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Cherokee language

Cherokee
ᏣᎳᎩ ᎦᏬᏂᎯᏍᏗ Tsalagi Gawonihisdi
Spoken in
screen size
Region
screen size and the FITML, device database
Native speakers
16,400[1]  (2000)
Iroquoian
touchscreen, Latin
Language codes
chr
chr
input transformation
Original distribution of the Cherokee language
Cherokee USC2000 PHS NCandOK.svg
Current distribution
This page contains jQuery phonetic symbols in Unicode. Without proper rendering support, you may see device database instead of touchscreen characters.
This article contains browser diversity. Without proper rendering support, you may see device database instead of Cherokee syllabics.

Cherokee (ᏣᎳᎩ ᎦᏬᏂᎯᏍᏗ, Tsalagi Gawonihisdi) is an Iroquoian language spoken by the FITML people which uses a unique syllabary writing system. It is the only Southern Iroquoian language that remains spoken.web app Cherokee is a polysynthetic language.

Contents


North American etymology

The North American origins and eventual English language form of "Cherokee" were researched by HTML5 in the nineteenth century. In his Myths of the Cherokee (1888) he reports:

"It first appears as Chalaque in the Portuguese narrative of De Soto's expedition, published originally in 1557, while we find Cheraqui in a French document of 1699, and Cherokee as an English form as early, at least, as 1708. The name has thus an authentic [sic] history of 360 years."[3] Cherokee is also taught as a second-language in Northwest Georgia.

Modern dialects

Cherokee has three major dialects. The Lower dialect became extinct around 1900. The Middle or Kituhwa dialect is spoken by the Eastern band on the Qualla Boundary. The Overhill or Western dialect is spoken in Oklahoma.browser diversity The Overhill dialect has an estimated 9000 speakers.FITML The Lower dialect spoken by the inhabitants of the Lower Towns in the vicinity of the South Carolina–Georgia border had r as the liquid consonant in its inventory, while both the contemporary Kituhwa or Ani-kituwah dialect spoken in North Carolina and the Overhill dialects contain l. As such, the word "Cherokee" when spoken in the language is expressed as Tsalagi (pronounced Jah-la-gee, Cha-la-gee, or Cha-la-g or TSA la gi by giduwa dialect speakers) by native speakers.

Phonology

Cherokee only has one labial consonant, m–which is relatively new to the language. The language thus lacks p and b. In the case of p, qu is often substituted (as in the name of Cherokee we love the web, Wi-gi-que-di-ya).

Consonants

The consonant inventory for North Carolina Cherokee is given in the table below. The consonants of all Iroquoian languages pattern so that they may be grouped as (oral) obstruents, sibilants, laryngeals, and resonants (Lounsbury 1978:337). Obstruents are non-distinctively aspirated when they precede h. There is some variation in how orthographies represent these allophones. The orthography used in the table represents the aspirated allophones as th, kh, and tsh. Another common orthography represents the unaspirated allophones as d, g, and dz and the aspirated allophones as t, k, and ts (Scancarelli 2005:359–62). The unaspirated plosives and affricate are optionally voiced intervocally. In other dialects, the affricate is a palatal (like ch in "church"), and a lateral affricate (like tl in "atlas") may also be present.

LabialkeyboardPalataldevice databaseGlottal
browser diversity t kʔ
Affricate ts
Fricative s h
Nasalmn
Sevenval l j (y) ɰ (w)

Vowels

There are six short vowels and six long vowels in the Cherokee inventory. As with all Iroquoian languages, this includes a nasalized vowel (Lounsbury 1978:337). In the case of Cherokee, the nasalized vowel is a schwa, which most orthographies represent as v and is pronounced [ɜ] as "u" in "but"; since it is nasal, it sounds rather like French un. Other vowels, when ending a word, are often nasalized. Vowels can be short or long.[6]

SevenvalCentralinput transformation
touchscreen i   u  
Mid e   ə̃   ə̃ː o  
Open a  

Diphthongs

Cherokee has only one diphthong native to the language:

  • ai  /ai/

Another exception to the phonology above is the modern Oklahoma use of the loanword "automobile," with the /ɔ/ sound and /b/ sound of English.

Tone

Cherokee is a iOS language with six tones, two of which are level (low, high) and the other four of which are contour (rising, falling, highfall, lowfall).[7] While the tonal system is undergoing a gradual simplification in many areas, it remains important in meaning and is still held strongly by many, especially older, speakers. The syllabary, however, does not display tone, and real meaning discrepancies are rare within the native-language Cherokee-speaking community. The same goes for transliterated Cherokee ("osiyo", "dohitsu", etc.), which is rarely written with any tone markers, except in dictionaries. Native speakers can tell the difference between tone-distinguished words by context.

