in verb paradigms which vary by subject, object, or aspect. The following example is of -lan the verb "to be" in the imperfective aspect and in the Nondalton dialect.

-lan, the verb "to be"
imperfective aspect
Nondalton dialect
Singular Plural
1st person

eshlan

eshlan

I am

ch'ilan

ch'ilan

we are

2nd person

inlan

inlan

you are

ehlan

ehlan

you all are

3rd person

nlan

nlan

he/she/it is

qilan

qilan

they are

areal

qilan

qilan

area is

Grammatical categories edit

Denaʼina indicates classification with obligatory verb prefixes, meaning the root verb appears at the end of the word. The verb will always specify a classification and often person, gender, or object prefixes that indicate aspects of the noun or object for transitive verbs, and aspects of the speaker for intransitive verbs. Person can also be indicated by suffixes on the noun; the singular person suffix on a noun is generally -en, whereas the plural suffix is generally -na or -ina. Plurals for non-persons that are animate are indicated by the noun suffixes -qa, -ha, and -yi. Inanimate plurals are unable to be indicated by a noun suffix, and instead attach to the verb.

For examples of person indication on the verb, see the chart under the morphology section above concerning the verb root -lan. Denaʼina specifies between 1st person singular/plural, 2nd person singular/plural, 3rd person singular/plural, and areal.

Verbs fall into many categories that are broadly lumped into "active" and "neuter", where an active verb indicates movement, a state of being incomplete, something being made, or in the production of sound, and a neuter verb indicates a general state of being that is complete. Categories of classification that are affixed to a verb also can refer to certain characteristics of the object of that verb. Depending on the gender affix that follows the classificatory affix, the nature of the object can change, as indicated by the following chart:

Classificatory verbs Gender prefixes
∅- d- n- dn- q-
1 Single compact object; ʼu ball, trap, hat, sun, beaver lodge egg, song, word berry, bread, roe, coiled rope, head rock, ring, mirror, box, whetstone house, plot of land, situation, weather
2 Elongated object; tun needle, sled, boat, bow, gun pole, plate, cane, quill, pencil stick dentalium necklace mirror x
3 Enclosed object; łtun knife, full sack, rolled sleeping bag pillow, mattress, lake sack of berries, flour or fish eggs box of rocks q+d ravine, valley
4 Fabric-like object; kits blanket, net, paper, open sleeping bag, empty sack, skin without hair skin with

hair, fur, caribou mat

5 Object in open vessel; qu sugar, water in container eggs or wood chips in bucket berries or roe in container rocks or coal in bucket x
6 Animate object; ta person, dog, doll, crucifix x x x x
7 Food; kit piece of meat, dry fish beaver's food pile roe x x
8 Mushy object; tlaqʼ mud, rotted food, wet cloth, butter wet tea leaves fish eggs (not in container) x pile of refuse, area of soft ground
9 Plural objects; lu traps, boots, dogs eggs, plates, cups, words, tobacco, songs, waves sg. uncoiled rope, pl. coiled ropes, beads, berries, roe, snare rocks, whetstones, boxes houses, objects over area, freight
10 Multiple objects; chuqʼ sand, glacier ice chips of wood berries rocks earth, clouds

However, there are other categories of classification or instrumentation that indicate how an action was done or aspects about the outcome of the action. Many instrumental affixes have become causative over time. Causality is expressed by changing a classifier in the verb to "ł". Instrumental affixes that indicate the manner or motion of an action include the following: "-aqʼa", which refers to clubbing an object or leaving a depression in the snow; "-dni", which refers to causing an object to leave, disappear, or die; "-du", which refers to affecting an object with the mouth; "-eł,-eła, and -ł", which all indicate that the object being referred to was used in an instrumental sense; "-iqu (uqu)", which refers to a pointing motion; "-kʼ", which refers to a wiping motion; and "-lu", which refers to the use of a hand.

Space relations edit

Postpositions edit

Denaʼina shows space relations through the addition of morphemes that are either independent or bound, known as postpositions.

  • Independent postpositions follow a noun. For example, "miłni det" (without water) is composed of the noun "miłni" (water) and the post position "det" (without).
  • Bound postpositions follow a pronoun or a noun, but are said and written as one word, and are often related to directionals.
    • Sheł ("with me") is composed of the pronoun sh ("me") and the postposition eł ("with").
    • Object + -ch' (towards the object, in the direction of the object)
      • Nach' gheyuł = "He is walking towards us"
    • Object + -a (object spends time)
      • Ba shan hghizet = "He spent the whole summer day"
      • Be = "him/her" (be + a = ba)

Postpositions can also be incorporated into a verb as a prefix.

