Shasta language

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Shasta
Spoken in: United States 
Region: primarily northern California
Language extinction: by end of 20th century
Language family: Shastan
 Shasta
Language codes
ISO 639-1: none
ISO 639-2: nai
ISO 639-3: sht

The Shasta language was a Shastan language spoken from northern California into southwestern Oregon. In 1980, only two fluent speakers, both elderly, were alive. Today the language is extinct, and all Shasta people now speak English.


Contents

[edit] Sounds

[edit] Consonants

Bilabial Dental Palatal Velar Glottal
Stop Plain /p/ /t/ /k/ /ʔ/
Ejective /pʼ/ /tʼ/ /kʼ/
Affricate Plain /ʦ/ /ʧ/
Ejective /ʦʼ/ /ʧʼ/
Fricative /s/ /x/ /h/
Nasal /m/ /n/
Rhotic /r/
Semivowel /w/ /j/

Length was distinctive for consonants in Shasta. The affricates were generally spelled <c> and <č>, and the ejectives indicated by an apostrophe written over the character. The phoneme /j/ was spelled <y>.

[edit] Vowels

Shasta had four vowels, /i/ /e/ /a/ /u/, with contrastive length, and two tones: high tone, marked with an acute accent, and low tone, which was unmarked.

[edit] References

  • Mithun, Marianne. The Languages of Native North America. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1999.

[edit] External links