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| Yana | |
|---|---|
Yana Texts | |
| Native to | United States |
| Region | California |
| Ethnicity | Yana |
| Extinct | 1916, with the death ofIshi[1] |
Hokan?
| |
| Dialects | Northern Central Southern |
| Language codes | |
| ISO 639-3 | ynn |
ynn | |
| Glottolog | yana1271 |
Pre-contact distribution of the Yana language | |
TheYana language (alsoYanan) is an extinct language that was formerly spoken by theYana people, who lived in north-centralCalifornia between theFeather andPit rivers in what is now theShasta andTehama counties. The last speaker of the southernmost dialect, which is called Yahi, wasIshi, who died in 1916. When the last fluent speaker(s) of the other dialects died is not recorded. Yana is fairly well documented, mostly byEdward Sapir.
The namesYana andYahi are derived fromya "people" plus an obligatory suffix,-na in the northern two dialects and-hi or-xi in the southern two dialects.[2]
There are four knowndialects:
Northern Yana, Central Yana, and Yahi were well recorded by Edward Sapir through work with Betty Brown, Sam Batwi, and Ishi respectively. Only a small collection of words and phrases of Southern Yana (more properly, Northern Yahi)[3] were recorded by Sapir in his work with Sam Batwi, who spoke the dialect only in his childhood. Because Southern Yana is poorly attested, it is unclear how many additional subdialects there may have been.[4]
Northern and Central Yana are close, differing mainly in phonology (mostly by innovations in Northern Yana), and Southern Yana and Yahi are similarly close. The two pairs differ from each other in phonological, lexical, and grammatical elements, and can only be understood by the other side with difficulty.
Yana is often classified in theHokan superstock. Sapir suggested a grouping of Yana within aNorthern Hokan sub-family withKaruk,Chimariko,Shastan,Palaihnihan, andPomoan. Contemporary linguists generally consider Yana to be alanguage isolate.[5][6]
Yana employs 22 consonants and 5 vowels. It ispolysynthetic andagglutinative, with asubject-verb-object word order. Verbs contain much meaning through affixation. Like some other California languages, direction is very important: All verbs of motion must contain a different directional affix.
Unlike other languages of the region, Yana has different word forms used by male and female speakers.[7] This is not used in the Yahi dialect, however.[8]
The body of linguistic work on Yana is fortunate to include a number of texts and stories. Linguist Jean Perry writes that:
| Labial | Alveolar | Palatal | Velar | Glottal | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| central | sibilent | lateral | ||||||
| Plosive | voiceless | p | t | t͡s | k | ʔ | ||
| aspirated | pʰ | tʰ | t͡sʰ | kʰ | ||||
| ejective | pʼ | tʼ | t͡sʼ | kʼ | ||||
| Fricative | s | x | h | |||||
| Rhotic | r | |||||||
| Sonorant | plain | m | n | l | j | w | ||
| glottalized | ˀm | ˀn | ˀl | ˀj | ˀw | |||
Yana has five vowels, /i, ɛ, a, ɔ, u/; Sapir's (1910) comparanda with vowels of English, French and German clearly indicate that the mid vowels are lower mid. Each vowel occurs with phonemic vowel length.
| Front | Back | |
|---|---|---|
| Close | i | u |
| Mid | ɛ | ɔ |
| Open | a | |
{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)(pg. 207)Sapir's names (N. Yana, C. Yana, S. Yana and southernmost Yana or Yahi) reflects [sic] the general ignorance of Yahi at the time of his first work on Yanan in 1907. He later (e.g. 1917, 2n) shifted his S. Yana to denote S. Yahi, presumably because N.Yahi is so slightly documented (but cf. also Waterman as quoted in T. Kroeber, 1967, 207) . The present terminology reflects the conclusion reached in Sapir and Spier (1943) 244 concerning the probable interrelations in Yanan.