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| Chumash | |
|---|---|
| Geographic distribution | southern coastalCalifornia |
| Ethnicity | Chumash |
| Extinct | 1965, with the death ofMary Yee |
| Linguistic classification | One of the world's primarylanguage families |
| Subdivisions |
|
| Language codes | |
| ISO 639-3 | chs (retired) |
| Glottolog | chum1262 |
Pre-contact distribution of Chumashan languages | |
Chumashan is an extinct and revitalizing family of languages that were spoken on thesouthern Californiacoast byNative AmericanChumash people, from theCoastal plains and valleys ofSan Luis Obispo toMalibu, neighboring inland andTransverse Ranges valleys and canyons east to bordering theSan Joaquin Valley, to three adjacentChannel Islands:San Miguel,Santa Rosa, andSanta Cruz.[1]
The Chumashan languages may be, along withYukian and perhaps languages of southern Baja California such asWaikuri, one of the oldest language families established in California, before the arrival of speakers ofPenutian,Uto-Aztecan, and perhaps evenHokan languages. Chumashan, Yukian, and southern Baja languages are spoken in areas with long-established populations of a distinct physical type. The population in the core Chumashan area has been stable for the past 10,000 years.[citation needed] However, the attested range of Chumashan is recent (within a couple thousand years). There is internal evidence that Obispeño replaced aHokan language and that Island Chumash mixed with a language very different from Chumashan; the islands were not in contact with the mainland until the introduction of plank canoes in the first millennium AD.[2]
Although the Chumashan languages are nowextinct or dormant, language revitalization programs are underway with four of these Chumashan languages. These languages are well-documented in the unpublished fieldnotes of linguistJohn Peabody Harrington. Especially well documented areBarbareño,Ineseño, andVentureño. The last native speaker of a Chumashan language was Barbareño speakerMary Yee, who died in 1965.
Six Chumashan languages areattested, all now extinct. However, most of them are in the process of revitalization, with language programs and classes. Contemporary Chumash people now prefer to refer to their languages by native names rather than the older names based on the local missions.
Obispeño was the most divergent Chumashan language. The Central Chumash languages include Purisimeño, Ineseño, Barbareño and Ventureño. There was a dialect continuum across this area, but the form of the language spoken in the vicinity of each mission was distinct enough to qualify as a different language.
There is very little documentation of Purisimeño. Ineseño, Barbareño and Ventureño each had several dialects, although documentation usually focused on just one. Island Chumash had different dialects onSanta Cruz Island,San Miguel Island andSanta Rosa Island, but all speakers were relocated to the mainland in the early 19th century.John Peabody Harrington conducted fieldwork on all the above Chumashan languages, but obtained the least data on Island Chumash, Purisimeño, and Obispeño. There is no linguistic data on Cuyama, though ethnographic data suggests that it was likely Chumash (Interior Chumash).

The languages are named after the localFranciscanSpanish missions in California where Chumashan speakers were relocated and aggregated between the 1770s and 1830s:
Roland Dixon andAlfred L. Kroeber suggested that the Chumashan languages might be related to the neighboringSalinan in aIskoman grouping.[3]Edward Sapir accepted this speculation and included Iskoman in his classification ofHokan.[4] More recently it has been noted that Salinan and Chumashan shared only one word, which the Chumashan languages probably borrowed from Salinan (the word for 'white clam shell', which was used as currency).[5] As a result, the inclusion of Chumashan into Hokan is now disfavored by most specialists, and the consensus is that Chumashan has no identified linguistic relatives.[6]
The Chumashan languages are well known for theirconsonant harmony (regressive sibilant harmony). Mithun presents a scholarly synopsis of Chumashan linguistic structures.[7]
The Central Chumash languages all have a symmetrical six-vowel system. The distinctive high central vowel is written various ways, including<ɨ> "barred I,"<ə> "schwa" and<ï> "I umlaut." Contemporary users of the languages favor/ɨ/ or/ə/.
| Front | Central | Back | |
|---|---|---|---|
| High | i | ɨ/ə | u |
| Low | e | a | o |
Striking features of this system include
The Central Chumash languages have a complex inventory of consonants. All of the consonants except /h/ can be glottalized; all of the consonants except /h/, /x/ and the liquids can be aspirated.
