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Algic languages

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Indigenous language family of North America

Algic
Algonquian–Ritwan
Algonquian–Wiyot–Yurok
Geographic
distribution
NorthernNorth America
Linguistic classificationOne of the world's primarylanguage families (orAlgonquian–Wakashan?)
Proto-languageProto-Algic
Subdivisions
Language codes
ISO 639-5aql
Glottologalgi1248
Pre-contact distribution of Algic languages
Notes† - extinct language

TheAlgic languages (/ˈæl.ɡɪk/); also Algonquian–Wiyot–Yurok or Algonquian–Ritwan)[1][2] are anindigenous language family of North America. Most Algic languages belong to theAlgonquian subfamily, dispersed over a broad area from theRocky Mountains toAtlantic Canada. The other Algic languages are theYurok andWiyot of northwesternCalifornia, which, despite their geographic proximity, are not closely related to each other. All these languages descend fromProto-Algic, a second-orderproto-language[3] estimated to have been spoken about 5,000 years ago and reconstructed using the reconstructedProto-Algonquian language and theWiyot andYurok languages.[4]

Text inCree. Cree is the most widely spoken Algic language.

History

[edit]

The termAlgic was first coined byHenry Schoolcraft in hisAlgic Researches, published in 1839. Schoolcraft defined the term as "derived from the wordsAllegheny andAtlantic, in reference to the indigenous people anciently located in this geographical area".[5] Schoolcraft's terminology was not retained. The peoples he called "Algic" were later included among the speakers of Algonquian languages. This language group is also referred to as "Algonquian-Ritwan" and "Wiyot-Yurok-Algonquian".

WhenEdward Sapir proposed that the well-established Algonquian family wasgenetically related to the Wiyot and Yurok languages of northernCalifornia, he applied the termAlgic to this larger family. The Algicurheimat is thought to have been located in theNorthwestern United States somewhere between the suspectedhomeland of the Algonquian branch (to the west ofLake Superior according toIves Goddard[6]) and the earliest known location of the Wiyot and Yurok (along the middleColumbia River according to Whistler[7]).

Classification of Algic

[edit]

Thegenetic relation of Wiyot and Yurok to Algonquian was first proposed byEdward Sapir (1913, 1915, 1923), and argued against by AlgonquianistTruman Michelson (1914, 1914, 1935). According to Lyle Campbell (1997), the relationship "has subsequently been demonstrated to the satisfaction of all".[8] This controversy in the early classification of North American languages was called the "Ritwan controversy" because Wiyot and Yurok were assigned to a genetic grouping called "Ritwan". Most specialists now reject the validity of the Ritwan genetic node.[9] Berman (1982) suggested that Wiyot and Yurok share sound changes not shared by the rest of Algic (which would be explainable by either areal diffusion or genetic relatedness); Proulx (2004) argued against Berman's conclusion of common sound changes.[1]

More recently,Sergei Nikolaev has argued in two papers for a systematic relationship between theNivkh language ofSakhalin and theAmur river basin and the Algic languages, and a secondary relationship between these two together and theWakashan languages.[10][11]

Internal classification

[edit]

The following tree follows the paradigm established by Goddard (1994) whereinBlackfoot was the first language to diverge fromProto-Algic, followed byArapaho andCree, then theEastern Great Lakes or "Core Central" languages, and finally theEastern Algonquian languages; this is reflected by "newer" languages being lower on the tree.[12]

Family tree of the Algic languages[13]
  1. ^Sometimes considered to be a dialect of Cree
  2. ^Possibly 5 different languages

Proto-language

[edit]
Main article:Proto-Algic language

Proto-Algic is an example of a second-orderproto-language: its reconstruction depends on the reconstruction another proto-language (namely its descendantProto-Algonquian), as well as the divergent branches ofWiyot andYurok.[3] As such, reconstruction of Proto-Algic is based oncross-examination of linguistic features between Proto-Algonquian, Wiyot, and Yurok.[15]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abBerman 1984
  2. ^Golla 2011:61
  3. ^abProulx 1984
  4. ^Nikolaev 2015
  5. ^Schoolcraft 1839:12
  6. ^Goddard 1994:207
  7. ^Moratto 1984:540, 546, 564
  8. ^Campbell 2000:152, who cites among othersHaas 1958
  9. ^Campbell 2000:152;Mithun 1999:337
  10. ^Nikolaev 2015
  11. ^Nikolaev 2016
  12. ^Goddard 1994
  13. ^ab"Glottolog 5.0 - Algic".glottolog.org. RetrievedJuly 6, 2024.
  14. ^Campbell 2000:153
  15. ^Proulx 1991

Bibliography

[edit]
Algonquian
Arapahoan
Cree–Montagnais–Naskapi
Cree
Others
Eastern Algonquian
Southern New England
Delawaran
Nanticockan
Others
Mesquakie–Sauk–Kickapoo
OjibwaPotawatomi
Ojibwa
Potawatomi
Others
Others
Uncertain
Proto-languages
1Creole/Pidgin/Mixed language • Italics indicateextinct languages
Africa
Isolates
Eurasia
(Europe
andAsia)
Isolates
New Guinea
andthe Pacific
Isolates
Australia
Isolates
North
America
Isolates
Mesoamerica
Isolates
South
America
Isolates
Sign
languages
Isolates
See also
  • Families with question marks (?) are disputed or controversial.
  • Families initalics have no living members.
  • Families with more than 30 languages are inbold.
Language families
and isolates
Eskaleut
Na-Dene
Algic
Mosan ?
Macro-Siouan ?
Penutian ?
Yok-Utian ?
Coast Oregon ?
Takelma–Kalapuyan ?
Hokan ?
Pueblo
linguistic area
Coahuiltecan
linguistic area
Gulf ?
Calusa–Tunica ?
Mesoamerican
linguistic area
Mesoamerican
sprachbund
Caribbean
linguistic area
Pre-Arawakan
Proposed groupings
Lists
† indicates anextinct language,italics indicates independent status of a language,bold indicates that a language family has at least 10 members
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