Tubatulabal language
Encyclopedia
Tübatulabal is a Uto-Aztecan language
, traditionally spoken in Kern County
, California
. It is the traditional language of the Tübatulabal people
, who have now largely shifted
to English
. The language is currently considered moribund.
In English, the name Tübatulabal refers to both the Tübatulabal people and their language. However, in the language itself, the term Tübatulabal refers only to the Tübatulabal people. Its origin is unclear, but it may be related to the noun stem tɨba- "pine nuts". The Tübatulabal term for the Tübatulabal language is pakaːnil.
There are six phonemic vowels in Tübatulabal:
Contrastive short and long versions
of each vowel are found in both stressed and unstressed syllable
s. The vowels have various allophone
s which occur in different environments, most notably more central lax allophones when the vowels are short and occur in unstressed syllables. i and u can occur as the second member of a diphthong
with any other vowel, resulting in ten possible diphthongs (Voegelin reports that ɨu is rare). Phonologically, the members of a diphthong are treated as distinct segments. For example, the common initial reduplication process, which copies the first stem vowel, copies only the first member of a diphthong, e.g.:
ʔuinul 'the sucker fish'
ʔuʔuinul 'the many suckers in one place'
Vowel length is contrastive. However, according to , in the suffixing morphology length is typically predictable. In most cases, the first suffix is short, the second suffix is long, the third suffix is short, and so on. For example, the verbal stem tɨk- 'to eat' can be expanded to tɨk-ilɔːɡ-ɔ-maːla 'let us go and pretend to eat'. In this word, each suffix alternates in length compared to its neighbors. When arranged differently, the same suffixes will have different lengths. Thus compare maːla 'let us' with the realization of the same morpheme in tɨk-al-aː-mala 'let us go eat'.
Tübatulabal consonants show a basic voicing distinction, with a corresponding alternately voiced phoneme present for almost every obstruent. Unlike English, Tübatulabal voiceless consonants are not aspirated.
Non-contrastive allophones of all vowels occur, usually when a vowel follows a nasal consonant, and especially when it also precedes a glottal consonant.
Consonants
All the consonantal phonemes of Tübatulabal are shown below.
All consonants except the glottal stop can occur as geminates
. Gemination is often phonologically predictable. In particular, all consonants except the voiced stops and the glottal stop geminate when following a short vowel. All stops and affricates are geminated in word-final position, regardless of the length of the preceding vowel.
. For example:
''ˌʔɨmbɨŋˌwibaˈʔat "he is wanting to roll string on his thigh"
''ˌjuːuˌduːˌjuːuˈdat "the fruit is mashing"
Words with the form VːCVCV will be stressed as ˌVːCVˈCV:
''ˌnaːwiˈʃul "the pine-nut pole"
For the purposes of stress assignment, two identical short vowels separated only by a glottal stop are treated as a single vowel if and only if they belong to the same morpheme, e.g.:
''ˌkuʔud͡ʒuˈbil "the little one"
There are four word-formation processes in Tübatulabal: suffixation, reduplication
, conjunction and compounding.
Suffixation
Suffixation is the most common and most productive process in agglutinative word-formation. Suffixes form a closed class and occur in a fixed order according to the word type.
Reduplication
There are two kinds of reduplication: full reduplication and partial reduplication. Full reduplication is the less common type; it is used to mark iterative aspect on verbs.
Partial reduplication can occur as initial or final reduplication. Final reduplication is very rare; it is used only to express the idea of 'plural allegiance.' It is also apparently limited to occurring with noun stems or suffixes that end in wa. Voegelin illustrates with an example:
tɔhat͡siŋwan 'his hunting partner'
tɔhat͡siŋwawaːn 'his hunting partner (in the sense that the partner referred to, being very proficient, has many companions in hunting)'
Initial reduplication is far more productive. It is used to express collective plurality in nouns, and to express aspect reversal in verbs. Initial reduplication prefixes a copy of the first vowel of the stem (as well as any immediately following nasal), preceded by a fixed ʔ. The underlying stem-initial consonant (if any) may also undergo changes, particularly in voicing and length. Some examples illustrate the reduplication process.
