Yuki language explained

Yuki language should not be confused with Yuki language (Bolivia).

Yuki
Nativename:Ukomno'm
Region:Eel River area
Ethnicity:Yuki people
Extinct:1983, with the death of Arthur Anderson
Familycolor:American
Fam1:Yuki–Wappo
Iso3:yuk
Glotto:yuki1243
Glottorefname:Northern Yukian
Iso3comment:(Yuki proper)
Linglist:yuk
Lingname:Yuki proper
Linglist2:qdw
Lingname2:Coast Yuki
Linglist3:qiq
Lingname3:Huchnom
Map:Lang Status 01-EX.svg
Mapcaption:[1]

Yuki, also known as Ukomno'm, is an extinct language of California, formerly spoken by the Yuki people.[2] The Yuki are the original inhabitants of the Eel River area and the Round Valley Reservation of northern California. Yuki ceased to be used as an everyday language in the early 20th century and its last speaker, Arthur Anderson, died in 1983.[3] Yuki is generally thought to be distantly related to the Wappo language.

Classification

Yuki consisted of three dialects, from east to west: Round Valley Yuki, Huchnom (Clear Lake Yuki) and Coast Yuki. These were at least partially mutually intelligible, but are sometimes counted as distinct languages.[4]

These languages are categorized as (Northern) Yukian within the Yuki–Wappo family, which also includes the distant Wappo language. It is thought that the ancestor of the Yukian languages diverged from Wappo around 1500 .[5] The three Yukian languages diverged from each other over the last one thousand years, while dialectal variations in Wappo are even more recent. The most likely catalyst or, at least, influence on the separation of Yukian and Wappo was the expansion of the Pomo, leading to pomoization of the Wappo language and physical separation between the Yuki and the Wappo tribes.[6]

Vocabulary

Yuki had an octal (base-8) counting system, as the Yuki keep count by using the four spaces between their fingers rather than the fingers themselves. Yuki also had an extensive vocabulary for the plants of Mendocino County, California.[7]

Grammar

An extensive reference grammar of Yuki was published in 2016 and is based primarily on the texts and other notes recorded by Alfred L. Kroeber from Yuki speaker Ralph Moore in the first decade of the 20th century as well as elicited material recorded from other speakers later in the 20th century. This grammar also contains sketches of Huchnom and Coast Yuki based on the notes of Sydney Lamb and John Peabody Harrington, respectively.[8]

Phonology

!Bilabial!Dental!Alveolar!Postalveolar!Palatal!Velar!Glottal
StopPlainpkʔ
Ejectivet̪ʼt̺ʼ
AffricatePlaint͡ʃ
Ejectivet͡ʃʼ
FricativePlainsʃh
Ejective
NasalPlainmn
Glottalˀmˀn
ApproximantPlainwlj
Glottalˀwˀlˀj
An alveolar stop /t/ is an apico-alveolar stop articulated as [t̺].
! colspan="2"
FrontCentralBack
shortlongshortlongshortlong
Closeiu
Midəo
e
Opena

External links

Notes and References

  1. Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger . UNESCO . 3rd . 2010 . 11.
  2. http://www.ethnologue.com/show_language.asp?code=yuk Ethnologue report for language code:yuk
  3. Book: Balodis . Uldis . Yuki Grammar: With Sketches of Huchnom and Coast Yuki . 2016 . University of California Press . 978-0-520-29219-2 . 23 . en.
  4. Campbell 1997:132
  5. Book: McCarthy . Helen . Ethnography and Prehistory of the North Coast Range, California . 1985 . University of California . 26 . 9789994127962 . en.
  6. Book: Jones . Terry L. . Klar . Kathryn . Archaeology . Society for California . California Prehistory: Colonization, Culture, and Complexity . 2007 . Rowman Altamira . 978-0-7591-0872-1 . 81 . https://books.google.com/books?id=fFX066QfQv8C&pg=PA81 . en . Yukian.
  7. Book: Chestnut . Victor King . Plants used by the Indians of Mendocino County, California. 24 August 2012. 1902. Government Printing Office.
  8. Book: Balodis, Uldis. Yuki Grammar with Sketches of Huchnom and Coast Yuki. Phonetics and Phonology. University of California Press. 2016. 9780520292192.