Shawnee | |
Nativename: | Sawanwa, Savannah, Sewanee, Shawano |
States: | United States |
Region: | Central and Northeast Oklahoma |
Ethnicity: | Shawnee |
Speakers: | 260 and decreasing |
Date: | 2015 |
Ref: | e18 |
Familycolor: | Algic |
Fam1: | Algic |
Fam2: | Algonquian |
Iso3: | sjw |
Glotto: | shaw1249 |
Glottorefname: | Shawnee |
Map: | Shawnee lang.png |
Mapcaption: | Distribution of the Shawnee language around 1650 |
Map2: | Lang Status 40-SE.svg |
Notice: | IPA |
Script: | Latin script |
The Shawnee language is a Central Algonquian language spoken in parts of central and northeastern Oklahoma by the Shawnee people. It was originally spoken by these people in a broad territory throughout the Eastern United States, mostly north of the Ohio River. They occupied territory in Ohio, West Virginia, Kentucky, and Pennsylvania.
Shawnee is closely related to other Algonquian languages, such as Mesquakie-Sauk (Sac and Fox) and Kickapoo. It has 260 speakers, according to a 2015 census, although the number is decreasing. It is a polysynthetic language with rather free word ordering.
Shawnee is severely threatened, as many speakers have shifted to English. The approximately 200 remaining speakers are older adults. Some of the decline in usage of Shawnee resulted from the United States' assimilation program carried out by Indian boarding schools, which abused, starved, and beat children who spoke their Native languages. This treatment often extended to the family of those children as well.
Of the 4,576 citizens of the Absentee Shawnee Tribe around the city of Shawnee, more than 100 are speakers. Of the 3,652 citizens of the Eastern Shawnee Tribe in Ottawa County, only a few elders are speakers. Of the 2,226 citizens of the Shawnee Tribe, or Loyal Shawnee in northeastern Oklahoma around Whiteoak, there are fewer than 12 speakers. Because of such low figures and the percentage of elderly speakers, Shawnee is classified as an endangered language. Additionally, development outside of the home has been limited. A dictionary and portions of the Bible translated from 1842 to 1929 were translated into Shawnee.
Absentee-Shawnee Elder George Blanchard Sr., former governor of his tribe, teaches classes to Head Start and elementary school children, as well as evening classes for adults, at the Cultural Preservation Center in Seneca, Missouri. His work was profiled on the PBS show American Experience in 2009.[1] The classes are intended to encourage speaking Shawnee among families at home. The Eastern Shawnee have also taught language classes.[2] The Shawnee Tribe launched a language immersion program in 2020 with virtual and in-person classes.[3]
Conversational Shawnee booklets, CDs, and a Learn Shawnee Language website are available.[4] [5]
Shawnee has six vowels,[6] three of which are high, and three are low.
Front | Central | Back | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Close | pronounced as /ink/ pronounced as /ink/ | |||
Mid | pronounced as /ink/ | pronounced as /ink/ | ||
Open | pronounced as /ink/ pronounced as /ink/ |
In (1) and (2), a near minimal pair has been found for Shawnee pronounced as //i// and pronounced as //ii//. In (3) and (4), a minimal pair has been found for Shawnee pronounced as //a// and pronounced as //aa//.
(1) ho-wiisi'-ta 'he was in charge'
(2) wi 'si 'dog'
(3) caaki yaama 'all this'
(4) caki 'small'
However, no quantitative contrasts have been found in the vowels pronounced as //e// and pronounced as //o//.
Shawnee consonants are shown in the chart below.
Labial | Alveolar | Palatal | Velar | Glottal | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Plosive | pronounced as /p/ | pronounced as /t/ | pronounced as /tʃ/ | k kː | pronounced as /ʔ/ | |
Fricative | pronounced as /θ/ | pronounced as /ʃ/ | pronounced as /h/ | |||
Lateral | pronounced as /l/ | |||||
Nasal | pronounced as /m/ | pronounced as /n/ | ||||
Semivowel | pronounced as /w/ | pronounced as /j/ |
pronounced as //k// and pronounced as //kk// contrast in the verbal affixes -ki (which marks third person singular animate objects) and -kki (which marks third person plural animate objects).
The Shawnee pronounced as //θ// is most often derived from Proto-Algonquian *s.[7]
Some speakers of Shawnee pronounce pronounced as //ʃ// more like an alveolar pronounced as /[s]/. This pronunciation is especially common among Loyal Band Shawnee speakers near Vinita, Oklahoma.
[{{IPA|ʔ}}] and [h] are allophones of the same phoneme: [{{IPA|ʔ}}] occurs in syllable final position, while pronounced as /[h]/ occurs at the beginning of a syllable.
Stress in Shawnee falls on the final syllable (ultima) of a word.
