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Kalaallisut language
About Kalaallisut language
The 'Kalaallisut language' (also called 'Western Greenlandic', 'Greenlandic Eskimo', or 'Greenlandic Inuktitut') is an Eskimo-Aleut language spoken by the Kalaallit of Greenland. It is closely related to the Inuit languages in Canada, such as Inuktitut. Kalaallisut is spoken by about 54,000 people, which is more than all the other Eskimo-Aleut languages combined. The northern dialect, 'Inuktun' or Avanersuarmiutut, spoken around the city of Qaanaaq (Thule) is particularly closely related to Canadian Inuktitut. Other dialects are the dialect of eastern Greenland (Tunu) called 'Tunumiit oraasiat', and the dialect of Upernavik.
| Contents |
| Phonology of Kalaallisut |
| Grammatical features of Kalaallisut |
| Orthography |
| Further reading |
| See also |
| External links |
| Notes |
Phonology of Kalaallisut
The most extensive study of Kalaallisut phonology is Jørgen Rischel's "Topics in West Greenlandic Phonology" (1974)[1].
Three vowels: '/i/', '/u/' and '/a/'
Before a uvular consonant ( or ) /i/ is realized allophonically as [e] or and /u/ as [o] or . This alternation is shown in the modern standard orthography by writing /i/ and /u/ as
and).
Double vowels are pronounced as two mora, so they are phonologically a vowel sequence not a long vowel, they are also written as two vowels in the orthography. There is no stress phonemic or phonetic but heavy syllables (with double vowel or in front of a consonant cluster) sound stressed and some intonational patterns also sound like stress.
'Consonants'
Letters between // are phonemes and the following letter is the way it is spelled in the new standard Greenlandic orthogaphy of 1973.
Labial Alveolar Palatal Velar Uvular Stops - p - t - k - q Fricatives - v~f [2] - s - g Nasals - m - n - ng Liquids - l ~ - ll - r Semivowel - j
Kalaallisut phonology distinguishes itself phonologically from the other Inuit languages by a series of assimilations. One of the most famous Inuktitut words, ''iglu'' (''house''), is ''illu'' in Kalaallisut, where the /gl/ consonant cluster of inuktitut is assimillated into an unvoiced lateral affricate. And for example the name ''Inuktitut'', when translated into Kalaallisut, is ''Inuttut''.
Grammatical features of Kalaallisut
The language, like its relatives, is highly polysynthetic and ergative. There are almost no compound words, but mostly derivations. Greenland has three main dialects: Avanersuaq (Northern Greenland), Tunu (East Greenland) and Kitaa (West Greenland).
Kalaallisut distinguishes two open word classes: nouns and verbs. Each category is subdivided by intransitive and transitive words. The language distinguishes four persons (1st, 2nd, 3rd, 3rd reflexive), two numbers (singular, plural; no dual as in Inuktitut), eight moods (indicative, participial, imperative, optative, past subjunctive, future subjunctive, habitual subjunctive), ten cases (absolutive, ergative, equative, instrumental, locative, allative, ablative, prolative; for some selected nouns: nominative, accusative). Verbs carry bipersonal inflection for subject and object (distinguished by person and number). Transitive nouns carry possessive inflection.
Orthography
In contrast to Eskimo-Aleut languages in Canada, Kalaallisut is written with the Latin alphabet and not with the Inuktitut syllabary. A special character, Kra (''), was used exclusively in Kalaallisut until the spelling reform of 1973 replaced it with the letter q. [3]
Further reading
★ Fortescue, M. D. (1990). ''From the writings of the Greenlanders = Kalaallit atuakkiaannit''. [Fairbanks, Alaska]: University of Alaska Press. ISBN 0912006439
★ Sadock, J. M. (2003). ''A grammar of Kalaallisut: (West Greenlandic Inuttut)''. Languages of the world, 162. München: Lincom. ISBN 3895862347
See also
★ Inuit language
★
★ Inuit language phonology and phonetics
★
★ Inuit grammar
External links
★ The Greenland Language Council
★ The Bible in Kalaallisut online translation from the Church of Denmark
★ Greenlandic Inuktitut at Ethnologue
★ Гренландский язык, a detailed article written by Н.Б. Вахтин (in Russian)
★ Linguistic papers and on Kalaallisut language, also original texts, on Maria Bittner's homepage
★ Bodil Kappel Schmidt: West Greenlandic antipassive
★ A morphological parser for Kalaallisut (paste text to be analysed)
Notes
1. Jørgen Rischel, 1974, ''Topics in West Greenlandic Phonology''. Copenhagen: Akademisk Forlag.
2.is the way of writing the devoiced /vv/ geminate. 3. http://www.evertype.com/alphabets/greenlandic.pdf
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