Conjunction
Conjunction involves the combination of a particle with a word of another type. According to Voegelin, the behavior of particles in these constructions is similar to that of enclitics
in other Uto-Aztecan languages, but distinct enough from them that this should not be considered a kind of cliticization.
Compounding
Compounding
appears to have been a much more productive process at an earlier stage of the language. Compounding now has very limited productivity, and in many cases appears to have been completely lexicalized insofar as it can occur at all.
or atelic
; by default, a bare stem is inherently atelic), and an inherent value for transitivity (transitive, intransitive or impersonal). These inherent values can be changed by morphological addition in order to yield a verb stem with any of the other possible values. Aspect reversal is indicated by initial reduplication. Transitivity change is indicated by the use of one (or more) of a number of derivational suffixes with which verbs are constructed.
The full verb structure can be summarized as (A) + B + (C) + (D), where B is the verb root, and the other positions (all optional) represent classes of morphemes. A indicates initial reduplication, which can occur only once per word. C indicates a class of derivational morphemes, which can be divided into ten ordered positions, each of which allows at most one morpheme per word. D is the final position; there are nine possible morphemes in final position, but only one can occur in any single word.
The C class morphemes are given with examples in the table below. When these morphemes co-occur in a word, they must occur in the order given. Transitivity changing morphemes are marked with *. These morphemes have a different effect depending on the inherent transitivity of the verb root, as well as the presence of other transitivity-changing morphology.
The possible verbal final morphemes (class D) are shown below. Unlike the class C morphemes, only one of these final-position morphemes can occur in any single word. Therefore the ordering of morphemes in this table does not indicate anything about a linear relationship among these morphemes.
: subject, object or genitive. Relative nouns make a finer distinction between suus and ejus objects and genitives. In addition to this obligatory morphology, nouns may also receive suffixes indicating several secondary cases (inessive, ablative, allative and instrumental
) as well as many other derivational suffixes.
Nouns may be divided into three basic classes according to their stem shape and morphological behavior, and sometimes according to their semantic contribution as well. The basic test for classification is how the noun occurs when it is absolute. The absolute suffix has a different allomorph
when it occurs with a noun from each of these classes. Class A nouns all have vowel-final stems, and add the absolute suffix as -l. Class B noun stems may be vowel-final or consonant-final, but in either case the absolute suffix is -t. Class C is a small class of nouns, many of which are kinship terms or other inalienable nouns. The absolute noun is phonologically null when it occurs with class C nouns.
Each of these classes can be subdivided into two or more classes, depending on phonological differences in the noun stem which lead to divergent behavior in certain case forms. Specifically, class A is divided into A1 nouns (stems end with a long vowel) and A2 nouns (stems end with a short vowel). Class B is divided into five subclasses, depending on whether the stem ends in a short vowel, a long vowel, n, m, or a voiceless consonant. Class C is divided into C1 (nouns which take an overt relative suffix) and C2 (nouns with no overt relative suffix).
The following table illustrates each of the noun classes and subclasses, with all of the obligatory cases.
Conjunctive particles resemble clitics in that they never appear independently (that is, they always lean on another word). However, unlike clitics, conjunctive particles typically bear their own stress, and they do not alter the stress of the word on which they lean. Conjunctive particles include various discourse and modal morphemes, as well as the typical pronominal agreement morphemes which occur with verbs.
Independent particles are fully independent words. They include prepositional, modal and exclamatory morphemes, numerals, and one class of pronouns.
The table below shows the pronominal morphemes of Tübatulabal. Like nouns, pronouns distinguish between three cases: subject, object and possessive. (Unsurprisingly, pronouns do not make a distinction between absolute and relative entities.) Different forms exist for first, second and third person entities. Second and third person forms distinguish only singular and plural numbers, while first person forms distinguish between singular, dual inclusive, dual exclusive, and plural numbers. All pronouns may be expressed through conjunctive particles. The subject pronouns are unique in that they can also be expressed by an independent particle.