Demonstratives edit

Space relations can also be marked by demonstratives pronouns, which indicate proximal/distal distinction.

  • ghin - that
  • ghini - that/these things, non-human and distant
  • gini - this/these things, non-human and close by
  • ghu - there in the distance
  • ghunen - that person, human and distant
  • gu - here, nearby
  • gunen - this person, human and close by
  • ghuna - those persons, human and distant
  • guna - these persons, human and close by

For example:

  • ghini dghili = "those mountains"
  • ghunen uniłni = "that person calls"
  • gunen qisen = "this woman"

Adverbs edit

Adverbs of location and direction can also convey space relations.

  • nes - out from center
    • nes yanił chet = "he shoved the boat out"
  • en - off or away from
    • ye'un = "away from it"
    • ye'un ti'ilgguk = "he went out the door"

Directionals edit

The directional system in Denaʼina is based upon river flows, and are used with directional prefixes, roots, and suffixes.

  • Prefixes:
    • ey - unmarked
    • yu - distant
    • du - near
  • Roots:
    • n'e or ni - upstream
    • du or t'e - downstream
  • Suffixes:
    • ∅ - towards
    • -ch' - towards, form
    • -t - at, the place of

For example, yunit means "at a place far upstream", and is composed of the prefix "yu", root "ni", and suffix "t".

Time and tense edit

Temporal adverbs edit

Temporal adverbs convey information about when an action or intent of the verb occurred.

  • ch'qeyan - always
  • da'a - never
  • janiq' - all day
  • janq'u - still

For example:

  • janiq'e ghestnu = "I worked all day"
  • nunigi ch'qeyan = "always fog"

Mode edit

Mode indicates when the action happens. Normal mode is also referred to as tense, and is given by mode/aspect prefix positions in the verbs. The tense modes are the imperfect (present), perfect (past) and the future represented by 4 types of imperfectives—∅, z, n, gh—and 4 types of perfectives—gh, z, n, ∅. There are also 4 modal variations: neuter, inceptive, optative-intentional, and negative.

Tense edit

  • Imperfective mode - action was started and is continuing at the present time
    • ∅ imperfective and gh imperfective - generally means the action in moving toward completion
    • n imperfective - associated w/ motion verbs
    • z imperfective - generally means the action is static
  • Perfect mode - action was started and completed in the past
    • gh perfective - most common perfect structure in most aspects
    • n perfective - often used with motion verbs when action has reached terminal state
    • z perfective - generally means the actions have achieved a stable state
    • ∅ perfective - used in transitional themes
  • Future mode - action has yet to happen. Used with a future stem, a "ghe" in the mode position, and a "t(e)" in the inceptive position

Modal variations edit

  • Optative-intentional mode - expresses an intent to act
  • Inceptive mode - "beginning to" in the imperfect and perfect modes
  • Imperfect inceptive
  • Perfective inceptive
  • Neuter - applicable to neuter verbs, and "to be" neuter

Aspect edit

Aspect conveys information about how the action happened, and works in conjunction with tense. The most common aspects are conclusive, momentaneous, neuter, onomatopoetic, and semelfactive. The morpheme attached to the root verb can also change depending on aspect.

Mode
imperfect perfect future optative
Aspect
continuative ya ya ya Ya
durative nax Yał nax nax
momentaneous ya yał
neuter Ya' Ya'
repetitive nash nak nash nish

Modality edit

Modality is most commonly and easily seen in evidentials which usually appear at the end of a sentence.

  • Evidentials - words that emphasize certainty
    • shughu - then it is
    • ł - it is said, it seems, apparently
    • For example:
      • shi shughu = "I am the one"
      • Denaʼina łu k'elen hqghe'n ninya egh = "The Denaʼina, they say, had some beliefs about the animals"
  • Emphatics - words that add emphasis
    • shida - I am
    • For example:
      • Albert shi shida = "I am Albert, this is who I am"

Predicates, arguments, and case edit

Predicate refers to the main verb and auxiliary verbs, while arguments usually refer to those words outside of the predicate.

Word order in the basic Denaʼina sentence is subject-object-verb (SOV). Because of this, there is a low danger of referential ambiguity. It is rare to have both the subject and the objects as nouns; instead, one or both usually occur as pronouns. Some sentences differ from the SOV structure. In subject-verb (SV), the object is embedded in the verb as a pronoun, or the sentence doesn't require an object. In object-verb (OV), the subject is a pronoun contained in the verb, and the object is a noun.

