Sirenik | |
Nativename: | Сиӷы́ных, Uqeghllistun |
Pronunciation: | pronounced as /siˈʁənəx/ |
States: | Russia |
Region: | Bering Strait region, mixed populations in settlements Sireniki and Imtuk |
Ethnicity: | Sirenik Eskimos |
Extinct: | 1997, with the death of Valentina Wye[1] |
Ref: | e18 |
Familycolor: | Eskimo-Aleut |
Fam2: | Eskimo |
Fam3: | Yupik? |
Ancestor: | Proto-Eskimo–Aleut |
Ancestor2: | Proto-Eskimo |
Ancestor3: | Proto-Yupik? |
Iso3: | ysr |
Linglist: | ysr |
Glotto: | sire1246 |
Glottorefname: | Old Sirenik |
Script: | Transcribed with Cyrillic in old monographs (extended with diacritics), but new publications may appear also romanised |
Notice: | IPA |
Sirenik Yupik,[2] Sireniki Yupik[3] (also Old Sirenik or Vuteen), Sirenik, or Sirenikskiy is an extinct Eskimo–Aleut language. It was spoken in and around the village of Sireniki (Сиреники) in Chukotka Peninsula, Chukotka Autonomous Okrug, Russia. The language shift has been a long process, ending in total language death. In January 1997, the last native speaker of the language, a woman named Vyjye (Valentina Wye) (Russian: Выйе), died.[4] [5] Ever since that point, the language has been extinct; nowadays, all Sirenik Eskimos speak Siberian Yupik or Russian. Despite this, censuses as late as 2010 report up to 5 speakers of Sirenik.[6]
Сиӷы́ных pronounced as /siˈʁənəx/ is the endonym for the eponymous settlement of Sireniki. The endonym for the people itself is pronounced as /[siˈʁənəɣˈməːʁij]/ "Sirenikites"; the singular form is pronounced as /[siˈʁənəɣˈməːʁa]/).
This article is based on Menovschikov (1964), with cited examples transliterated from Cyrillic transcription to the International Phonetic Alphabet.
Some argue that the Sirenik language is a remnant of a third group of Eskimo languages, in addition to Yupik and Inuit groups[4] [5] [7] [8] (see a visual representation by tree and an argumentation based on comparative linguistics[9] [10]). In fact, the exact genealogical classification of Sireniki language is not settled yet,[4] and some others regard it belonging to the Yupik branch.[11]
Many words are formed from entirely different roots to those in Siberian Yupik. Also, the grammar has several peculiarities compared to other Eskimo languages, and even compared to Aleut. For example, dual number is not known in Sireniki Eskimo, while most Eskimo–Aleut languages have dual, including even its neighboring Siberian Yupik relatives. The peculiarities amounted to mutual unintelligibility with even its nearest language relatives. This forced Sirenik Eskimos to use Chukchi as a lingua franca when speaking with neighboring Eskimo peoples. Thus, any external contacts required using a different language for Sireniki Eskimos: they either resorted to use of lingua franca, or used Siberian Yupik languages (being definitely a mutually unintelligible, different language for them, not just a dialect of their own). This difference from all their language relatives may be the result of a supposed long isolation from other Eskimo groups: Sireniki Eskimos may have been in contact only with speakers of unrelated languages for many centuries in the past, influenced especially by non-relative Chukchi.
Although the number of its speakers was very few even at the end of the nineteenth century, the language had at least two dialects in the past.
As for its morphological typology, it has polysynthetic and incorporative features (just like the other Eskimo languages).
Labial | Alveolar | Palatal | Velar | Uvular | Glottal | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nasal | voiced | pronounced as /link/ | pronounced as /link/ | pronounced as /link/ | |||
voiceless | pronounced as /link/ | ||||||
Stop/Affricate | pronounced as /link/ | pronounced as /link/ | pronounced as /link/ | pronounced as /link/ | pronounced as /link/ | pronounced as /link/ | |
Fricative | voiceless | (pronounced as /link/) | pronounced as /link/ | (pronounced as /link/) | pronounced as /link/ | pronounced as /link/ | |
voiced | pronounced as /link/ | pronounced as /link/ | pronounced as /link/ | ||||
Approximant | voiceless | pronounced as /link/ | pronounced as /link/ | ||||
voiced | pronounced as /link/ | pronounced as /link/ | pronounced as /link/ |
Front | Central | Back | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Close | pronounced as /link/ pronounced as /link/ | pronounced as /link/ pronounced as /link/ | pronounced as /link/ pronounced as /link/ | |
Mid | ||||
Open | pronounced as /link/ pronounced as /link/ |
Like all other Eskimo languages, the morphology is rather complex. A description grouped by lexical categories follows.
Although morphology will be treated grouped into a nominal and a verbal part, many Eskimo languages show features which “crosscut” any such groupings in several aspects:
Some grammatical categories (e.g. person and number) are applicable to both verbal and nominal lexical categories.