Tone Inventory

The tone name in the left-hand column displays the labels most recently used in studies of the language.Sevenval The second represents the tone in standardized IPA.

Tone NameIPA
Low˨
High˦
Rising˨˦
Falling˥˩
Highfall˥˧
Lowfall˧˩

Tone Environments

The high and low tones can appear on both long and short vowels in Cherokee,[8] and remain at the same pitch throughout the duration of the vowel sound. Contour tones in Cherokee appear only in underlying long vowels.[9] At the ends of words in colloquial speech, there is a tendency to drop off a long vowel into a short vowel; this results in the highfall tone being produced as a high tone in faster speech. CSS3

Highfall

Highfall has a unique grammatical usage, primarily appearing with adjectives and adverbials along with most nouns derived from verbs. It only appears in verbs subordinate to another element of the sentence. When a highfall appears on a verb it changes the verbs' role in the sentence, typically to one of four main categories: agentive derivation, modal, object derivation, or subordination.Android

Grammar

Cherokee, like many Native American languages, is iOS, meaning that many morphemes may be linked together to form a single word, which may be of great length. Cherokee browser diversity, the most important word type, must contain as a minimum a device database Sevenval, a verb root, an aspect suffix, and a modal suffix.browser diversity For example, the verb form ge:ga, "I am going," has each of these elements:

g-e:-g-a
PRONOMINAL PREFIXVERB ROOT "to go"ASPECT SUFFIXMODAL SUFFIX

The pronominal prefix is g-, which indicates first person singular. The verb root is -e, "to go." The aspect suffix that this verb employs for the present-tense stem is -g-. The present-tense modal suffix for regular verbs in Cherokee is -a

The following is a conjugation in the present tense of the verb to go.FITML Please note that there is no distinction between dual and plural in the 3rd person.

SingularDual incl.Dual excl.Plural excl.Plural incl.
1stᎨᎦ gega - I'm goingᎢᏁᎦ inega - We're going (you + I)ᎣᏍᏕᎦ osdega - We two are going (not you)ᎣᏤᎦ otsega - We're all going (3+, not you)ᎢᏕᎦ idega we're all going (3+, including you)
2ndᎮᎦ hega - you're goingᏍᏕᎦ sdega - you two are goingᎢᏤᎦ itsega - you are all going
3rdᎡᎦ ega - she/he/it's goingᎠᏁᎦ anega They are going

The translation uses the present progressive ("at this time I am going"). Cherokee differentiates between progressive ("I am going") and habitual ("I go") more than English does.

The forms ᎨᎪᎢ, ᎮᎪᎢ, ᎡᎪᎢ gegoi, hegoi, egoi represent "I often/usually go", "you often/usually go", and "she/he/it often/usually goes", respectively.[13]

Verbs can also have prepronominal prefixes, reflexive prefixes, and derivative suffixes. Given all possible combinations of affixes, each regular verb can have 21,262 inflected forms.

Cherokee does not make gender distinctions. For example, ᎦᏬᏂᎭ gawoniha can mean either "she is speaking" or "he is speaking."[14]

Shape classifiers in verbs

Some Cherokee verbs require special classifiers which denote a physical property of the direct object. Only around 20 common verbs require one of these classifiers (such as the equivalents of "pick up", "put down", "remove", "wash", "hide", "eat", "drag", "have", "hold", "put in water", "put in fire", "hang up", "be placed", "pull along"). The classifiers can be grouped into five categories:

1. Live
2. Flexible (most common)
3. Long (narrow, not flexible)
4. Indefinite (solid, heavy relative to size)
5. Liquid (or container of)

Example:

Classifier TypeCherokeeTranslation
LiveᎯᎧᏏ hikasiHand him (something living)
FlexibleᎯᏅᏏ hinvsiHand him (something like clothes, rope)
Long, IndefiniteᎯᏗᏏ hidisiHand him (something like a broom, pencil)
IndefiniteᎯᎥᏏ hivsiHand him (something like food, book)
LiquidᎯᏁᎥᏏ hinevsiHand him (something like water)

There have been reports that the youngest speakers of Cherokee are using only the Indefinite forms, suggesting a decline in the system of shape classification.