The first person subject conjunctive forms have special allomorphs when they occur with the exhortative suffix -ma:
The third person conjunctive form is usually null, but it is expressed by -d͡za when it occurs after the exhortative or permissive suffixes. (This suffix often undergoes syncope and devoicing, yielding -t͡s.) The second person conjunctive plural subject form may also syncopate, in which case the medial vowel shortens as well, yielding -bum. The first person conjuncitve singular subject form may also syncopate, triggering devoicing but no irregular phonology; in these cases the suffix has the form -k.
Subject pronouns typically lean on verbs (if conjunctive) and correspond to grammatical subject, e.g. iwikkːɨki "I discarded (it)" (with devoicing); anabaːhaʃta "they can throw it" (with metathesis of the components of the affricate, and consequent change of s > ʃ).
Object pronouns also lean on verbs, and indicate any non-possessive oblique function, including transitive objects, ditransitive objects or benefactives, objects of imperative verbs, as well as subjects of subordinate verbs if not equivalent to the subject of the matrix verb.
Possessive pronouns typically lean on the possessum, e.g. haniːnɨʔɨŋ "my house"; ʃɔːɔjin "his wife".
orthography. In addition, the most important linguistic work on Tübatulabal, the original grammatical description of the language, uses a somewhat different orthography.
Voegelin writes ɨ as ï and ɔ as ô. He also writes ʃ as c, t͡ʃ as tc, ʔ as ‘, d͡ʒ as dž and j as y. He also uses a number of special symbols for vocalic allomorphs. ι is an allomorph of i, μ is an allomorph of u, o is an allomorph of ô (IPA ɔ), and ŏ is an allomorph of both a and ô.
The letter ü in the name Tübatulabal represents the central unrounded vowel ɨ.
Uto-Aztecan languages
Uto-Aztecan or Uto-Aztekan is a Native American language family consisting of over 30 languages. Uto-Aztecan languages are found from the Great Basin of the Western United States , through western, central and southern Mexico Uto-Aztecan or Uto-Aztekan is a Native American language family...
, traditionally spoken in Kern County
Kern County, California
Spreading across the southern end of the California Central Valley, Kern County is the fifth-largest county by population in California. Its economy is heavily linked to agriculture and to petroleum extraction, and there is a strong aviation and space presence. Politically, it has generally...
, California
California
California is a state located on the West Coast of the United States. It is by far the most populous U.S. state, and the third-largest by land area...
. It is the traditional language of the Tübatulabal people
Tübatulabal people
The Tübatulabal are Native Americans whose ancestral home was in the Kern River basin, in the southern Sierra Nevada mountains of California.Their traditional culture was similar to that of the Yokuts, who occupied most the of the southern half of the California's Central Valley. Acorns, piñon...
, who have now largely shifted
Language shift
Language shift, sometimes referred to as language transfer or language replacement or assimilation, is the progressive process whereby a speech community of a language shifts to speaking another language. The rate of assimilation is the percentage of individuals with a given mother tongue who speak...
to English
English language
English is a West Germanic language that arose in the Anglo-Saxon kingdoms of England and spread into what was to become south-east Scotland under the influence of the Anglian medieval kingdom of Northumbria...
. The language is currently considered moribund.
In English, the name Tübatulabal refers to both the Tübatulabal people and their language. However, in the language itself, the term Tübatulabal refers only to the Tübatulabal people. Its origin is unclear, but it may be related to the noun stem tɨba- "pine nuts". The Tübatulabal term for the Tübatulabal language is pakaːnil.