Although person and number are expressed in a single suffix, sometimes it can be traced back to consist of a distinct person and a distinct number suffix.
Paradigms can make a distinction in 3rd person for “self”, thus the mere personal suffix (of the verb or noun) can distinguish e.g.
Thus, it can be translated into English (and some other languages) using a reflexive pronoun. This notion concerns also other concepts in building larger parts of the sentence and the text, see section
Although other Eskimo languages know more than the familiar two grammatical numbers, by having also dual, Sireniki uses only singular and plural. Sireniki is, as mentioned above, peculiar in this aspect, alongside Greenlandic, within the Eskimo–Aleut language family, with even its neighboring Siberian Yupik relatives having dual number.
Sireniki had an unusual wide range of deictic distinctions between up to four distances (near, medial, far and out_of_view) which could be horizontal “una”>”igna”>”ikna”, vertical “mana”>”unygna”>”pikna”, marking a movement like approaching the speaker “ukna”, away from them “agna”, refer to conversational topics be they definite “ugna”>”k’amna”>oov “amna” or indefinite “k’akymna”>”k’agna”>oov “akymna” or describe sth in the past “imna”.
Suffix -pronounced as //ɕuɣɨn//- meaning “to be similar to sth”:
Root | Becomes verbal by suffix | Indicative mood, singular 3rd person | |
---|---|---|---|
pronounced as //mɨtɨχlʲ̥ux// | pronounced as //mɨtɨχlʲ̥ux-ɕuɣɨn//- | pronounced as //mɨtɨχlʲ̥ux-ɕuɣɨn-tɨ-χ// | |
raven | to be similar to a raven | he/she is similar to a raven |
Predicative form of a noun can be built using suffix -pronounced as //t͡ʃ ɨ//-:
Root | Predicative form | Examples | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Singular 2nd person | Singular 3rd person | |||
pronounced as //juɣ// | pronounced as //juɣɨ t͡ʃ ɨ//- | pronounced as //juɣɨ t͡ʃ ɨtɨn// | pronounced as //juɣɨ t͡ʃ ɨχ// | |
man | to be a man | you are a man | he/she is a man |
Not only the grammatical cases of nouns are marked by suffixes, but also the person of possessor (use of possessive pronouns in English) can be expressed by agglutination.
Absolutive | pronounced as //taŋaqa// (my child) | pronounced as //taŋaʁɨn// (your child) | |
---|---|---|---|
Ablative / Instrumental | pronounced as //taŋamnɨŋ// (from my child) | pronounced as //taŋaχpɨnɨŋ// (from your child) | |
Dative / Lative | pronounced as //taŋamnu// (to my child) | pronounced as //taŋaχpɨnu// (to your child) | |
Locative | pronounced as //taŋamni// (at my child) | pronounced as //taŋaχpɨni// (at your child) | |
Equative (comparative) | pronounced as //taŋamtɨn// (like my child) | pronounced as //taŋaχpɨtɨn// (like your child) |
There is no grammatical gender (or gender-like noun class system).
Sireniki is an absolutive–ergative language.
Cases (listed using Menovščikov's numbering):
To see why a single case can play such distinct roles at all, read morphosyntactic alignment, and also a short table about it.
Some finer grammatical functions are expressed using postpositions. Most of them are built as a combinations of cases
in a similar way as we use expressions like "on top of" in English.
Also at verbs, the morphology is very rich. Suffixes can express grammatical moods of the verb (e.g. imperative, interrogative, optative), and also negation, tense, aspect, the person of subject and object. Some examples (far from being comprehensive):
Phonology | Meaning | Grammatical notes | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Person, number of | Mood | Others | ||||
subject | object | |||||
pronounced as //aʁaʁɨ-tɨqɨχ-tɨ-mkɨn// | I lead you | Singular 1st person | Singular 2nd person | Indicative | ||
pronounced as //aʁaʁɨ-ɕuk-ɨ-mɕi// | Let me lead you | Singular 1st person | Singular 2nd person | Imperative | ||
pronounced as //nɨŋɨ-sɨɣɨŋ-sɨn// | Don't you see me? | Singular 2nd person | Singular 1st person | Interrogative | Negative polarity |
The rich set of morphemes makes it possible to build huge verbs whose meaning could be expressed (in most of widely known languages) as whole sentences (consisting of more words) . Sireniki – like the other Eskimo languages – has polysynthetic and incorporative features, in many forms, among others polypersonal agreement.
The polysynthetic and incorporative features mentioned above manifest themselves in most of the ways Sirenik language can express grammatical categories.
For background, see transitivity. (Remember also section
See also Nicole Tersis and Shirley Carter-Thomas (2005).
Even the grammatical polarity can be expressed by adding a suffix to the verb.
An example for negative polarity: the negation form of the verb pronounced as //aʁaʁ-// (to go):
Also linguistic modality can be expressed by suffixes. Modal verbs like "want to", "wish to" etc. do not even exist:
pronounced as //aftalʁaʁ-jux-// (to want to work) | ||
pronounced as //aftalʁaχ-tɨqɨχ-tɨ-ŋ// (I work) | pronounced as //aftalʁaʁ-jux-tɨqɨχ-tɨ-ŋ// (I want to work) |
The table illustrates also why Sirenik is treated as agglutinative (rather than fusional).
