Umatilla language

Umatilla (Tamalúut or Imatalamłaamí Sɨ́nwit) is a variety of Southern Sahaptin, part of the Sahaptian subfamily of the Plateau Penutian group.[2] It was spoken during late aboriginal times along the Columbia River and is therefore also called Columbia River Sahaptin. It is currently spoken as a first language by a few dozen elders and some adults in the Umatilla Reservation in Oregon. Some sources say that Umatilla is derived from imatilám-hlama: hlama means 'those living at' or 'people of' and there is an ongoing debate about the meaning of imatilám, but it is said to be an island in the Columbia River. B. Rigsby and N. Rude mention the village of ímatalam that was situated at the mouth of the Umatilla River and where the language was spoken.

Umatilla
Pronunciation/ˌjuːməˈtɪlə/
Native toUnited States
RegionOregon, Washington
EthnicityUmatilla
Native speakers
25 (2007)[1]
Language codes
ISO 639-3uma
Glottologumat1237

The Umatillas pronounce the word ímatalam. A Umatilla person is called imatalamłá (with orthographic ł representing IPA /ɬ/) and the Umatilla people are called imatalamłáma. The Nez Perce refer to the Umatilla people as hiyówatalampoo. See Aoki (1994:171).

Use and revitalization efforts

As of 2013, there are about 50 first language speakers of Umatilla. The language is taught at the Nixyaawii Community School. "There are six full-time language instructors in CTUIR (Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation). Nixyaawii Community School has offered Umatilla, Walla Walla and Nez Perce language classes for the last decade and a Cay-Uma-Wa Head Start program is being developed to reach children while they’re young. There are also online video resources and the Tamaluut immersion school, a new language immersion program for three- to five-year-olds."[3][4] The Wíyat'ish Naknúwit "For the Future" Language Project, has trained speakers using a Master-Apprentice program.[5] A Flash Story Camp has been held by First Nations Development in collaboration with Tamastslikt's Language Enhancement Program and Education Department, and the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation.[6] In 2015, Umatilla instruction will be given at the high school level. There is interest in adapting a curriculum for Umatilla that has been used successfully for Okanagan Salish at the Salish School of Spokane.[7]


The Umatilla Dictionary was published in 2014 with the University of Washington Press. The Dictionary documents the language of the Umatilla people east of the Cascade Mountains in Oregon and Washington. Working for many years with the accumulated scholarship of linguists and anthropologists as well as with elders on the Umatilla Reservation, tribal linguist Noel Rude has painstakingly recorded words, pronunciations, phrases, and other elements of the Umatilla language. The dictionary includes a grammar and comparative information that places the Umatilla language in its linguistic and historical context and compiles all of its known words, phrases, and constructions. Umatilla Dictionary is an important work for people of the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation, the Yakama Nation, and the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs and adds to the growing linguistic work being done by tribes and scholars on endangered languages.[8]

Phonology

Rigsby and Rude use a technical alphabet based upon the Americanist phonetic notation to transcribe Umatilla, though other practical orthographies also exist.

Vowels

front central back
high i, iː ɨ u, uː
low a, aː

All long vowels are written as clusters of identical short vowels.

  • The pronunciation of /a/ ranges from [ɑ] to [ʌ] and it shifts to [a] or [ɛ] when preceded or followed by /y/.
  • The pronunciation of /aa/ ranges from [aː] to [ɑː].
  • The pronunciation of /i/ ranges from [ɪ] to [i] and it shifts to [e] near /q qʼ x̣/.
  • /ii/ has a schwa-like offglide before uvulars and it shifts to [e] after uvulars.
  • /ɨ/ is pronounced [ɨ], and may lower dialectally to [ə] or [a].
  • /u/ is pronounced [u] and it shifts to [o] near uvulars.
  • /uu/ is pronounced [uː] and it shifts to [o] near uvulars.

Vowels of different quality never appear in clusters. Allowed diphthongs are the following: /ay aay aw aaw iw iiw uy uuy/.

Consonants

bilabial dental alveolar lateral alveopalatal velar labiovelar uvular labio-uvular laryngeal
stop & affricate p t ts c ƛ č k q ʔ ʼ
glottalized stop & affricate tsʼ tɬʼ ƛʼ tʃʼ čʼ kʷ’ qʷ’
spirant & continuant s ɬ ł ʃ š x χ χʷ x̣ʷ h
nasal m n
lateral l
glide w j y

Consonant clusters are common and show few restrictions. All words begin with a consonant, even though according to orthographic conventions, an initial glottal stop before a vowel is not written and initial unstressed /ʼɨ/ is not written before /m n l/ plus a consonant. Initial clusters of up to three consonants are allowed (pccák 'pepper'), medials of up to five consonants and finals of up to four consonants (látx̣tx̣ 'ashes'). Clusters of identical consonants also occur: qqápni 'silly', ččù 'quiet'. The laryngeals /h ʼ/ usually occur in initial position and sometimes in intervocalic position.

Syllable structure

As yet, no detailed description of syllable structure in Umatilla Sahaptin has been written.

Stress

Primary stress is distinctive and is indicated by an acute accent. It occurs on one syllable of a word. Stress contrast can be seen in the following examples: ámapa 'husband' (objective case) and amápa 'island' (locative case); páqʼinušana 'he saw him' and paqʼínušana 'they saw (him)'. Nondistinctive secondary and lesser stresses occur phonetically and are conditioned by phonetic and syntactic environments.