This sectionneeds expansion. You can help byadding missing information.(November 2015) |
| Proto-Chumash | |
|---|---|
| Reconstruction of | Chumashan languages |
Proto-Chumash reconstructions by Klar (1977):[8]
| no. | gloss | Proto-Chumash | Proto-Southern Chumash | notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | advise, to | *si/umun | ||
| 2 | all | *yimlaʔ | ||
| 3 | alone | *l-ho | ||
| 4 | already | *kVla- | ||
| 5 | ant | *tkaya’ | plus sound symbolism | |
| 6 | armpit | *ti/uq’olo(lo) | stem: *q'olo(lo) | |
| 7 | arrive | *ki/um | ||
| 8 | arrow | *ya' | ||
| 9 | arroyo | *l’VmV | ||
| 10 | ascend | *-nVpa | ||
| 11 | ashamed, to be | *-nos- | ||
| 12 | ashes | *qSa | ||
| 13 | ask, to | *-VsqVnV | ||
| 14 | back (body part) | *mVtV’ | ||
| 15 | ball | *-apapa | reduplicated stem | |
| 16 | bat (animal) | *mVkala | ||
| 17 | bathe, to | *k-ep’ | ||
| 18 | bear (animal) | *qus | ||
| 19 | bee | *olo | plus sound symbolism | |
| 20 | begin, to | *-nVna’ | reduplicated stem? | |
| 21 | blow, to | *aq-(tV)-p-; *-kVt | *-wu- | |
| 22 | boil, to | *-wi- | ||
| 23 | bone | *Se | ||
| 24 | bow (noun) | *aqa | ||
| 25 | break, to | *k’oto; *eqe | ||
| 26 | breast | *kVtet | ||
| 27 | breathe; breath | *kal-haS; *-haS | ||
| 28 | bring, to | *kVlhi | ||
| 29 | burn, to | *qi/ut | ||
| 30 | cost, to | *piw’ | ||
| 31 | carry, to | *kum | ||
| 32 | carry on back, to | *sVpV | ||
| 33 | cheek | *po' | ||
| 34 | chest (body part) | *kVwV | ||
| 35 | chia | *’epV- | ||
| 36 | canoe | *tomolo | ||
| 37 | clitoris | *Cele ~ *C’ele | ||
| 38 | cold, to feel | *toqom ~ *qotom | ||
| 39 | comb, to | *ti/ukikS | ||
| 40 | come, to | *yit-i; *VlhVw | ||
| 41 | concerned with, to be | *tak | ||
| 42 | cooked | *pSel | ||
| 43 | cough, to | *oqoqo- | reduplicated stem; onomatopoetic | |
| 44 | cover, to | *Vqmay | ||
| 45 | crack, split, to | *-eqe | ||
| 46 | cut, to | *’iwa | plus reduplication | |
| 47 | dark-colored, to be | *Soy | ||
| 48 | day | *qSi; *-iSa- | ||
| 49 | deaf | *tu’ | ||
| 50 | deep | *l-hiy | ||
| 51 | die, to | *qSa | ||
| 52 | dirt | *uyu | ||
| 53 | drink; thirsty, to be | *aq-mihi-l-ha; *o- | ||
| 54 | ear | *tu’ | ||
| 55 | earth | *šup | ||
| 56 | eat, to | *uw | ||
| 57 | eye, face | *tVq | ||
| 58 | eyes, face, having to do with | *weqe | ||
| 59 | far, to be | *mVkV | ||
| 60 | fat | *qilhi | ||
| 61 | fight, to | *aqi/u | ||
| 62 | fire | *ne | ||
| 63 | flower | *pey’ | ||
| 64 | flea | *-tep (Proto-Central Chumash) | ||
| 65 | fly (insect) | *axulpes | ||
| 66 | follow, to | *pey | ||
| 67 | food (cf. eat) | *uw- | *uw- 'eat' plus *-mu (nominalizing suffix) | |
| 68 | foot | *teme’ | ||
| 69 | forget, to | *may | ||
| 70 | full from eating, to be | *qti’ | ||
| 71 | get up, to | *kVta’ | ||
| 72 | gopher snake | *pSoSo | reduplicated stem | |
| 73 | grasshopper | *ti/uqu | root: *-qu | |
