KLALLAM LANGUAGE


'Klallam' or 'Clallam' (native name: ) is a nearly extinct Straits Salishan language that was traditionally spoken by the Klallam peoples at Becher Bay on Vancouver Island in British Columbia and across the Strait of Juan de Fuca on the north coast of the Olympic Peninsula in Washington. Today it has only 4 remaining native speakers, though revival efforts exist.
Klallam is closely related to North Straits Salish, but not mutually intelligible.

Contents
Sounds
Consonants
Vowels
Grammar
External links
Bibliography

Sounds


Consonants

The 34 consonants of Klallam written in orthography with International Phonetic Alphabet symbols is brackets when different:
  Bilabial Alveolar Post-
alveolar
Palatal Velar Uvular Glottal
central lateral plain labial plain labial
Nasal plain m n           ŋ /ɴ/    
glottalized           ŋ /ɴʼ/    
Plosive plain p t       (k) q  
glottalized         kʼʷ qʼʷ ʔ
Affricate plain   c /ʦ/   č /ʧ/            
glottalized   cʼ /ʦʼ/ ƛʼ /tɬʼ/ čʼ /ʧʼ/            
Fricative   s ɬ š /ʃ/     x̣ /χ/ x̣ /χʷ/ h
Approximant plain     l   y /j/   w      
glottalized         yʼ /jʼ/        


★ Glottalized resonants , , , , are realized either
:# with creaky voice: , , , , ,
:# as decomposed glottal stop + resonant: , , , , , or
:# as decomposed resonant + glottal stop: , , , ,

★ is borrowed from English and occurs in only a few words.

★ also rarely occurs in Klallam.

★ The alveolar affricate contrasts with a sequence of stop + fricative .
Vowels

The 4 vowels of Klallam:
  Front Central Back
'High'  
'Mid'    
'Low'    


★ Vowels may be stressed or unstressed. Unstressed vowels are shorter and lower in intensity than stressed vowels.

★ Vowels are lowered when followed by a glottal stop :
: 'bird'   →
: 'deer'   →
: 'salmon backbone'   →

★ Vowels are also often lowered when followed by a glottalized resonant (i.e., , , , , ).

Grammar


External links



Klallam language (Timothy Montler's site) (main page) ''(includes sound & video files, but must use Internet Explorer)''


Introduction


Map


Family tree


Alphabet


Wordlist


Phrases


"The Flood" (story)


"Two Deaf Fishermen" (story)

Preserving a Culture

Linguist keeping language, culture of Pacific Northwest tribes alive

Lower Elwha Klallam Tribe

Jamestown S'Klallam Tribe

Washington Post: "Northwest Tribe Struggles to Revive Its Language"

Elaine Grinnell, Klallam storyteller and basket & drum maker

Klallam at Ethnologue

Bibliography



★ Brooks, Pamela. (1997). John P. Harrington's Klallam and Chemakum place names. ''Proceedings of the International Conference on Salish and Neighboring Languages'', ''32'', 144-188.

★ Fleisher, Mark. (1976). ''Clallam: A study in Coast Salish ethnolinguistics''. (Doctoral disseration, Washington State University).

★ Fleisher, Mark. (1977). Aspects of Clallam phonology and their implication of reconstruction. ''Proceedings of the International Conference on Salishan Languages'', ''12'', 132-141.

★ Mithun, Marianne. (1999). ''The languages of Native North America''. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-23228-7 (hbk); ISBN 0-521-29875-X.

★ Montler, Timothy. (1996). Languages and dialects in Straits Salishan. ''Proceedings of the International Conference on Salish and Neighboring Languages'', ''31'', 249-256.

★ Montler, Timothy. (1996). Some Klallam paradigms. ''Proceedings of the International Conference on Salish and Neighboring Languages'', ''31'', 257-264.

★ Montler, Timothy. (1998). The major processes affecting Klallam vowels. ''Proceedings of the International Conference on Salish and Neighboring Languages'', ''33'', 366-373.

★ Montler, Timothy. (1999). Language and dialect variation in Straits Salishan. ''Anthropological linguistics'', ''41'' (4), 462-502.

★ Montler, Timothy. (2005). [Personal communication].

★ Thompson, Laurence; & Thompson, M. Terry. (1969). Metathesis as a grammatical device. ''International Journal of American Linguistics'', ''35'', 213-219.

★ Thompson, Laurence; & Thompson, M. Terry. (1971). Clallam: A preview. ''University of California Publications in Linguistics'', ''65'', 251-294.

★ Thompson, Laurence; Thompson, M. Terry; & Efrat, Barbara. (1974). Some phonological developments in Straits Salish. ''International Journal of American Linguistics'', ''40'', 182-196.

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