Phonological processes

Alternation in the phonetic shapes of morphemes is frequent and most often vocalic.

Vocalic alternations result from processes (ablaut, epenthesis and truncation) that can be morphologically or phonologically conditioned.

Consonantal alternations arise from two processes: velar stops /k kʼ/ may palatalize to /c č/ and affricates /c č/ become /t/ before /s š/. For instance, /c/ + /š/ becomes /t/ + /š/.

Morphology

The morphological structure of Umatilla and other Sahaptin dialects is synthetic to mildly polysynthetic.
The processes used are clisis, reduplication, ablaut, compounding, suppletion, order and the most common one is affixation (suffixation in particular).
Nouns, adjectives and pronouns inflect for number and case. There are three number categories: singular, dual and plural. The singular is not marked. The dual is marked by the suffix -in (with allomorphs -win, -yn or -n depending on the final). There are two main ways to mark the plural: with the suffix -ma (tílaaki-ma 'women") and by full or partial reduplication (pšwá 'stone', pšwápšwa 'stones'). These two markers can sometimes co-exist in the same word. Several nouns feature irregular plural marks that might have been more widely used in the past, such as the prefix a- and the suffix -tu.
Verbs have the most complex morphology of all the parts of speech. Their internal structure is characterized by three major positions:

1) the pronominal prefix
This position is not necessarily occupied, it depends on the aspects of sentence structure external to the verb.

2) the theme
It can be composed of one or several elements. Theme-derivational processes include notions such as the distribution of action and the iteration of action which is expressed by the reduplication of a part of or the totality of the theme (i-ƛúp-ƛúp-ša 'he keeps on jumping up and down', where ƛúp means 'to jump'). Affixations of adverbial notions also occur: qá- 'suddenly', máy- 'in the morning, twá- 'with the edge of a long object', tísɨm- 'while sitting'.

3) the auxiliary suffix complex
Its inflectional system marks the verbs for:

  • mood: indicative (unmarked), conditional and imperative
  • aspect: imperfective for an action in process (suffix -ša, -šan), customary for the usual character of an action (suffix -x̣a, -x̣an)
  • tense
  • directionality for motion verbs: cislocative suffix -ɨm (motion or activity towards or with respect to speaker), translocative suffix -kik (motion away from the speaker).

Syntax

Umatilla, like other varieties of Sahaptin, is characterized by a free word order and a complex case-marking system.

Noun case endings

Nonhuman   Human  
Singular Dual Plural
Unmarked kʼúsi (horse) ɨwínš (man) awínšin awínšma
Inverse ergative kʼúsinɨm ɨwínšnɨm no dual no plural
Obviative ergative kʼúsiyin ɨwínšin no dual no plural
Objective kʼúsina ɨwínšna awínšinaman awínšmaaman
Comitative kʼúsiyin ɨwínšin no dual no plural
Genitive kʼúsinmí ɨwínš awínšinamí awínšmaamí
Benefactive kʼúsiyay ɨwínšmíyay awínšinamíyay awinšmaamíyay
Dative kʼúsiyaw ɨwinšmíyaw awinšinamíyaw awinšmaamíyaw
Allative kʼúsikan ɨwinšmíkan awinšinamíkan awinšmaamíkan
Ablative kʼúsikni ɨwinšmíkni awinšinamíkni awinšmaamíkni
Instrumental kʼúsiki ɨwinšmíki awinšinamíki awinšmaamíki
Locative kʼúsipa ɨwinšmípa awinšinamípa awinšmaamípa

See also

References

  1. Umatilla at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
  2. "CTUIR Language Program: Tamaluut". YouTube.
  3. Wheeler, Natalie (2013-09-18). "Tribe works to keep Umatilla language alive". Daily Astorian. Retrieved 2013-09-21.
  4. Wheeler, Natalie. "East Oregonian: Immersed In The Umatilla Language". Oregon Public Broadcasting/East Oregonian (2 Oct. 2013 ed.). Retrieved 2013-10-16.
  5. "CTUIR native language program to host open house". Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation. 2005-10-18. Retrieved 2013-09-21.
  6. Reyes, Jessica Delos (2003-11-01). "Campers Learn About Their Tribal Language". Canku Ota (99). Retrieved 2013-09-21.
  7. Phinney, Will (August 12, 2015). "Language program adopts new curriculum". Confederated Umatilla Journal, via East Oregonian. Retrieved 2015-10-03.
  8. Rude, Noel (October 2014). "Umatilla Dictionary". University of Washington Press. ISBN 9780295994284. Retrieved 2022-09-13.

Sources

  • Aoki, Haruo. (1994). Nez Perce dictionary. University of California Publications in Linguistics (Vol. 112). Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-09763-7.
  • Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation; Rude, Noel (2014). Umatilla Dictionary. Seattle: Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation, in association with University of Washington Press. ISBN 9780295994284.
  • Rigsby, B. and Rude, N. 1996. Sketch of Sahaptin, a Sahaptian language. Handbook of North American Indians. Vol. 17, Languages: 666-692. Smithsonian Institution, Washington D.C.; ISBN 0-16-048774-9
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