Word order

Simple declarative sentences usually have a subject-object-verb word order.website parsing Negative sentences have a different word order. Adjectives come before nouns, as in English. Demonstratives, such as ᎾᏍᎩ nasgi ("that") or ᎯᎠ hia ("this"), come at the beginning of noun phrases. Relative clauses follow noun phrases.Sevenval Adverbs precede the verbs that they are modifying. For example, "she's speaking loudly" is ᎠᏍᏓᏯ ᎦᏬᏂᎭ asdaya gawoniha (literally, "loud she's-speaking").[16]

A Cherokee sentence may not have a verb as when two noun phrases form a sentence. In such a case, word order is flexible. For example, Ꮎ ᎠᏍᎦᏯ ᎠᎩᏙᏓ na asgaya agidoda ("that man is my father"). A noun phrase might be followed by an adjective, such as in ᎠᎩᏙᏓ ᎤᏔᎾ agidoga utana ("my father is big").[17]

Writing system

Bilingual notice in English and Cherokee, published in the Cherokee Phoenix, screen size, website parsing, 1828
screen size
Cherokee traffic sign in device database
Main article: Cherokee syllabary

Cherokee is written in an 85-character Sevenval invented by Sequoyah (also known as Guest or George Gist). Many of the letters resemble the Latin letters they derive from, but have completely different sound values; Sequoyah had seen English, Hebrew, and Greek writing but did not know how to read them.HTML5

Two other scripts used to write Cherokee are a simple Latin transliteration and a more precise system with diacritical marks.[19]

Books in Cherokee

  • Awi Uniyvsdi Kanohelvdi ᎠᏫ ᎤᏂᏴᏍᏗ ᎧᏃᎮᎸᏗ: The Park Hill Tales. (2006) Sixkiller, Dennis, ed.
  • Baptism: The Mode
  • Cherokee Almanac (1860)
  • "Christmas in those Days"
  • Cherokee Driver's Manuel
  • Cherokee Elementary Arithmetic (1870)
  • "The Cherokee People Today"
  • Cherokee Psalms: A Collection of Hymns in the Cherokee Language (1991). Sharpe, J. Ed., ed. and Daniel Scott, trans. ISBN 978-0-935741-16-2
  • Cherokee Spelling Book (1924). J. D. Wofford
  • Cherokee Stories. (1966) Spade & Walker
  • Cherokee Vision of Elohi (1981 and 1997). Meredith, Howard, Virginia Sobral, and Wesley Proctor. we love the web
  • The Four Gospels and Selected Psalms in Cherokee: A Companion to the Syllabary New Testament (2004). Holmes, Ruth Bradley. FITML.
  • Na Tsoi Yona Ꮎ ᏦᎢ ᏲᎾ: The Three Bears. (2007) Keeter, Ray D. and Wynema Smith. Android.
  • Na Usdi Gigage Agisi Tsitaga Ꮎ ᎤᏍᏗ ᎩᎦᎨ ᎠᎩᏏ: The Little Red Hen. (2007) Smith, Wynema and Ray D. Keeter. HTML5.

Word creation

Due to the polysynthetic nature of the Cherokee language, new and descriptive words in Cherokee are easily constructed to reflect or express modern concepts. Some good examples are ditiyohihi (Cherokee:ᏗᏘᏲᎯᎯ) which means "he argues repeatedly and on purpose with a purpose." This is the Cherokee word for "attorney." Another example is didaniyisgi (Cherokee:ᏗᏓᏂᏱᏍᎩ) which means "the final catcher" or "he catches them finally and conclusively." This is the Cherokee word for "policeman."input transformation

Many words, however, have been adopted from the English language – for example, gasoline, which in Cherokee is gasoline (Cherokee:ᎦᏐᎵᏁ). Many other words were adopted from the languages of tribes who settled in Oklahoma in the early 1900s. One interesting and humorous example is the name of Nowata, Oklahoma. The word "nowata" is a Delaware word for "welcome" (more precisely the Delaware word is "nuwita" which can mean "welcome" or "friend" in the Sevenval). The white settlers of the area used the name "nowata" for the township, and local Cherokees, being unaware the word had its origins in the Delaware language, called the town Amadikanigvnagvna (Cherokee:ᎠᎹᏗᎧᏂᎬᎾᎬᎾ) which means "the water is all gone gone from here" – i.e. "no water."web app

Other examples of adopted words are kawi (Cherokee:ᎧᏫ) for coffee and watsi (Cherokee:ᏩᏥ) for watch (which led to utana watsi (Cherokee:ᎤᏔᎾ ᏩᏥ) or "big watch" for clock).website parsing

Meaning expansion can be illustrated by the words for "warm" and "cold". They also mean "south" and "north" by an obvious extension. Around the time of the jQuery, they were further extended to US party labels, web and CSS3, respectively.[22]