An example sentence structure: object pronoun (argument) + outer subject pronoun (argument) + (other prefixes) + inner subject pronoun (argument) + ... verb stem (predicate). This example shows multiple arguments attaching to a single predicate.

A full clause can be expressed in the verb. In the verb, the verb stem is last, and even when embedded in the verb, the object and subject necessarily come first. In Denaʼina, all verbs require a nominative (subject) and an accusative (object), which indicates a nominative-accusative case. This means the marked morphemes, or those that change to convey more specific meanings, are those that indicate the object. Distinction occurs between the nominative and accusative, and each would have its own core argument.

Obliques edit

Obliques indicate instrumentals, locatives, and other arguments outside of core arguments. Both core and oblique arguments attach to the verb via prefixes which must occur in a certain order. In Denaʼina, obliques are prefixes to the verb which occur between the object prefix and the inner subject pronoun prefix and/or the outer subject pronoun.

Possession edit

Inherent possession edit

Denaʼina has inherently possessed nouns and non-verbs. Inherently possessed words consist of a prefix and a stem which are abound morphemes. For example, "shunkda" means "my mother", where "sh-" is the possessive pronoun meaning "my", and "-unkda" is the possessed root meaning "mother".

The pronouns used with inherently possessed bound morphemes:

  • sh- = my
  • qu- = their
  • n- = your (singular)
  • k'e- = someone's
  • be- = his/her
  • de- = his/her own
  • na = our
  • deh- = their own
  • h- = your (plural)
  • nił- = each other's

Non-inherent possession edit

Non-inherent possession occurs with proper nouns as the possessor, shown by -a or -'a attached as a suffix to the possessed noun. Possessive pronouns are attached as a prefix to the possessed noun and the -'a is added at the end of the word.

Complement clauses edit

Complement clauses are clauses that act as the direct object of the verb, introduced by a complementizer (e.g.: in English, "that" or "which"). Complement clauses exist as subordinate clauses and bare clauses, as with other languages in the Athabaskan language family. Some complement clauses are marked by enclitics, and are always embedded as part of the sentence.

Relative suffixes are attached to nouns or verbs, and are one of the few suffixes on verbs. Common relative suffixes include:

  • -en = "the person that"
  • -t = "the place that"
  • -na = "the people that"
  • -h = "at, to a general area"
  • -i = "the thing that"
  • -hdi = "then, next"

Endangerment edit

The population of Denaʼina is 900. As of 2007, there are 75-90 speakers, and in 1970 there were only 10 speakers of the Kenai dialect.

Linguist Michael E. Krauss provides three levels of endangerment: safe; endangered, where the language is being learned by children but requires community effort to maintain it; and moribund, where the language is not being learned by children. According to this classification, the Denaʼina is a moribund language.

Revitalization efforts edit

There are various efforts to revitalize the language.

  • The Denaʼina Archiving, Training and Access grant (DATA) aims to archive and provide access to Denaʼina materials. It also attempts to train community members in technology.
  • Lake Clark National Park maintains a catalog of audio recordings of the language.
  • Some books are being published on Denaʼina language and culture, and there is a yearly Denaʼina festival, followed by a three-week intensive course led by elders.
  • At the Kenai Peninsula College, there is a language class on the Cook Inlet dialect. As of October 2014, there are only 15 students, all young adults, in the class, but this indicates momentum.[4] The class's curriculum is formed from the collected grammars published by linguists.

Contributing factors to the endangerment include the policy of early territorial schools to not let native students speak their own language, especially in regards to the Kenai dialect. This policy was often enforced via corporal punishment; the trauma caused elders, all within one generation, to avoid speaking the language.

References edit

  1. ^ a b https://www.commerce.alaska.gov/web/Portals/4/pub/ANLPAC/ANLPAC%202020%20Report%20to%20the%20Governor%20and%20Legislature.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  2. ^ Chappell, Bill (21 April 2014). "Alaska OKs Bill Making Native Languages Official". NPR.
  3. ^ "Qena Sint'isis". Argent Kvasnikoff. Retrieved 2023-05-16.
  4. ^ Neyman, Jenny. (2014). "In a word: Revival — Language class speaks to effort to revitalize Denaʼina".

