Plateau Penutian language branch of US From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sahaptian (also Sahaptianic, Sahaptin, Shahaptian) is a two-language branch of the hypothetical Plateau Penutian family spoken by Native American peoples in the Columbia Plateau region of Washington, Oregon, and Idaho in the northwestern United States.
Sahaptian | |
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Geographic distribution | Pacific Northwest |
Linguistic classification | Penutian?
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Subdivisions | |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | – |
Glottolog | saha1239 |
Sahaptian among Plateau Penutian languages |
The terms Sahaptian (the family) and Sahaptin (the language) have often been confused and used interchangeably in the literature.
Sahaptian includes two languages:
Nez Perce has two principal dialects, Upper and Lower. Sahaptin has somewhat greater internal diversity, with its main dialects being Umatilla and Yakama.
Noel Rude's (2012) classification of Sahaptian is as follows.[1]
Proto-Sahaptian | |
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Reconstruction of | Sahaptian languages |
Work on Proto-Sahaptian reconstruction has been undertaken by Aoki (1962) and Noel Rude (2006,[2] 2012[1]).
Proto-Sahaptian consonants:[1]: 306
Proto-Sahaptian vowels:[1]: 293
front | central | back | |
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high | i | ɨ | u |
mid | o | ||
low | æ | ɑ |
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