Tongva language explained

Tongva
Also Known As:Gabrielino or Gabrieleño
States:Southern California, United States
Region:Los Angeles, Santa Catalina Island
Ethnicity:Tongva
Extinct:ca. 1900
Revived:since 2000s
Familycolor:Uto-Aztecan
Fam1:Uto-Aztecan
Fam2:Northern Uto-Aztecan
Fam3:Takic
Fam4:Serran
Map:Gabrielino language.png
Iso3:xgf
Linglist:xgf
Glotto:tong1329
Glottorefname:Tongva
Notice:IPA
Nativename:eyooshiraaw

The Tongva language (also known as Gabrielino or Gabrieleño) is an extinct[1] Uto-Aztecan language formerly spoken by the Tongva, a Native American people who have lived in and around modern day Los Angeles for centuries. It has not been a language of everyday conversation since the 1940s. The Gabrielino people now speak English but a few are attempting to revive their language by using it in everyday conversation and ceremonial contexts. Presently, Gabrielino is also being used in language revitalization classes and in some public discussion regarding religious and environmental issues.[2] Tongva is closely related to Serrano.[3] The names of several cities and neighborhoods in Southern California are of Tongva origin, and include Pacoima, Tujunga, Topanga, Azusa, Cahuenga in Cahuenga Pass and Cucamonga in Rancho Cucamonga.

The last fluent native speakers of Tongva lived in the early 20th century. The language is primarily documented in the unpublished field notes of John Peabody Harrington made during that time. The "J.P. Harrington Project", developed by The Smithsonian through University of California, Davis, approximately 6,000 pages of his notes on the Tongva language, were coded for documentation by a Tongva member, who took three years to accomplish the task. Alleged native speakers of Tongva who have died as late as in the 1970s have not been verified as having been fluent speakers.

The minor planet 50000 Quaoar was named after the Tongva creator god.[4]

Language revitalization

The Gabrielino language is a subgroup of Takic, a subfamily of Uto-Aztecan, which is usually divided into three subgoups: Serrano-Kitanemuk, Gabrielino (including the Fernandeño dialect) and Cupan. As of 2012, members of the contemporary Tongva (Gabrieleño) tribal council are attempting to revive the language, by making use of written vocabularies, by comparison to better attested members of the Takic group to which Tongva belonged, and by offering classes.[5]

In 2004, Pamela Munro, now UCLA emeritus professor of linguistics, was asked to serve as a linguistic mentor to Tongva people who wanted to learn about their language at the Breath of Life Workshop, a biennial event in Berkeley staged by the Advocates for Indigenous California Language Survival.[6] Since then, she has taught monthly Tongva language classes in which adults and children practice pronunciation, master the use of grammatical particles, sing songs and play word games. She calls her work "a reclamation effort" for the language.[7] Munro has compiled a Tongva dictionary of over 1,000 words, and also maintains a Tongva language Facebook page to which she posts Tongva words, phrases and songs.[8] Munro says there are no audio recordings of people speaking the Tongva language, but that there are a few scratched wax cylinder recordings of Tongva songs.[9]

Phonology

Consonants

The following is a list of the consonants and vowels of the Tongva language as used by the Tongva Language Committee, based on linguist Pamela Munro's interpretation of the fieldnotes of J. P. Harrington.[10] In parentheses is the spelling of the specific sound. There are multiple orthographies for the Tongva language.

LabialAlveolarPalatalVelarLabio
-velar
Glottal
Nasalm pronounced as /link/n pronounced as /link/ng pronounced as /link/
Stopvoiced(b pronounced as /link/)(d pronounced as /link/)(g pronounced as /link/)
voicelessp pronounced as /link/t pronounced as /link/ch pronounced as /link/k pronounced as /link/kw pronounced as /link/ʼ pronounced as /link/
Fricative(f pronounced as /link/)s pronounced as /link/sh pronounced as /link/x pronounced as /link/h pronounced as /link/
Approximantv pronounced as /link/l pronounced as /link/y pronounced as /link/w pronounced as /link/
Tapr pronounced as /link/
Consonants pronounced as //b d f ɡ// are used in loanwords.[10]

Vowels

FrontCentralBack
shortlongshortlongshortlong
Closei pronounced as /link/ii pronounced as /link/u pronounced as /link/uu pronounced as /link/
Mide pronounced as /link/ee pronounced as /link/o pronounced as /link/oo pronounced as /link/
Opena pronounced as /link/aa pronounced as /link/

Morphology

Tongva is an agglutinative language, where words use suffixes and multiple morphemes for a variety of purposes.

Vocabulary

The Lord's Prayer[10]

The Lord's Prayer is called ʼEyoonak in Tongva. The following text was derived from old Mission records.