Bibliography edit

  • Balluta, Alex & Gladys Evanoff. 2004. Denaʼina Qenaga Duʼidnaghelnik (Denaʼina Words Sound Pretty). Denaʼina Phrases 1: Nondalton Dialect, ed. by Olga Müller. Fairbanks: Alaska Native Language Center; Anchorage: Alaska Native Heritage Center.
  • Boraas, Alan. 2009. An Introduction to Denaʼina Grammar: The Kenai (Outer Inlet) Dialect. Kenai Peninsula College.
  • Chickalusion, Maxim, et al. 1980. Qʼudi Heyi Niłchʼdiluyi Sukduʼa: "This Years Collected Stories.(Denaʼina Stories from Tyonek and Illiamna Lake). Anchorage: National Bilingual Materials Development Center.
  • Ellanna, Linda & Andrew Balluta. 1992. Nuvendaltin Quhtʼana: The People of Nondalton. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press.
  • Johnson, Walter. 2004. Sukdu Neł Nuhtghelnek: I'll Tell You A Story: Stories I Recall From Growing Up On Iliamna Lake. Fairbanks: Alaska Native Language Center.
  • Kalifornsky, Peter. 1991 "Kʼtlʼeghʼi Sukdu, A Denaʼina Legacy: The Collected Writings of Peter Kalifornsky" edited by James Kari and Alan Boraas. Fairbanks: Alaska Native Language Center.
  • Kari, James. 1975. A classification of the Tanaina dialects. Anthropological Papers of the University of Alaska 17:49-55.
  • Kari, James. 2007. Denaʼina Topical Dictionary. Fairbanks: Alaska Native Language Center. ISBN 978-1-55500-091-2.
  • Kari, James, Priscilla Russell Kari and Jane McGary. 1983. Denaʼina Ełnena: Tanaina Country. Fairbanks: Alaska Native Language Center. Includes good bibliography and many photographs
  • Kari, Priscilla Russell. 1987. Tanaina Plantlore: Denaʼina Kʼetʼuna. 2nd ed. Anchorage: Alaska Park Service. Ethnobotany and much other cultural information.
  • Mithun, Marianne. 1999. The languages of Native North America. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-23228-7 (hbk); ISBN 0-521-29875-X.
  • Osgood, Cornelius. 1937. Contributions to the Ethnography of the Tanaina. Yale University Publications in Anthropology, 16.
  • Stephan, Sava. 2005. Upper Inlet Denaʼina Language Lessons, ed. by James Kari. Anchorage: Alaska Native Heritage Center. [3] 2007-09-28 at the Wayback Machine
  • Tenenbaum, Joan. 1978. Morphology and semantics of the Tanaina verb. (Doctoral dissertation, Columbia University).
  • Tenenbaum, Joan. 2006. Denaʼina Sukduʼa 3rd ed. Fairbanks: Alaska Native Language Center. ISBN 1-55500-090-8.
  • Townsend, Joan B. 1981. "Tanaina." In June Helm, ed., Subarctic: Handbook of North American Indians, vol. 6. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution.
  • Wassillie, Albert. 1980. Nuvendaltun Htʼana Sukduʼa: Nondalton People's Stories. Anchorage: National Bilingual Materials Development Center.

External links edit

  • Alaska Native Language Center - Denaʼina
  • Denaʼina Qenaga Du'idnaghelnik (Denaʼina Phrasebook)
  • Denaʼina Qenaga Website 2008-12-01 at the Wayback Machine
  • Dena'ina Language Home Page (Kenai/Outer Inlet dialect)
  • An introduction to Denaʼina[permanent dead link]
  • An Introduction to Dena'ina Grammar
  • Denaʼina basic lexicon at the Global Lexicostatistical Database
  • Wrangell's 1839 Comparative Word-List of Alaskan languages 2012-11-19 at the Wayback Machine (includes Denaʼina)

