Chumash | |
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S.hamala | |
Spoken in | southern coastal California |
Extinct | since the 1960s |
Language family |
Chumash
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Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | variously: boi – Barbareño crz – Cruzeño inz – Ineseño obi – Obispeño puy – Purisimeño veo – Ventureño |
Pre-contact distribution of Chumashan languages
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Chumashan is a family of languages that were spoken on the southern California coast by Native American Chumash people.
From the Coastal plains and valleys of San Luis Obispo to Malibu), neighboring inland and Transverse Ranges valleys and canyons east to bordering the San Joaquin Valley; and on three adjacent Channel Islands: (San Miguel, Santa Rosa, and Santa Cruz).[1]
All of the Chumashan languages are now extinct, although they are well documented in the unpublished fieldnotes of linguist John Peabody Harrington. Especially well documented are the Barbareño, Ineseño, and Ventureño dialects. The last first-language speaker of a Chumashan language was Barbareño speaker Mary Yee, who died in 1965.
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Chumashan consists of 6 languages.
I. Northern Chumash
II. Southern Chumash
Obispeño was the most divergent Chumashan language. Ineseño and Barbareño may have been dialects of the same language. There is very little documentation of Purisimeño. There were several different subdialects of Ventureño. Island Chumash had different subdialects spoken on Santa Cruz Island and Santa Rosa Island, but all its speakers were relocated to the mainland in the early 19th century. John Peabody Harrington conducted fieldwork on all the above Chumashan languages, but obtained the least data on Island Chumash, Purisimeño, and Obispeño.
The languages are named after the local Franciscan Spanish missions in California where Chumashan speakers were relocated and aggregated between the 1770s and 1830s:
Roland Dixon and Alfred L. Kroeber suggested that the Chumashan languages might be related to the neighboring Salinan in a Iskoman grouping.[2] Edward Sapir accepted this speculation and included Iskoman in his classification of Hokan.[3] More recently it has been noted that Salinan and Chumashan shared only one word, which the Chumashan languages probably borrowed from Salinan (the word meant 'white clam shell' and was used as currency).[4] As a result, the inclusion of Chumashan into Hokan is now disfavored by most specialists, and the consensus is that Chumashan has no identified linguistic relatives.[5]
The Chumashan languages are well-known for their consonant harmony (regressive sibilant harmony). Mithun presents a scholarly synopsis of Chumashan linguistic structures.[6]
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