Collected by C. Hart Merriam (1903)[11]

(Merriam refers to them as the Tongvā)

Numbers
  1. Po-koo
  2. Wěh-hā
  3. Pah-hā
  4. Wah-chah
  5. Mah-har
  6. Pah-vah-hā
  7. Wah-chah-kav-e-ah
  8. Wa-ha's-wah-chah
  9. Mah-ha'hr-kav-e-ah
  10. Wa-hās-mah-hah'r
  11. Wa-hā's-mah-hah'r-koi-po-koo
  12. Wa-hā's-mah-hah'r-koi-wěh-hā
grizzly bear
  • hoó-nahr
  • hoon-nah (subject)
  • hoon-rah (object)
    black bear
  • pí-yah-hó-naht

    Collected by Alexander Taylor (1860)[11]

    Numbers
    1. po-koo
    2. wa-hay
    3. pa-hey
    4. wat-sa
    5. mahar
    6. pawahe
    7. wat-sa-kabiya
    8. wa-hish-watchsa
    9. mahar-cabearka
    10. wa-hish-mar

    Taylor claims "they do not count farther than ten"

    Collected by Dr. Oscar Loew (1875)[11]

    Numbers
    1. pu-guʼ
    2. ve-heʼ
    3. paʼ-hi
    4. va-tchaʼ
    5. mahaʼr
    6. pa-vaʼhe
    7. vatchaʼ-kabyaʼ
    8. vehesh-vatchaʼ
    9. mahar-kabyaʼ
    10. vehes-mahar
    11. puku-hurura
    12. vehe-hurura
    bear
  • unar

    Collected by Charles Wilkes, USN (1838-1842)[11]

    Numbers
    1. pukū
    2. wehē
    3. pāhe
    4. watsā
    bear
  • hundr

    Other sources

    Toponymy

    The table below gives the names of various missions in the Tongva language.[13]

    c=engEnglishc=tngTongva
    c=engLos Angelesc=tngYaa
    c=engSan Bernardinoc=tngWa'aach
    c=engSan Gabrielc=tngShevaa
    c=engSan Pedroc=tngChaaw
    c=engSanta Anac=tngHotuuk
    c=engSanta Monicac=tngKecheek
    c=engSanta Catalinac=tngPemu

    See also

    External links

    Notes and References

    1. https://glottolog.org/resource/languoid/id/tong1329 Glottolog 4.4 – Tongva
    2. Jana. Fortier . Native American Consultation And Ethnographic Study, Ventura County, California . California Department of Transportation . 17 June 2019 . La Jolla, California . 13–14. December 2008.
    3. Book: Golla . Victor . California Indian Languages . 2011 . University of California Press . 978-0-520-26667-4 . en.
    4. Web site: Byrd. Deborah . Quaoar, a rocky world orbiting beyond Neptune. EarthSky. 31 August 2014. 19 February 2013.
    5. News: Plesset . R. . San Pedro: Science Center Endangered/Tongva Village Site Revitalization : LA IMC . 26 September 2021 . la.indymedia.org . 2 June 2012 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120628200740/http://la.indymedia.org/news/2012/06/253605.php . 28 June 2012.
    6. News: Munro . Pamela . This is how to revive a Native American language spoken before white people came . 26 September 2021 . Washington Post . 28 October 2014 . https://web.archive.org/web/20141029064201/http://www.washingtonpost.com/posteverything/wp/2014/10/28/this-is-how-to-revive-a-native-american-language-spoken-before-white-people-came/ . 29 October 2014.
    7. Web site: Tongva, Los Angeles' first language, opens the door to a forgotten time and place. Curwen. Thomas. May 12, 2019. Los Angeles Times. en. 2019-05-12.
    8. News: Marquez . Letisia . UCLA linguist, Gabrielino-Tongva Indians use social media to revive extinct language . 26 September 2021 . UCLA Newsroom . June 27, 2014.
    9. Web site: Rosemeyer (Rosemyre) . J. V. . Tongva wax cylinder recordingsHearst Museum of Anthropology . hearstmuseum.berkeley.edu . 26 September 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210926153129/https://portal.hearstmuseum.berkeley.edu/?page=4&q=tongva&search_field=text . 26 September 2021 . en . 1916.
    10. Book: Munro. Pamela . The Gabrielino/Tongva Language Committee. Hyaare Shiraaw'ax 'Eyooshiraaw'a: Now You're Speaking Our Language (An Introduction to the Gabrielino/Tongva/Fernandeño Language). 2008. Lesson One: Pronouncing and Writing the Tongva Language. P. Munro and the Gabrielino/Tongva Language Committee . 25610961M .
    11. McCawley, William. The First Angelinos: The Gabrielino Indians of Los Angeles. Malki Museum Press, 1996
    12. Native Languages of the Americas
    13. [Pamela Munro|Munro, Pamela]