denaʼina, language, denaʼina, also, tanaina, athabaskan, language, region, surrounding, cook, inlet, geographically, unique, alaska, only, alaska, athabaskan, language, include, territory, which, borders, salt, water, four, dialects, usually, distinguished, up. Denaʼina d ɪ ˈ n aɪ n e also Tanaina is the Athabaskan language of the region surrounding Cook Inlet It is geographically unique in Alaska as the only Alaska Athabaskan language to include territory which borders salt water Four dialects are usually distinguished Upper Inlet spoken in Eklutna Knik Susitna Tyonek Outer Inlet spoken in Kenai Kustatan Seldovia Iliamna spoken in Pedro Bay Old Iliamna Lake Iliamna area Inland spoken in Nondalton Lime VillageDenaʼinaDenaʼina Qenaga DenaʼinaqʼNative toUnited StatesRegionAlaska Cook Inlet region Lake Clark Lake Iliamna Ethnicity900 Denaʼina people 2007 1 Native speakers5 2020 1 Language familyDene Yeniseian Na DeneAthabaskanNorthern AthabaskanDenaʼinaWriting systemLatin Denaʼina alphabet Official statusOfficial language in Alaska 2 Language codesISO 639 3 a href https iso639 3 sil org code tfn class extiw title iso639 3 tfn tfn a Glottologtana1289ELPDena inaTanaina is classified as Severely Endangered by the UNESCO Atlas of the World s Languages in DangerThis 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 PersonDenaPeopleDenaʼinaLanguageDenaʼina QenagaCountryDena ina Elnena Of the total Denaʼina population of about 900 people only 75 95 members still speak Denaʼina James Kari has done extensive work on the language since 1972 including his edition with Alan Boraas of the collected writings of Peter Kalifornsky in 1991 Joan M Tenenbaum also conducted extensive field research on the language in the 1970s Contents 1 Ethnonym 2 Phonology 2 1 Consonants 2 2 Vowels 2 3 Syllable structure 3 Writing Systems 4 Morphology 5 Grammatical categories 6 Space relations 6 1 Postpositions 6 2 Demonstratives 6 3 Adverbs 6 4 Directionals 7 Time and tense 7 1 Temporal adverbs 7 2 Mode 7 2 1 Tense 7 2 2 Modal variations 7 3 Aspect 8 Modality 9 Predicates arguments and case 10 Obliques 11 Possession 11 1 Inherent possession 11 2 Non inherent possession 12 Complement clauses 13 Endangerment 13 1 Revitalization efforts 14 References 15 Bibliography 16 External linksEthnonym editThe word Denaʼina is composed of the dena meaning person and the human plural suffix ina While the apostrophe which joins the two parts of this word ordinarily indicates a glottal stop most speakers pronounce this with a diphthong so that the second syllable of the word rhymes with English nine as in the older spelling Tanaina nbsp Denaʼina source source Gladys Evanoff pronouncing Denaʼina Problems playing this file See media help Phonology editDenaʼina is one of seven Alaska Athabaskan languages which does not distinguish phonemic tone Consonants edit The consonants of Denaʼina in practical orthography with IPA equivalents Labial Dental Palatal Velar Uvular Glottalplain lateral sibilantNasal m m n n Plosive andAffricate plain p b t d t ɬ dl t s dz t ʃ j k g q gg ʔ aspirated tʰ t t ɬʰ tl t sʰ ts t ʃʰ ch kʰ k qʰ q ejective tʼ t t ɬʼ tl t sʼ ts t ʃʼ ch kʼ k qʼ q Fricative voiceless f f ɬ ɬ s s ʃ sh x x x h h ĥ voiced v v z z ʒ zh ɣ ŷ ʁ gh Approximant l l ɹ r a j y w w ɹ is only found in English loanwords Vowels edit The 4 vowels of Denaʼina Note that close vowels are more open in the environment of a uvular consonant Front Central BackClose i uMid e e Open aGenerally the vowels i a and u are considered long vowels and are fully pronounced in words however the e is considered a reduced vowel similar to the English schwa Syllable structure edit In the Inland dialect syllables at the end of a semantic unit are often longer lower in pitch and have longer rhymes The onset of a syllable has consonant clusters of up to three such as CCCVC though these are rare and more commonly a syllable onset is one or two consonants Writing Systems editDena ina uses a variant of the Latin alphabet though a Dena ina artist Argent Kvasnikoff created a custom alphabet for the language 3 Morphology editDenaʼina is a polysynthetic language where a single word can mean the entirety of an English sentence ex nuntnghel ilnu again n you t FUT n see gh FUT sh I l CL ilsee FUTnu n t n gh sh l ilagain you FUT see FUT I CL see FUT I will see you again Verbs are the most elaborate part of speech in the Denaʼina language which vary in verb paradigms which vary by subject object or aspect The following example is of lan the verb to be in the imperfective aspect and in the Nondalton dialect lan the verb to be imperfective aspectNondalton dialect Singular Plural1st person eshlaneshlanI am ch ilanch ilanwe are2nd person inlaninlanyou are ehlanehlanyou all are3rd person nlannlanhe she it is qilanqilanthey areareal qilanqilanarea isGrammatical categories editDenaʼina indicates classification with obligatory verb prefixes meaning the root verb appears at the end of the word The verb will always specify a classification and often person gender or object prefixes that indicate aspects of the noun or object for transitive verbs and aspects of the speaker for intransitive verbs Person can also