Four grammatical voices are mentioned in:
A distinction between two kinds of participles (adverbial participle and adjectival participle) makes sense in Sireniki (just like in Hungarian, see határozói igenév and melléknévi igenév for detailed description of these concepts; or in Russian, see деепричастие and причастие).
Sireniki has many kinds of participles in both categories. In the following, they will be listed, grouped by the relation between the “dependent action” and “main action” (or by other meanings beyond this, e.g. modality) – following the terminology of Menovschikov (1964). A sentence with a participle can be imagined as simulating a subordinating compound sentence where the action described in the dependent clause relates somehow to the action described in the main clause. In English, an adverbial clause may express reason, purpose, condition, succession etc., and a relative clause can express many meanings, too.
In an analogous way, in Sireniki Eskimo language, the "dependent action" (expressed by the adverbial participle in the sentence element called adverbial, or expressed by the adjectival participle in the sentence element called attribute) relates somehow to the “main action” (expressed by the verb in the sentence element called predicate), and the participles will be listed below grouped by this relation (or by other meanings beyond this, e.g. modality).
They can be translated into English e.g. by using an appropriate adverbial clause. There are many of them, with various meanings.
An interesting feature: they can have person and number. The person of the dependent action need not coincide with that of the main action. An example (meant in the British English usage of “shall / should” in the 1st person: here, conveying only conditional, but no necessity or morality):
If I were a marksman, we should kill walrus |
Another example (with a different adverbial participle):
when he/she sings, they keep frightening him/her |
They will be discussed in more details below.
An adverbial participle “explaining reason, purpose or circumstance of action” is expressed by suffix -pronounced as //lɨ//- / -pronounced as // l̥ɨ//- (followed by appropriate person-number suffix). Examples:
Persons | Sentence | |
---|---|---|
Adverbial participle | Verb | |
1st—1st | pronounced as //jɨfkɨ-lɨ-ma/ | pronounced as /itχɨ-mɨ-t͡ʃɨ-ŋ// |
(I) having stood up | I went in | |
3rd—3rd | pronounced as //jɨfkɨ-lɨ-mi/ | pronounced as /itχɨ-mɨ-tɨ-χ// |
(he/she) having stood up | he/she went in |
Another example, with a somewhat different usage:
Adverbial participle | Verb | |
---|---|---|
pronounced as //nɨŋitu l̥ɨku/ | pronounced as /pɨjɨkɨŋa// | |
To examine him/her2 (another being) | he/she1 went |
Using the adverbial participle -pronounced as //ja//- / -pronounced as //ɕa//-, the dependent action (expressed by the adverbial participle in the sentence element called adverbial) finishes just before the main action (expressed by the verb in the sentence element called predicate) begins.
It can be expressed by suffix -pronounced as //inɨq ȷ̊a//-. Examples:
pronounced as //nukɨ l̥piɣt͡ʃɨʁaʁɨm aninɨq ȷ̊ami qamt͡ʃɨni tiɣɨmɨra(x)// | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
the boy, going out [of the house], took his [own] sledge [with himself])|}where
Another example:
ConditionalDependent action is conditional: it does not takes place, although it would (either really, or provided that some—maybe irreal—conditions would hold). Confer also conditional sentence. Sireniki Eskimo has several adverbial participles to express that. We can distinguish them according to the concerned condition (conveyed by the dependent action): it may be
= Real= It is expressed with suffix -pronounced as //qɨɣɨ//- / -pronounced as //kɨɣɨ//-, let us see e.g. a paradigm beginning with pronounced as //aʁa-qɨɣɨ-ma// (if I get off / depart); pronounced as //aʁa-qɨɣɨ-pi// (if you get off / depart):
= Irreal=Confer counterfactual conditional. Sireniki can compress it into an adverbial participle: it is expressed with suffix -pronounced as //ɣɨjɨqɨɣɨ//- / -pronounced as //majɨqɨɣɨ//-. The dependent action is expressed with an adverbial participle. The main action is conveyed by the verb. If also the main action is conditional (a typical usage), than it can be expressed with a verb of conditional mood. The persons need not coincide. An example (meant in the British English usage of “shall / should” in the 1st person: here, conveying only conditional, but no necessity or morality):
The example in details: Dependent action:
Adjectival participlesThere are more kinds of them.
They can be used not only in attributive role (as in the above examples), but also in predicative role:
ModalityAdjectival participle -pronounced as //kajux// / -pronounced as //qajux// conveys a meaning related rather to modality (than to the relation of dependent action and main action). It conveys meaning “able to”.
SyntaxErgative–absolutiveSireniki is (just like many Eskimo languages) an ergative–absolutive language. For English-language materials treating this feature of Sireniki, see Vakhtin's book, See also
References
External links
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