These affixes (-ki, -kki) are object markers in the transitive animate subordinate mode. The subject is understood.
[h] Insertion
∅→[h]/#____V
A word may not begin with a vowel. Instead, an on-glide pronounced as /[h]/ is added. For example:
There are two variants of the article -oci, meaning 'from'. It can attach to nouns to form prepositional phrases, or it can also be a preverb. When it attaches to a noun, it is -ooci, and when attached to a preverb it is -hoci.
/y/ Insertion
∅→[y]/V(:)_____ V(:)
When one of the vowels is long, Shawnee allows for the insertion of pronounced as /[y]/.
Word-final consonant deletion
C# → 0
A consonant is deleted at the end of a word.
In (a), a noun ends in a consonant when a locative suffix follows, but in (b), the consonant is deleted at word end.
Word-final vowel shortening
V:# → V#
A long vowel is shortened at the end of a word.
t/V____V
[t] is inserted between two vowels at morpheme boundary.
As we know from the phonological rule stated above, a word may not begin with a vowel in Shawnee. From the morphophonological rule above, it can be assumed that pronounced as /[h]/~pronounced as /[t]/.
example
-eecini(i) meaning 'Indian agent' appears as hina heecini or 'that Indian agent', and as ho-[t]eecinii-ma-waa-li, meaning 'he was their Indian agent'. The pronounced as /[t]/ of ho-[t]- fills the open slot that would otherwise have to be filled with pronounced as /[h]/.
V1-V2-----> V2
A short vowel preceding another short vowel at a morpheme boundary is deleted.
V:V------> V:
When a long vowel and a short vowel come together at a morpheme boundary, the short vowel is deleted.
Shawnee shares many grammatical features with other Algonquian languages. There are two third persons, proximate and obviative, and two noun classes (or genders), animate and inanimate. It is primarily agglutinating typologically, and is polysynthetic, resulting in a great deal of information being encoded on the verb. The most common word order is Verb-Subject.
stem-(instrumental affix)-transitivizing affix-object affix
The instrumental affix is not obligatory, but if it is present, it determines the type of transitivizing affix that can follow it, (see numbering scheme below) or by the last stem in the theme.
Instrumental affixes are as follows
Instrumental suffix | ||
---|---|---|
pw 'by mouth' | ||
n 'by hand' | ||
h(0) 'by heat' | ||
hh 'by mechanical instrument' | ||
l 'by projectile' | ||
(h)t 'by vocal noise' | ||
šk 'by feet in locomotion' | ||
hšk 'by feet as agent' | ||
lhk 'by legs' | ||
Possessor | Singular noun | Plural noun | |
---|---|---|---|
1s | ni- + ROOT | ni- + ROOT + ki | |
2s | ki- + ROOT | ki- + ROOT + ki | |
3s | ho- + ROOT | ho- + ROOT + ki | |
4s | ho- + ROOT + li | ho- + ROOT + waa + li | |
1p (excl) | ni- + ROOT + na | ni- + ROOT + naa + ki | |
2+1 (incl) | ki- + ROOT + na | ki- + ROOT + naa + ki | |
2p | ki- + ROOT + wa | ki- + ROOT + waa + ki | |
4p | ho- + ROOT + hi | ho- + ROOT + waa + hi |
-tθani (w)- 'bed'
Possessor | Singular noun | Plural noun | |
---|---|---|---|
1s | ni- + tθani | ni- + tθaniw+ali | |
2s | ki- + tθani | ki- + tθaniw+ali | |
3s | ho- + tθani | ho- + tθaniw+ali | |
1p (excl) | ni- + tθane+na | ni- + tθane+na | |
2+1 (incl) | ki- + tθane+na | ki- + tθane+na | |
2p | ki- + tθani+wa | ki- + tθani+wa | |
3p | ho- + tθani+wa | ho- + tθani+wa | |
Locative | tθan + eki | (unattested) | |
Diminutive | tθan + ehi |
Shawnee has a fairly free word order, with VSO being the most common:
SOV, SVO, VOS, and OVS are also plausible.
Parts of speech in the Algonquian languages, Shawnee included, show a basic division between inflecting forms (nouns, verbs and pronouns), and non-inflecting invariant forms (also known as particles). Directional particles (piyeci meaning 'towards') incorporate into the verb itself. Although particles are invariant in form, they have different distributions and meanings that correspond to adverbs ([hi]noki meaning 'now', waapaki meaning 'today', lakokwe meaning 'so, certainly', mata meaning 'not') postpositions (heta'koθaki wayeeci meaning 'towards the east') and interjections (ce meaning 'so!').