be indicated by suffixes on the noun the singular person suffix on a noun is generally en whereas the plural suffix is generally na or ina Plurals for non persons that are animate are indicated by the noun suffixes qa ha and yi Inanimate plurals are unable to be indicated by a noun suffix and instead attach to the verb For examples of person indication on the verb see the chart under the morphology section above concerning the verb root lan Denaʼina specifies between 1st person singular plural 2nd person singular plural 3rd person singular plural and areal Verbs fall into many categories that are broadly lumped into active and neuter where an active verb indicates movement a state of being incomplete something being made or in the production of sound and a neuter verb indicates a general state of being that is complete Categories of classification that are affixed to a verb also can refer to certain characteristics of the object of that verb Depending on the gender affix that follows the classificatory affix the nature of the object can change as indicated by the following chart Classificatory verbs Gender prefixes d n dn q 1 Single compact object ʼu ball trap hat sun beaver lodge egg song word berry bread roe coiled rope head rock ring mirror box whetstone house plot of land situation weather2 Elongated object tun needle sled boat bow gun pole plate cane quill pencil stick dentalium necklace mirror x3 Enclosed object ltun knife full sack rolled sleeping bag pillow mattress lake sack of berries flour or fish eggs box of rocks q d ravine valley4 Fabric like object kits blanket net paper open sleeping bag empty sack skin without hair skin with hair fur caribou mat5 Object in open vessel qu sugar water in container eggs or wood chips in bucket berries or roe in container rocks or coal in bucket x6 Animate object ta person dog doll crucifix x x x x7 Food kit piece of meat dry fish beaver s food pile roe x x8 Mushy object tlaqʼ mud rotted food wet cloth butter wet tea leaves fish eggs not in container x pile of refuse area of soft ground9 Plural objects lu traps boots dogs eggs plates cups words tobacco songs waves sg uncoiled rope pl coiled ropes beads berries roe snare rocks whetstones boxes houses objects over area freight10 Multiple objects chuqʼ sand glacier ice chips of wood berries rocks earth cloudsHowever there are other categories of classification or instrumentation that indicate how an action was done or aspects about the outcome of the action Many instrumental affixes have become causative over time Causality is expressed by changing a classifier in the verb to l Instrumental affixes that indicate the manner or motion of an action include the following aqʼa which refers to clubbing an object or leaving a depression in the snow dni which refers to causing an object to leave disappear or die du which refers to affecting an object with the mouth el ela and l which all indicate that the object being referred to was used in an instrumental sense iqu uqu which refers to a pointing motion kʼ which refers to a wiping motion and lu which refers to the use of a hand Space relations editPostpositions edit Denaʼina shows space relations through the addition of morphemes that are either independent or bound known as postpositions Independent postpositions follow a noun For example milni det without water is composed of the noun milni water and the post position det without Bound postpositions follow a pronoun or a noun but are said and written as one word and are often related to directionals Shel with me is composed of the pronoun sh me and the postposition el with Object ch towards the object in the direction of the object Nach gheyul He is walking towards us Object a object spends time Ba shan hghizet He spent the whole summer day Be him her be a ba Postpositions can also be incorporated into a verb as a prefix Demonstratives edit Space relations can also be marked by demonstratives pronouns which indicate proximal distal distinction ghin that ghini that these things non human and distant gini this these things non human and close by ghu there in the distance ghunen that person human and distant gu here nearby gunen this person human and close by ghuna those persons human and distant guna these persons human and close byFor example ghini dghili those mountains ghunen unilni that person calls gunen qisen this woman Adverbs edit Adverbs of location and direction can also convey space relations nes out from center nes yanil chet he shoved the boat out en off or away from ye un away from it ye un ti ilgguk he went out the door Directionals edit The directional system in Denaʼina is based upon river flows and are used with directional prefixes roots and suffixes Prefixes ey unmarked yu distant du near Roots n e or ni upstream du or t e downstream Suffixes towards ch towards form t at the place ofFor example yunit means at a place far upstream and is composed of the prefix yu root ni and suffix t Time and tense editTemporal adverbs edit Temporal adverbs convey information about when an action or intent of the verb occurred ch qeyan always da a never janiq all day janq u stillFor example janiq e ghestnu I