North Straits Salish language

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North Straits Salish
Spoken in: Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada; Washington, USA
Total speakers: ~20
Language family: Salishan
 Coast
  Central
   Straits
    North Straits Salish
Language codes
ISO 639-1: none
ISO 639-2: sal
ISO 639-3: str

North Straits Salish is a Salishan language which includes the dialects of Lummi, Samish, Saanich, Semiahmoo, Songish, and Sooke. Although they are mutually intelligible, each dialect is traditionally referred to as if they were separate languages, and there is no native term to encompass them all.

North Straits along with Klallam form the Straits Salish branch of the Central Coast Salish languages. Klallam and North Straits are very closely related, but not mutually intelligible.

Contents

[edit] Phonology

[edit] Vowels

There is considerable variation among the dialects in the non-high vowels: /e/ ranges from [e] to [æ]; /ə/ is higher in palatal environments, rounded in labialized environments, and [ʌ] when stressed; and /a/ ranges to [ɑ], [ɒ], and [ɔ].

  Front Central Back
High i  
Mid e ə  
Low   a  

[edit] Consonants

The following table includes all the sounds found in the North Straits dialects. No one dialect includes them all.

Bi­labial Dental Alveolar Lateral
Alveolar
Post­alveolar Palatal Velar Uvular Glottal
Plain Rounded Plain Rounded
Stop Plain p t (k) q ʔ
Glottalized kʷʼ qʷʼ
Affricate Plain ts
Glottalized ts̪ʼ tsʼ tɬʼ tʃʼ
Fricative s ɬ ʃ χ χʷ h
Nasal Plain m n ɴ
Glottalized (mʼ) (nʼ) (ɴʼ)
Approximant Plain l j w
Glottalized (lʼ) (jʼ) (wʼ)

The unrounded velar stop /k/ is found only in loanwords in all dialects.

Saanich has turned former /ts tsʼ/ into /s̪ ts̪ʼ/, respectively. It is the only dialect to have /s̪ ts̪ʼ/. /s̪ ts̪ʼ/ are also written /θ tθʼ/, although they are not interdental.

Sooke has turned former /l/ into /j/. While /l/ occurs in native words in other dialects, in Sooke it is only present in loanwords.

The uvular nasals /ɴ ɴʼ/ are also written /ŋ ŋʼ/, but they are not velar.

The status of the glottalized resonants /mʼ nʼ ɴʼ lʼ jʼ wʼ/ is not agreed upon. Some linguists analyse them as unit phonemes, others as sequences of a plain resonant and a glottal stop /ʔ/.

[edit] References

  • Laurence C. Thompson; M. Terry Thompson; Barbara S. Efrat (1974). "Some Phonological Developments in Straits Salish". International Journal of American Linguistics 40 (3): 182–196. doi:10.1086/465311. 
  • Timothy Montler (1999). "Language and dialect variation in Straits Salishan". Anthropological Linguistics 41 (4): 462–502. 

[edit] External links