
Pre-contact distribution of Chimakuan languages
The 'Chimakuan' language family consists of two languages spoken in northwestern
Washington, USA on the
Olympic Peninsula. It is part of the
Mosan sprachbund, and one of its languages is famous for having no
nasal consonants. The two languages were about as close as English and
German.
Family division
# '
Chemakum' (also known as Chimakum or Chimacum) ''(†)''
# '
Quileute' (also known as Quillayute)
Chemakum is now
extinct. It was spoken until the 1940s on the east side of the Olympic Peninsula between
Port Townsend and
Hood Canal. The name Chemakum is an Anglicized version of a Salishan word for the Chemakum people, such as the nearby
Twana word ''čə́bqəb'' (earlier ).
Quileute is now severely
endangered. It is spoken by a few people south of the
Makah on the western coast of the Olympic peninsula south of Cape Flattery at La Push and the lower
Hoh River. The name Quileute comes from ''kʷoʔlí·yot’'' , the name of a village at La Push.
Phonology
The (pre-)Proto-Chimakuan sound system contained three vowels, long and short, and lexical stress. It had the following consonants.
| | Labial | Alveolar stop | Alveolar fricate | Lateral | Palatal | Velar | Labialized velar | Uvualar | Labialized uvular | Glottal |
|---|
| 'Plosive' | | | | | () | | | | | |
| 'Ejective' | | | | | () | | | | | |
| 'Fricative' | | | | | () | | | | | |
| 'Sonorant' | | | | | | | | | | |
| 'Glottalized' | | | | | | | | | | |
In Proto-Chimakuan the series occurred (mostly?) before the vowel . On the other hand, occurred (mostly?) before the vowels . These series may have become separate phonemes before Chimakum and Quileute split, but if so, it seems clear that they had been
allophones not long before then.
In Quileute the stress became fixed to the penultimate syllable, though subsequent changes made it somewhat unpredictable, and the glottalized sonorants became allophonic with glottal stop-sonorant sequences and so can no longer be considered phonemic. Open syllables developed long vowels. Perhaps as recently as the late 19th century, the nasals became voiced plosives .
In Chemakum, stressed vowels frequently acquired glottal stops; depalatalized to , while palatalized to ; sonorants lost their glottalization; and the approximants hardened to in the environment of stressed vowels.
Bibilography
★ Andrade, Manuel J. (1933). ''Quileute''. New York: Columbia University Press. (Extract from ''Handbook of American Indian Languages'' (Vol. 3, pp. 151-292); Andrade's doctoral dissertation).
★ Andrade, Manuel J. (1953). Notes on the relations between Chemakum and Quileute. ''International Journal of American Linguistics'', ''19'', 212-215.
★ Andrade, Manuel J.; & Frachtenberg, Leo J. (1931). ''Quileute texts''. Columbia University contributions to anthropology (Vol. 12). New York: Columbia University Press.
★ Boas, Franz. (1892). Notes on the Chemakum language. ''American Anthropologist'', ''5'', 37-44.
★ Campbell, Lyle. (1997). ''American Indian languages: The historical linguistics of Native America''. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-509427-1.
★ Mithun, Marianne. (1999). ''The languages of Native North America''. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-23228-7 (hbk); ISBN 0-521-29875-X.