In today's world, Plateau Penutian languages has become a topic of great relevance and interest to a large number of people. Since its discovery until today, Plateau Penutian languages has been the subject of multiple studies, debates and scientific advances that have contributed to expanding our knowledge on this topic. In this article, we will explore different aspects related to Plateau Penutian languages, analyzing its impact on society, its evolution over time, and the possible implications it has for the future. Through a multidisciplinary perspective, we will seek to understand in depth everything that Plateau Penutian languages has to offer, and how its influence extends to different areas of our daily lives.
Plateau Penutian | |
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Shahapwailutan, Lepitan | |
Geographic distribution | Pacific Northwest |
Linguistic classification | Penutian?
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Subdivisions | |
Glottolog | None |
Pre-contact distribution of Plateau Penutian languages |
Plateau Penutian (also Shahapwailutan, Lepitan) is a family of languages spoken in northern California, reaching through central-western Oregon to northern Washington and central-northern Idaho.
Plateau Penutian consists of four languages:
Plateau Penutian as originally proposed was one branch of the hypothetical Penutian phylum as proposed by Edward Sapir. The original proposal also included Cayuse (which was grouped with Molala into a Waiilatpuan branch); however, this language has little documentation and that which is documented is inadequately recorded. Thus, the status of Cayuse within Penutian (or any other genealogical relation for that matter) may very well forever remain unclassified.
The Sahaptian grouping of Sahaptin and Nez Percé has long been uncontroversial. Several linguists have published mounting evidence in support of a connection between Klamath (a.k.a. Klamath-Modoc) and Sahaptian. Howard Berman provides rather convincing evidence to include Molala within Plateau Penutian. Recent appraisals of the Penutian hypothesis find Plateau Penutian to be "well supported" by specialists (DeLancey & Golla (1997: 181); Campbell 1997), with DeLancey & Golla (1997: 180) cautiously stating "while all subgroupings at this stage of Penutian research must be considered provisional, several linkages show considerable promise" (Campbell 1997 likewise mentions similar caveats). Other researchers have pointed out promising similarities between Plateau Penutian and the Maiduan family, although this proposal is still not completely demonstrated. A connection with Uto-Aztecan has also been suggested (Rude 2000).
The coherence of Plateau Penutian is also supposed in an automated computational analysis (ASJP 4) by Müller et al. (2013). The analysis also found Algic lexical influence on the Plateau Penutian languages.
Below is a comparison of selected basic vocabulary items in Proto-Sahaptian, Klamath, and Molala †.
gloss | Proto-Sahaptian | Klamath | Molala |
---|---|---|---|
head | S łamtɨ́x̣ | nʼo | laʔwi |
hair | lag̣ | tałimt | |
eye | lolb | tuːns | |
ear | momʼoˑwč | taːps | |
nose | *núšnu | psi | piłs |
tooth | dot | taʔnf | |
tongue | baˑwč | aʔpaːws | |
mouth | S ɨ́m | som | similq |
hand | nʼep | teːs | |
foot | peč | taylaks | |
meat | S nɨkʷɨ́t | čʼoleˑk | neːwit |
blood | N kikeʔt | ǰeg̣le | ałp |
bone | *pípš | qaqʼo | pupt |
person | *tenén | maqlag̣ | |
name | N weʔnikt | seˑss | hastu(ː)qs |
dog | N cq̓ám-qal | wač̓aˑkʼ | saka(ʔ) |
fish | kyem | ||
louse | N hasas 'nit, louse egg' | kʼoY | |
tree | N tewlikt | g̣oˑ | |
leaf | tʼapq | ||
flower | leˑw | ||
water | *kéweš; N kúus | ʔambo | uq-n-s |
fire | lolog̣ | teːc | |
stone | qday | tqaʔnt | |
earth | g̣eˑla | laŋs | |
road | *ʔɨškɨ́t | sdo | |
eat | N ké- | p’aʔst 's/he is eating' | |
die | *ƛaʔyáwi/*ƛʔayáwi | g̣leg (sg.); čʼoˑqʼ (pl.) | |
I | ni | ina | |
you | ʔi | kiː |