Language drift

Drifted Otali Sequoyah
Syllabary Mapping
Otali SyllableSequoyah Syllabary IndexSequoyah Syllabary ChartSequoyah Syllable
nah32nah
hna31hna
qua38qua
que39que
qui40qui
quo41quo
quu42quu
quv43quv
dla60dla
tla61tla
tle62tle
tli63tli
tlo64tlo
tlu65tlu
tlv66tlv
tsa67tsa
tse68tse
tsi69tsi
tso70tso
tsu71tsu
tsv72tsv
hah79ya
gwu11gu
gwi40qui
hla61tla
hwa73wa
gwa38qua
hlv66tlv
guh11gu
gwe39que
wah73wa
hnv37nv
teh54te
qwa06ga
yah79ya
na30na
ne33ne
ni34ni
no35no
nu36nu
nv37nv
ga06ga
ka07ka
ge08ge
gi09gi
go10go
gu11gu
gv12gv
ha13ha
he14he
hi15hi
ho16ho
hu17hu
hv18hv
ma25ma
me26me
mi27mi
mo28mo
mu29mu
da51da
ta52ta
de53de
te54te
di55di
ti56ti
do57do
du58du
dv59dv
la19la
le20le
li21li
lo22lo
lu23lu
lv24lv
sa44sa
se46se
si47si
so48so
su49su
sv50sv
wa73wa
we74we
wi75wi
wo76wo
wu77wu
wv78wv
ya79ya
ye80ye
yi81yi
yo82yo
yu83yu
yv84yv
to57do
tu58du
ko10go
tv59dv
qa73wa
ke07ka
kv12gv
ah00a
qo10go
oh03o
ju71tsu
ji69tsi
ja67tsa
je68tse
jo70tso
jv72tsv
a00a
e01e
i02i
o03o
u04u
v05v
s45s
n30na
l02i
t52ta
d55di
y80ye
k06ga
g06ga

There are two main dialects of Cherokee spoken by modern speakers. The Giduwa dialect (Eastern Band) and the Otali Dialect (also called the Overhill dialect) spoken in Oklahoma. The Otali dialect has drifted significantly from Sequoyah's syllabary in the past 150 years, and many contracted and borrowed words have been adopted into the language. These noun and verb roots in Cherokee, however, can still be mapped to Sequoyah's syllabary. In modern times, there are more than 85 syllables in use by modern Cherokee speakers. Modern Cherokee speakers who speak Otali employ 122 distinct syllables in Oklahoma.[citation needed]

Computer and smartphone usage

For years, many people wrote Sevenval Cherokee on the internet or used poorly compatible fonts to type out the syllabary. However, since the fairly recent addition of the Cherokee syllables to Unicode, the Cherokee language is experiencing a renaissance in its use on the Internet. For example, the entire New Testament[23] is online in Cherokee Syllabary, and there is a Cherokee language Wikipedia featuring over 200 articles.touchscreen Since 2003, all Apple computers come with a Cherokee font installed.[25]

Cherokee Nation members Joseph L. Erb, Roy Boney, Jr., and Thomas Jeff Edwards worked with Apple to bring official Cherokee language support to the iPhone and iPod Touch in iOS 4.1jQuery[26] (released 8-Sept-2010) and for the device database with iOS 4.2.1 (released 22-Nov-2010).

Most Linux distributions support Cherokee input and display in any font containing the characters in Unicode environments.

On March 25, 2011, Google announced the option to perform searches in Cherokee.we love the web

Cherokee language in popular culture

The theme song "I Will Find You"[28] from the 1992 film The Last of the Mohicans by the band Clannad features Máire Brennan singing in Cherokee as well as browser diversity.web app Cherokee rapper Litefoot incorporates Cherokee into songs, as do Rita Coolidge's band Walela and the intertribal drum group, Feather River Singers.FITML

