Nez Perce | |
---|---|
Spoken in | United States |
Region | Idaho |
Ethnicity | Nez Perce people |
Native speakers | 200 (date missing) |
Language family |
Plateau Penutian
|
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | nez |
Nez Perce ( /ˌnɛzˈpɜrs/), also spelled Nez Percé, is a Sahaptian language related to the several dialects of Sahaptin (note the spellings, -ian vs. -in). The Sahaptian sub-family is one of the branches of the Plateau Penutian family (which in turn may be related to a larger Penutian grouping). It is spoken by the Nez Perce tribe of the northwestern United States.
Nez Perce is a highly endangered language. While sources differ on the exact number of fluent speakers, it is almost definitely under 100. The Nez Perce tribe is endeavoring to reintroduce the language into native usage through a revitalization program, though at present the future of the Nez Perce language is far from assured.
The grammar of Nez Perce has been described in a grammar (Aoki 1970) and a dictionary (Aoki 1994) with two dissertations (Rude 1985; Crook 1999).
Contents |
The phonology of Nez Perce includes vowel harmony (which was mentioned in Noam Chomsky & Morris Halle's The Sound Pattern of English), as well as a complex stress system described by Crook (1999).
Bilabial | Dental | Alveolar | Postalveolar | Palatal | Velar | Uvular | Glottal | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
(lateral) | central | lateral | plain | lab. | plain | lab. | ||||||
Nasal | plain | m | n | |||||||||
glottalized | m̰ | n̰ | ||||||||||
Plosive | voiceless | p | t | c | k | kʷ | q | qʷ | ʔ | |||
glottalic | pʼ | tɬʼ | tʼ | cʼ | kʼ | kʷʼ | qʼ | qʷʼ | ||||
Fricative | (voiceless) | ɬ | s | ʃ | x | χ | h | |||||
Approximant | plain | w | l | j | ||||||||
glottalized | w̰ | l̰ | j̰ |
As in many other Native American languages, a Nez Perce verb can have the meaning of an entire sentence in English. (This manner of providing a great deal of information in one word is called polysynthesis.) Verbal morphemes provide information about the person and number of the subject and object, as well as tense and aspect (e.g., whether or not an action has been completed).
word: | ʔaw̓líwaaʔinpqawtaca |
morphemes: | ʔew - ʔilíw - wee - ʔinipí - qaw - tée - ce |
gloss: | 1/2-3OBJ - fire - fly - grab - straight.through - go.away - IMPERF.PRES.SG |
translation: | 'I go to scoop him up in the fire' (Cash Cash 2004:24) |
word: | hitw̓alapáyna |
morphemes: | hi - tiw̓ele - pááy - e |
gloss: | 3SUBJ - in.rain - come - PAST |
translation: | 'He arrived in the rain' (Aoki 1979) |
In Nez Perce, the subject of a sentence, and the object when there is one, can each be marked for grammatical case, a morpheme that shows the function of the word (compare to English he vs. him vs. his). Nez Perce employs a three-way case-marking strategy: a transitive subject, a transitive object, and an intransitive subject are each marked differently. Nez Perce is thus an example of the very rare type of tripartite languages (see morphosyntactic alignment).
Because of this case marking, the word order can be quite free. A specific word order tells the hearer what is new information (focus) versus old information (topic), but it does not mark the subject and the object (in English, word order is fixed — subject–verb–object).