Segmental phonology
VowelsThere are six phonemic vowels in Tübatulabal:
Front Front vowel A front vowel is a type of vowel sound used in some spoken languages. The defining characteristic of a front vowel is that the tongue is positioned as far in front as possible in the mouth without creating a constriction that would be classified as a consonant. Front vowels are sometimes also... |
Central Central vowel A central vowel is a type of vowel sound used in some spoken languages. The defining characteristic of a central vowel is that the tongue is positioned halfway between a front vowel and a back vowel... |
back Back vowel A back vowel is a type of vowel sound used in spoken languages. The defining characteristic of a back vowel is that the tongue is positioned as far back as possible in the mouth without creating a constriction that would be classified as a consonant. Back vowels are sometimes also called dark... |
|
---|---|---|---|
High Close vowel A close vowel is a type of vowel sound used in many spoken languages. The defining characteristic of a close vowel is that the tongue is positioned as close as possible to the roof of the mouth without creating a constriction that would be classified as a consonant.This term is prescribed by the... |
i | ɨ | u |
Mid Open-mid vowel An open-mid vowel is a type of vowel sound used in some spoken languages. The defining characteristic of an open-mid vowel is that the tongue is positioned two-thirds of the way from an open vowel to a mid vowel... |
e | ɔ | |
Low Open vowel An open vowel is defined as a vowel sound in which the tongue is positioned as far as possible from the roof of the mouth. Open vowels are sometimes also called low vowels in reference to the low position of the tongue... |
a |
Contrastive short and long versions
Vowel length
In linguistics, vowel length is the perceived duration of a vowel sound. Often the chroneme, or the "longness", acts like a consonant, and may etymologically be one, such as in Australian English. While not distinctive in most dialects of English, vowel length is an important phonemic factor in...
of each vowel are found in both stressed and unstressed syllable
Syllable
A syllable is a unit of organization for a sequence of speech sounds. For example, the word water is composed of two syllables: wa and ter. A syllable is typically made up of a syllable nucleus with optional initial and final margins .Syllables are often considered the phonological "building...
s. The vowels have various allophone
Allophone
In phonology, an allophone is one of a set of multiple possible spoken sounds used to pronounce a single phoneme. For example, and are allophones for the phoneme in the English language...
s which occur in different environments, most notably more central lax allophones when the vowels are short and occur in unstressed syllables. i and u can occur as the second member of a diphthong
Diphthong
A diphthong , also known as a gliding vowel, refers to two adjacent vowel sounds occurring within the same syllable. Technically, a diphthong is a vowel with two different targets: That is, the tongue moves during the pronunciation of the vowel...
with any other vowel, resulting in ten possible diphthongs (Voegelin reports that ɨu is rare). Phonologically, the members of a diphthong are treated as distinct segments. For example, the common initial reduplication process, which copies the first stem vowel, copies only the first member of a diphthong, e.g.:
ʔuinul 'the sucker fish'
ʔuʔuinul 'the many suckers in one place'
Vowel length is contrastive. However, according to , in the suffixing morphology length is typically predictable. In most cases, the first suffix is short, the second suffix is long, the third suffix is short, and so on. For example, the verbal stem tɨk- 'to eat' can be expanded to tɨk-ilɔːɡ-ɔ-maːla 'let us go and pretend to eat'. In this word, each suffix alternates in length compared to its neighbors. When arranged differently, the same suffixes will have different lengths. Thus compare maːla 'let us' with the realization of the same morpheme in tɨk-al-aː-mala 'let us go eat'.
Tübatulabal consonants show a basic voicing distinction, with a corresponding alternately voiced phoneme present for almost every obstruent. Unlike English, Tübatulabal voiceless consonants are not aspirated.
Non-contrastive allophones of all vowels occur, usually when a vowel follows a nasal consonant, and especially when it also precedes a glottal consonant.
Consonants
All the consonantal phonemes of Tübatulabal are shown below.
Labial | Alveolar plain |
Palato-alveolar | Velar | Glottal | |
Voiceless plosive or affricate |
p | t, t͡s | t͡ʃ | k | ʔ |
Voiced plosive or affricate |
b | d, d͡z | d͡ʒ | ɡ | |
Plain fricative | ʃ | h | |||
Nasal | m | n | ŋ | ||
Sonorant | l | j | w |
All consonants except the glottal stop can occur as geminates
Gemination
In phonetics, gemination happens when a spoken consonant is pronounced for an audibly longer period of time than a short consonant. Gemination is distinct from stress and may appear independently of it....
. Gemination is often phonologically predictable. In particular, all consonants except the voiced stops and the glottal stop geminate when following a short vowel. All stops and affricates are geminated in word-final position, regardless of the length of the preceding vowel.