worked all day nunigi ch qeyan always fog Mode edit Mode indicates when the action happens Normal mode is also referred to as tense and is given by mode aspect prefix positions in the verbs The tense modes are the imperfect present perfect past and the future represented by 4 types of imperfectives z n gh and 4 types of perfectives gh z n There are also 4 modal variations neuter inceptive optative intentional and negative Tense edit Imperfective mode action was started and is continuing at the present time imperfective and gh imperfective generally means the action in moving toward completion n imperfective associated w motion verbs z imperfective generally means the action is static Perfect mode action was started and completed in the past gh perfective most common perfect structure in most aspects n perfective often used with motion verbs when action has reached terminal state z perfective generally means the actions have achieved a stable state perfective used in transitional themes Future mode action has yet to happen Used with a future stem a ghe in the mode position and a t e in the inceptive positionModal variations edit Optative intentional mode expresses an intent to act Inceptive mode beginning to in the imperfect and perfect modes Imperfect inceptive Perfective inceptive Neuter applicable to neuter verbs and to be neuterAspect edit Aspect conveys information about how the action happened and works in conjunction with tense The most common aspects are conclusive momentaneous neuter onomatopoetic and semelfactive The morpheme attached to the root verb can also change depending on aspect Modeimperfect perfect future optativeAspect continuative ya ya ya Yadurative nax Yal nax naxmomentaneous ya yalneuter Ya Ya repetitive nash nak nash nishModality editModality is most commonly and easily seen in evidentials which usually appear at the end of a sentence Evidentials words that emphasize certainty shughu then it is l it is said it seems apparently For example shi shughu I am the one Denaʼina lu k elen hqghe n ninya egh The Denaʼina they say had some beliefs about the animals Emphatics words that add emphasis shida I am For example Albert shi shida I am Albert this is who I am Predicates arguments and case editPredicate refers to the main verb and auxiliary verbs while arguments usually refer to those words outside of the predicate Word order in the basic Denaʼina sentence is subject object verb SOV Because of this there is a low danger of referential ambiguity It is rare to have both the subject and the objects as nouns instead one or both usually occur as pronouns Some sentences differ from the SOV structure In subject verb SV the object is embedded in the verb as a pronoun or the sentence doesn t require an object In object verb OV the subject is a pronoun contained in the verb and the object is a noun An example sentence structure object pronoun argument outer subject pronoun argument other prefixes inner subject pronoun argument verb stem predicate This example shows multiple arguments attaching to a single predicate A full clause can be expressed in the verb In the verb the verb stem is last and even when embedded in the verb the object and subject necessarily come first In Denaʼina all verbs require a nominative subject and an accusative object which indicates a nominative accusative case This means the marked morphemes or those that change to convey more specific meanings are those that indicate the object Distinction occurs between the nominative and accusative and each would have its own core argument Obliques editObliques indicate instrumentals locatives and other arguments outside of core arguments Both core and oblique arguments attach to the verb via prefixes which must occur in a certain order In Denaʼina obliques are prefixes to the verb which occur between the object prefix and the inner subject pronoun prefix and or the outer subject pronoun Possession editInherent possession edit Denaʼina has inherently possessed nouns and non verbs Inherently possessed words consist of a prefix and a stem which are abound morphemes For example shunkda means my mother where sh is the possessive pronoun meaning my and unkda is the possessed root meaning mother The pronouns used with inherently possessed bound morphemes sh my qu their n your singular k e someone s be his her de his her own na our deh their own h your plural nil each other sNon inherent possession edit Non inherent possession occurs with proper nouns as the possessor shown by a or a attached as a suffix to the possessed noun Possessive pronouns are attached as a prefix to the possessed noun and the a is added at the end of the word Complement clauses editComplement clauses are clauses that act as the direct object of the verb introduced by a complementizer e g in English that or which Complement clauses exist as subordinate clauses and bare clauses as with other languages in the Athabaskan language family Some complement clauses are marked by enclitics and are always embedded as part of the sentence Relative suffixes are attached to nouns or verbs and are one of the few suffixes on verbs Common relative suffixes include en the person