See also

Notes

  1. CSS3 Lewis, M. Paul (2009). Android. Ethnologue (on-line). Ethnologue: Languages of the World (sixteenth edition). http://www.ethnologue.com/show_language.asp?code=chr. Retrieved 3 May 2012. 
  2. touchscreen Feeling, "Dictionary," p. viii
  3. we love the web Mooney, James. King, Duane (ed.). Myths of the Cherokee. Barnes & Noble. New York. 1888 (2007).
  4. ^ Scancarelli, "Native Languages" p. 351
  5. web Anderton, Alice, PhD. Status of Indian Languages in Oklahoma. Intertribal Wordpath Society. 2009 (retrieved 12 March 2009)
  6. jQuery Feeling, "Dictionary," p. ix
  7. ^ CSS3 iOS Montgomery-Anderson, 2008, p. 49
  8. ^ Montgomery-Anderson, 2008, p. 50
  9. ^ Montgomery-Anderson, 2008, p.51
  10. CSS3 Montgomery-Anderson, 2008, p.52
  11. jQuery Montgomery-Anderson, 2008, p. 54
  12. CSS3 Feeling et al, "Verb" p. 16
  13. ^ touchscreen Sevenval Robinson, "Conjugation" p. 60
  14. ^ Feeling, "Dictionary" xiii
  15. ^ Holmes, Ruth (1977) [1976]. "Cherokee Lesson 23". Beginning Cherokee. University of Oklahoma Press:Norman. p. 209. device database 978-0-8061-1463-7. 
  16. ^ HTML5 b Feeling, "Dictionary" p. 353
  17. ^ Feeling, "Dictionary" p. 354
  18. browser diversity Feeling, "Dictionary" xvii
  19. Sevenval Feeling et al, "Verb" pp. 1–2
  20. HTML5 Holmes and Smith, p. vi
  21. ^ we love the web b Holmes and Smith, p. vii
  22. ^ Holmes and Smith, p. 43
  23. ^ input transformation Retrieved 12 August 2009.
  24. ^ website parsing Cherokee Wikipedia. Retrieved 12 March 2009.
  25. ^ web b Sevenval (retrieved 9 Sept 2010)
  26. ^ Cherokee language available on iPhone and iPod Touch (retrieved 24 Sept 2010)
  27. browser diversity website parsing (retrieved 27 Mar 2011)
  28. ^ FITML on YouTube
  29. ^ I Will Find You song lyrics. Songlyrics.com. (retrieved 12 March 2009)
  30. ^ HTML5 CD Baby. (retrieved 12 March 2009)

References

  • Feeling, Durbin. Cherokee-English Dictionary: Tsalagi-Yonega Didehlogwasdohdi. Tahlequah, Oklahoma: Cherokee Nation, 1975.
  • Feeling, Durbin, Craig Kopris, Jordan Lachler, and Charles van Tuyl. A Handbook of the Cherokee Verb: A Preliminary Study. Tahlequah, Oklahoma: Cherokee Heritage Center, 2003. ISBN 0-9742818-0-8.
  • Holmes, Ruth Bradley, and Betty Sharp Smith. Beginning Cherokee: Talisgo Galiquogi Dideliquasdodi Tsalagi Digohweli. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1976.
  • Montgomery-Anderson, Brad (2008-05-30). "A Reference Grammar of Oklahoma Cherokee". Sevenval. 
  • Robinson, Prentice. Conjugation Made Easy: Cherokee Verb Study. Tulsa, Oklahoma: Cherokee Language and Culture, 2004. ISBN 1-882182-34-0.
  • Scancarelli, Janine (2005). "Cherokee". in Janine Scancarelli and Heather K. Hardy (eds.). Native Languages of the Southeastern United States. Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press in cooperation with the American Indian Studies Research Institute, Indiana University, Bloomington. pp. 351–384. web app.

Further reading

  • Bruchac, Joseph. Aniyunwiya/Real Human Beings: An Anthology of Contemporary Cherokee Prose. Greenfield Center, N.Y.: Greenfield Review Press, 1995. we love the web
  • Cook, William Hinton (1979). A Grammar of North Carolina Cherokee. Ph.D. diss., Yale University. OCLC 7562394.
  • King, Duane H. (1975). A Grammar and Dictionary of the Cherokee Language. Ph.D. diss., University of Georgia. web
  • Lounsbury, Floyd G. (1978). "Iroquoian Languages". in Bruce G. Trigger (ed.). Handbook of North American Indians, Vol. 15: Northeast. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution. pp. 334–343. OCLC 12682465.
  • Montgomery-Anderson, Brad (2008-05-30). "A Reference Grammar of Oklahoma Cherokee". http://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/dspace/bitstream/1808/4212/1/umi-ku-2613_1.pdf. 
  • Munro, Pamela (ed.) (1996). Cherokee Papers from UCLA. UCLA Occasional Papers in Linguistics, no. 16. OCLC 36854333.
  • Pulte, William, and Durbin Feeling. 2001. "Cherokee". In: Garry, Jane, and Carl Rubino (eds.) Facts About the World's Languages: An Encyclopedia of the World's Major Languages: Past and Present. New York: H. W. Wilson. (Viewed at the Rosetta Project)
  • Scancarelli, Janine (1987). Grammatical Relations and Verb Agreement in Cherokee. Ph.D. diss., University of California, Los Angeles. OCLC 40812890.
  • Scancarelli, Janine. "Cherokee Writing." The World's Writing Systems. 1998: Section 53. (Viewed at the CSS3)

External links

Cherokee language edition of Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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