| 74 | gull sp. | *miyV | ||
| 75 | hair, fur | *SuSV | reduplicated stem? | |
| 76 | hand | *pu | ||
| 77 | hang, to | *wayan ~ *waya | ||
| 78 | hear, to | *taq | ||
| 79 | heel | *’ososo | reduplicated stem | |
| 80 | hello (greeting) | *haku | ||
| 81 | hole | *loq | ||
| 82 | hole, cave, den | *Si ~ *SiSV | ||
| 83 | homosexual, to be | *’aqi’ | ||
| 84 | jimson weed | *mom’oy | from *moy | |
| 85 | knee | *pVm’V | ||
| 86 | knife | *’iw | ||
| 87 | lie down, to | *toy’ ~ *ton’ | ||
| 88 | liver | *c-al’a | ||
| 89 | look, to | *kuti ~ *kuti’ | ||
| 90 | louse | *Seke | ||
| 91 | low tide | *qVw | ||
| 92 | many, much | *equ | ||
| 93 | meat, body | *’Vmin’ | ||
| 94 | moist, to be | *so’ | ||
| 95 | money; clam sp. | *’ala-qu-Cum ~ *’ana-qu-Cum | *Cum is the root | |
| 96 | mosquito | *pewe(we)’ | ||
| 97 | mother-in-law | *mVSV | ||
| 98 | mountain lion | *tVkem’ | ||
| 99 | mouse | *qlo | plus reduplication | |
| 100 | mouth | *’Vk | ||
| 101 | name | *ti | ||
| 102 | neck | *ni’ | ||
| 103 | necklace | *el’ | ||
| 104 | nerve | *pilhil | ||
| 105 | nest | *patV ~ *patV’ | ||
| 106 | new, to be | *VmVn | ||
| 107 | now | *kipV(’) | ||
| 108 | oak spp. | *kuwu(’) | ||
| 109 | one-eyed, to be | *ta’ | ||
| 110 | open, to | *kal | ||
| 111 | overcast, to be | *iqVmay | ||
| 112 | pelican | *sew | ||
| 113 | person | *ku | ||
| 114 | pet | *qo’ | ||
| 115 | pick up, lift, raise | *lay | ||
| 116 | prickly pear | *qV’ | ||
| 117 | quail | *takaka | onomatopoetic | |
| 118 | rabbit/jackrabbit | *ma’; *kuni’ | ||
| 119 | rain, to | *tuhuy ~ *tuy | ||
| 120 | red | *qupe | ||
| 121 | roadrunner | *pu’ | ||
| 122 | rub, to | *muy | ||
| 123 | salt | *tepu(’) ~ *tipu(’) | ||
| 124 | save (rescue), to | *apay | ||
| 125 | seed | *’VmVn’ | ||
| 126 | skunk | *tVqema | ||
| 127 | smoke | *tuwo’ | ||
| 128 | snail, sea | *q’VmV’ | ||
| 129 | speak, say, to | *’ipi(’) | ||
| 130 | split-stick rattle | *wanS-aq’a ~ *wacs-aq’a | ||
| 131 | spread open | *kek-an | ||
| 132 | squirrel, ground | *emet’ ~ *em’et’ | ||
| 133 | steps | *tVyV- | ||
| 134 | stick to, to | *pey ~ *pey’ | ||
| 135 | sticky, to be | *pilhiy | ||
| 136 | stone, rock | *qVpV | ||
| 137 | straight | *tyiyeme ? | ||
| 138 | swordfish | *’eleyewun’ | ||
| 139 | tadpole | *qlo ~ *qyo | root: 'small creature' (cf. mouse) | |
| 140 | tail | *telheq’ | ||
| 141 | take off, to | *qe | ||
| 142 | tears | *tinik’ | ||
| 143 | tongue | *’elhew’ | ||
| 144 | tooth | *Sa | ||
| 145 | urinate, to | *Sol’ | ||
| 146 | vomit | *paS(V) | ||
| 147 | walk, to | - | ||
| 148 | warm self, to | *mol | ||
| 149 | water | *’o’ | ||
| 150 | whale | *paqat(V) | ||
| 151 | wood, tree, stick | *pono’ | ||
| 152 | woodpecker | *pVlak’a(k’) | ||
| 153 | wrinkled | *Sok’ | plus reduplication | |
| 154 | yawn | *San | plus reduplication | |
| 155 | yellow jacket | *ɨyɨ ~ *ɨyɨ’ |