that t the place that na the people that h at to a general area i the thing that hdi then next Endangerment editThe population of Denaʼina is 900 As of 2007 there are 75 90 speakers and in 1970 there were only 10 speakers of the Kenai dialect Linguist Michael E Krauss provides three levels of endangerment safe endangered where the language is being learned by children but requires community effort to maintain it and moribund where the language is not being learned by children According to this classification the Denaʼina is a moribund language Revitalization efforts edit There are various efforts to revitalize the language The Denaʼina Archiving Training and Access grant DATA aims to archive and provide access to Denaʼina materials It also attempts to train community members in technology Lake Clark National Park maintains a catalog of audio recordings of the language Some books are being published on Denaʼina language and culture and there is a yearly Denaʼina festival followed by a three week intensive course led by elders At the Kenai Peninsula College there is a language class on the Cook Inlet dialect As of October 2014 there are only 15 students all young adults in the class but this indicates momentum 4 The class s curriculum is formed from the collected grammars published by linguists Contributing factors to the endangerment include the policy of early territorial schools to not let native students speak their own language especially in regards to the Kenai dialect This policy was often enforced via corporal punishment the trauma caused elders all within one generation to avoid speaking the language References edit a b https www commerce alaska gov web Portals 4 pub ANLPAC ANLPAC 202020 20Report 20to 20the 20Governor 20and 20Legislature pdf bare URL PDF Chappell Bill 21 April 2014 Alaska OKs Bill Making Native Languages Official NPR Qena Sint isis Argent Kvasnikoff Retrieved 2023 05 16 Neyman Jenny 2014 In a word Revival Language class speaks to effort to revitalize Denaʼina Bibliography editBalluta Alex amp Gladys Evanoff 2004 Denaʼina Qenaga Duʼidnaghelnik Denaʼina Words Sound Pretty Denaʼina Phrases 1 Nondalton Dialect ed by Olga Muller Fairbanks Alaska Native Language Center Anchorage Alaska Native Heritage Center 1 Boraas Alan 2009 An Introduction to Denaʼina Grammar The Kenai Outer Inlet Dialect Kenai Peninsula College 2 Chickalusion Maxim et al 1980 Qʼudi Heyi Nilchʼdiluyi Sukduʼa This Years Collected Stories Denaʼina Stories from Tyonek and Illiamna Lake Anchorage National Bilingual Materials Development Center Ellanna Linda amp Andrew Balluta 1992 Nuvendaltin Quhtʼana The People of Nondalton Washington D C Smithsonian Institution Press Johnson Walter 2004 Sukdu Nel Nuhtghelnek I ll Tell You A Story Stories I Recall From Growing Up On Iliamna Lake Fairbanks Alaska Native Language Center Kalifornsky Peter 1991 Kʼtlʼeghʼi Sukdu A Denaʼina Legacy The Collected Writings of Peter Kalifornsky edited by James Kari and Alan Boraas Fairbanks Alaska Native Language Center Kari James 1975 A classification of the Tanaina dialects Anthropological Papers of the University of Alaska 17 49 55 Kari James 2007 Denaʼina Topical Dictionary Fairbanks Alaska Native Language Center ISBN 978 1 55500 091 2 Kari James Priscilla Russell Kari and Jane McGary 1983 Denaʼina Elnena Tanaina Country Fairbanks Alaska Native Language Center Includes good bibliography and many photographs Kari Priscilla Russell 1987 Tanaina Plantlore Denaʼina Kʼetʼuna 2nd ed Anchorage Alaska Park Service Ethnobotany and much other cultural information Mithun Marianne 1999 The languages of Native North America Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 23228 7 hbk ISBN 0 521 29875 X Osgood Cornelius 1937 Contributions to the Ethnography of the Tanaina Yale University Publications in Anthropology 16 Stephan Sava 2005 Upper Inlet Denaʼina Language Lessons ed by James Kari Anchorage Alaska Native Heritage Center 3 Archived 2007 09 28 at the Wayback Machine Tenenbaum Joan 1978 Morphology and semantics of the Tanaina verb Doctoral dissertation Columbia University Tenenbaum Joan 2006 Denaʼina Sukduʼa 3rd ed Fairbanks Alaska Native Language Center ISBN 1 55500 090 8 Townsend Joan B 1981 Tanaina In June Helm ed Subarctic Handbook of North American Indians vol 6 Washington DC Smithsonian Institution Wassillie Albert 1980 Nuvendaltun Htʼana Sukduʼa Nondalton People s Stories Anchorage National Bilingual Materials Development Center External links editAlaska Native Language Center Denaʼina Denaʼina Language Guide Denaʼina Qenaga Du idnaghelnik Denaʼina Phrasebook Denaʼina Qenaga Website Archived 2008 12 01 at the Wayback Machine Dena ina Language Home Page Kenai Outer Inlet dialect An introduction to Denaʼina permanent dead link An Introduction to Dena ina Grammar Denaʼina basic lexicon at the Global Lexicostatistical Database Wrangell s 1839 Comparative Word List of Alaskan languages Archived 2012 11 19 at the Wayback Machine includes Denaʼina Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Denaʼina language amp oldid 1199144006, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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