Examples (1) and (2) below show the grammatical interaction of obviation and inverse. The narrative begins in (1) in which grandfather is the grammatical subject [+AGENT] in discourse-focus [+PROXIMATE]. In (2), grandfather remains in discourse-focus [+PROXIMATE], but he is now the grammatical object [+OBJECT]. To align grammatical relations properly in (2), the inverse marker /-ekw-/ is used in the verb stem to signal that the governor is affecting grandfather. (The prefix pronounced as //ho-// on ho-stakooli refers to 'grandfather').
Since the person building the house (the governor) is disjoint from the person who the house is being built for (the grandfather), this disjunction is marked by placing one participant in the obviative. Since grandfather is the focus in this narrative, the governor is assigned the obviative marking. Grammatically, kapenal-ee (-ee- < -ile- < -ileni- 'person') is the subject who is not in discourse-focus (marked by pronounced as //-li// 3sOBVIATIVE), showing that grammatical relations and obviation are independent categories.
Similar interactions of inverse and obviation are found below. In Shawnee, third person animate beings participate in obviation, including grammatically animate nouns that are semantically inanimate.
The Shawnee pronounced as //-eki// meaning 'in' can be used with either gender. This locative affix cliticizes onto the preceding noun, and thus it appears to be a case ending.
The independent and imperative orders are used in independent clauses. The imperative order involves an understood second person affecting first or third persons.
Independent Mode:
Inanimate Intransitive (II):
3s---> /-i/ ---> skwaaw-i 'it is red'
3p---> /-a/ ---> kinwaaw-a 'those are long'
Refer to the examples below. Yaama meaning 'this' in examples 1 and 2 refers to someone in front of the speaker. The repetition of yaama in example 1 emphasizes the location of the referent in the immediate presence of the speaker.
Refer to the examples below. Hina functions as a third-person singular pronoun.
Refer to the examples below. Hini fulfills the same functions as above for inanimate nouns. Locational and third-person singular pronominal uses are found in the following examples.
The choice of person affix may depend on the relative position of agent and object on the animacy hierarchy. According to Dixon, [8] the animacy hierarchy extends from first-person pronoun, second-person pronoun, third-person pronoun, proper nouns, human common nouns, animate common nouns, and inanimate common nouns.
The affixes in the verb will reflect whether an animate agent is acting on someone or something lower in the animacy scale, or whether he or she is being acted upon by someone or something lower in the animacy scale.
Shawnee nouns can be singular or plural. Inflectional affixes in the verb stem that cross-reference objects are often omitted if inanimate objects are involved. Even if an inflectional affix for the inanimate object is present, it usually does not distinguish number. For example, in the TI paradigm (animate›inanimate) when there is a second or third person plural subject, object markers are present in the verb stem, but they are number-indifferent. Overt object markers are omitted for most other subjects. In the inverse situation, (animate‹inanimate) the inanimate participants are not cross-referenced morphologically.[9]
The basic distinction for gender in Shawnee is between animate actors and inanimate objects. Nouns are in two gender classes, inanimate and animate; the latter includes all persons, animals, spirits, and large trees, and some other objects such as tobacco, maize, apple, raspberry (but not strawberry), calf of leg (but not thigh), stomach, spittle, feather, bird's tail, horn, kettle, pipe for smoking, snowshoe.[10]
Grammatical gender in Shawnee is more accurately signaled by the phonology, not the semantics.
Nouns ending in pronounced as //-a// are animate, while nouns ending in pronounced as //-i// are inanimate.[11] This phonological criterion is not absolute. Modification by a demonstrative (hina being animate and hini being inanimate, meaning 'that') and pluralization are conclusive tests.
In the singular, Shawnee animate nouns end in pronounced as //-a//, and the obviative singular morpheme is pronounced as //-li//.
Shawnee inanimate nouns are usually pluralized with stem +pronounced as //-ali//.
This causes animate obviative singular and inanimate plural to look alike on the surface.
example
animate obviative singular
wiskilo'θa-'''li'''
bird
inanimate plural
niipit-'''ali'''
my teeth
During the 19th century a short-lived Roman-based alphabet was designed for Shawnee by the missionary Jotham Meeker. It was never widely used. Later, native Shawnee speaker Thomas ‘Wildcat’ Alford devised a highly phonemic and accurate orthography for his 1929 Shawnee translation of the four gospels of the New Testament, but it, too, never attained wide usage.
English | Shawnee |
---|---|
beard | Kwenaloonaroll |
general greeting (in the northeastern dialect) | Hatito |
general greeting (in the southern dialect) | Ho |
greetings | Bezon (general greeting)Bezon nikanaki (general greeting spoken to a friend) Howisakisiki (daytime greeting) Howisiwapani (morning greeting) Wasekiseki (morning greeting) |
how are you? | Hakiwisilaasamamo, Waswasimamo |