Central Pomo language explained

Central Pomo
States:United States
Region:Northern California
Extinct:by 2000
Ref:e23
Familycolor:American
Fam1:Hokan?
Fam2:Pomoan
Fam3:Western
Fam4:Southern
Iso3:poo
Glotto:cent2138
Glottorefname:Central Pomo
Map:Pomoan languages map.svg
Mapcaption:The seven Pomoan languages with an indication of their pre-contact distribution within California

Central Pomo is an extinct Pomoan language spoken in Northern California. Pre-contact speakers of all the Pomoan languages have been estimated at 8,000 all together. This estimation was from the American anthropologist Alfred Kroeber.

"The Central Pomo language was traditionally spoken from the Russian River southwest of Clear Lake to the Pacific coast. There were settlements along the Russian River (in the southern Ukiah Valley, in Hopland Valley, and further south near the Sonoma County line), in the coastal region (at Manchester, Point Arena, and at the mouth of the Gualala River), and in the region between the two (around Yorkville and in Anderson Valley)."[1]

It has a consonant inventory that is identical to the related Southern Pomo language with the following exceptions:

Central Pomo distinguishes velar pronounced as //k/, /kʰ/, /kʼ// from uvular pronounced as //q/, /qʰ/, /qʼ//. It lacks a non-ejective alveolar affricate (i.e., it does not have /ts/ as a phoneme), and does not have length, in the form of geminate root consonants, as found in Southern Pomo.

As of 2013, a transcription project of Central Pomo materials collected by J.P. Harrington is underway.[2]

Phonology

!Bilabial!Dental!Alveolar!Postalveolar!Palatal!Velar!Uvular!Glottal
StopVoicedbd
VoicelessPlainptkqʔ
Aspiratedt̪ʰ
Ejectivet̪ʼ
AffricatePlaint͡st͡ʃ
Aspiratedt͡ʃʰ
Ejectivet͡sʼt͡ʃʼ
Nasalmn
Fricativesʃh
Approximantwlj
! colspan="2"
FrontCentralBack
shortlongshortlongshortlong
Closeiu
Mideo
Opena
/e/ may also be heard as [ɛ].[3]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Central Pomo. Survey of California and Other Indian Languages. 2013-01-14.
  2. Web site: What matters to Lori Laiwa? Reviving her tribal language.. UC Davis: Discover What Matters. 2013-01-14. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20100611031832/http://discoverwhatmatters.ucdavis.edu/discover/what-matters/index/id/82386/. 2010-06-11.
  3. Web site: PDF Central Pomo Lesson Plans - CIMCC.