Mutsun language

Mutsun
San Juan Bautista
Spoken in United States
Region California
Extinct ?
Language family
Yok-Utian
Writing system Latin
Language codes
ISO 639-3 css

Mutsun is both: a name of one sub-group of the Ohlone indigenous people of Alta California; and the name of the native language the Mutsun tribes spoke.

Contents

The people

Mutsun (also known as San Juan Bautista Costanoan) is an extinct Utian language in the Ohlone/Costanoan language family that was spoken in Northern California by the division of the Ohlone who lived in the Mission San Juan Bautista area.

The language

Ascencion Solorsano, who died in 1930, was the last native speaker of Mutsun. Mutsun went extinct from a gradual process of the Mutsun being forced to switch to speaking Spanish and English. The Spanish wrote a grammar of the language, and linguist John Peabody Harrington collected very extensive notes on the language from Solorsano. Harrington's field notes formed the basis of the grammar of Mutsun[1] written by Marc Okrand as a University of California dissertation in 1977, which to this day remains the only grammar ever written of any Costanoan language. Many Mutsun people who live in California today are trying to restore their language.

Phonology

[2]

Consonants

Labial Dental/
Alveolar
Retroflex Alveolo-palatal/
Palatal
palatalised
Velar Glottal
Nasal m /m/ n /n/ nY /nʲ/
Stop p /p/ t /t/ tR /ʈ/ tY /tʲ/ k /k/ /ʔ/
Affricate c /ts/ č /ts̠/
Fricative s /s/ sY /ʃ/ h /h/
Central Approximant w /w/ y /j/
Lateral approximant l /l/ lY /lʲ/
Flap r /r/

Vowels

Front Back
Close i /i/ u /u/
Close-mid o /o/
Open-mid e /ɛ/
Open a /ɑ/

Vocabulary

English Mutsun
one hemetca
two tRhin
three kaphan
four utRit
five parwes
six nakitci
seven takitci
eight tayitmin
nine pakki
ten tansakte

Notable Mutsun Ohlone people

See also

References

External links