Shoshoni | ||||
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Sosoni' da̲i̲gwape | ||||
Spoken in | United States | |||
Region | Wyoming, Utah, Nevada, Idaho | |||
Native speakers | 2900[1] (2000) | |||
Language family | ||||
Language codes | ||||
ISO 639-3 | shh | |||
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Shoshoni or Shoshone ( /ʃoʊˈʃoʊniː/; Sosoni' da̲i̲gwape or newe da̲i̲gwape) is a Native American language spoken by the Shoshone people. Principal dialects of Shoshoni include Western Shoshoni in Nevada, Gosiute in western Utah, Northern Shoshoni in southern Idaho and northern Utah, and Eastern Shoshoni in Wyoming.
Shoshoni-speaking Native Americans occupy areas of Wyoming, Utah, Nevada, Idaho and Montana. The number of people who speak Shoshoni has been steadily dwindling over the last few decades, so there are only a few hundred people who speak the language fluently today. A few thousand know it to one degree or another.
Shoshoni is the northernmost member of the large Uto-Aztecan language family, which includes over thirty languages whose speakers originally inhabited a vast territory stretching from the Salmon River in central Idaho down into El Salvador. Shoshoni belongs to the Numic subbranch of Uto-Aztecan. The word Numic comes from the cognate word in all Numic languages for "person". For example, in Shoshoni the word is neme, in Timbisha it is nümü, and in Southern Paiute the word is nuwuvi.
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Shoshoni is an agglutinative language, in which words, especially verbs, tend to be quite complex with several morphemes strung together.
Shoshoni has a typical Numic vowel inventory of five vowels. In addition, there is the common diphthong ai, which varies rather freely with e, although certain morphemes always contain ai and others always contain e.
front | back unrounded |
back rounded |
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High | i | ɨ | u |
Non-High | a | o | |
Diphthong | ai |
Shoshoni has a typical Numic consonant inventory:
Bilabial | Coronal | Palatal | Velar | Labialized velar |
Glottal | |
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Stop | p | t | k | kʷ | ʔ | |
Affricate | ts | |||||
Fricative | s | h | ||||
Nasal | m | n | ||||
Semivowel | j | w |
Shoshoni stops (including the affricate) and nasals are voiced and lenited between vowels, are voiced in nasal-stop clusters, and are lenited (but not voiced) following h.
Short vowels are commonly devoiced word-finally and in unstressed syllables preceding /h/.
There are two main spelling systems in use. The older system is the Crum-Miller system used in Miller 1972; and Crum & Dayley 1993 and 1997, and Crum, Crum, & Dayley 2001.[2][3][4][5] The other system is the Idaho State University system and is used in Gould & Loether (2002).[6] The Idaho State system is more phonetically based while the Crum-Miller is more phonemically based. Both systems use "e" to represent the vowel ɨ.