Prosody
Tübatulabal has predictable word stress which is tied to morphological constituency and syllable weight. Primary stress falls on the final syllable of the stem. Secondary stress is assigned right to left from the final syllable, falling on every other moraMora (linguistics)
Mora is a unit in phonology that determines syllable weight, which in some languages determines stress or timing. As with many technical linguistic terms, the definition of a mora varies. Perhaps the most succinct working definition was provided by the American linguist James D...
. For example:
''ˌʔɨmbɨŋˌwibaˈʔat "he is wanting to roll string on his thigh"
''ˌjuːuˌduːˌjuːuˈdat "the fruit is mashing"
Words with the form VːCVCV will be stressed as ˌVːCVˈCV:
''ˌnaːwiˈʃul "the pine-nut pole"
For the purposes of stress assignment, two identical short vowels separated only by a glottal stop are treated as a single vowel if and only if they belong to the same morpheme, e.g.:
''ˌkuʔud͡ʒuˈbil "the little one"
Morphology
There are three basic word types in Tübatulabal: verbs, nouns, and particles. Verbs may be formed from verbal stems or from noun stems with verbalizing morphology; similarly, nouns can be formed from noun stems or from verbal stems with nominalizing morphology. Particles have their own stems, but they have comparatively little inflection, whereas both verbs and nouns tend to be very morphologically complex.There are four word-formation processes in Tübatulabal: suffixation, reduplication
Reduplication
Reduplication in linguistics is a morphological process in which the root or stem of a word is repeated exactly or with a slight change....
, conjunction and compounding.
Suffixation
Suffixation is the most common and most productive process in agglutinative word-formation. Suffixes form a closed class and occur in a fixed order according to the word type.
Reduplication
There are two kinds of reduplication: full reduplication and partial reduplication. Full reduplication is the less common type; it is used to mark iterative aspect on verbs.
Partial reduplication can occur as initial or final reduplication. Final reduplication is very rare; it is used only to express the idea of 'plural allegiance.' It is also apparently limited to occurring with noun stems or suffixes that end in wa. Voegelin illustrates with an example:
tɔhat͡siŋwan 'his hunting partner'
tɔhat͡siŋwawaːn 'his hunting partner (in the sense that the partner referred to, being very proficient, has many companions in hunting)'
Initial reduplication is far more productive. It is used to express collective plurality in nouns, and to express aspect reversal in verbs. Initial reduplication prefixes a copy of the first vowel of the stem (as well as any immediately following nasal), preceded by a fixed ʔ. The underlying stem-initial consonant (if any) may also undergo changes, particularly in voicing and length. Some examples illustrate the reduplication process.
Base form | Reduplicated form | Base form gloss |
---|---|---|
tɨk- | ʔɨtːɨk | to eat |
tana- | ʔandana | to get down |
paːabɨ- | ʔaːbaːabi | to be tired |
kulaːabiʃt | ʔukːulaːabiʃt | the duck |
Conjunction
Conjunction involves the combination of a particle with a word of another type. According to Voegelin, the behavior of particles in these constructions is similar to that of enclitics
Clitic
In morphology and syntax, a clitic is a morpheme that is grammatically independent, but phonologically dependent on another word or phrase. It is pronounced like an affix, but works at the phrase level...
in other Uto-Aztecan languages, but distinct enough from them that this should not be considered a kind of cliticization.
Compounding
Compounding
Compound (linguistics)
In linguistics, a compound is a lexeme that consists of more than one stem. Compounding or composition is the word formation that creates compound lexemes...
appears to have been a much more productive process at an earlier stage of the language. Compounding now has very limited productivity, and in many cases appears to have been completely lexicalized insofar as it can occur at all.
Verb morphology
Each verb stem has an unpredictable inherent aspect value (either telicTelicity
In linguistics, telicity is the property of a verb or verb phrase that presents an action or event as being complete in some sense...
or atelic
Telicity
In linguistics, telicity is the property of a verb or verb phrase that presents an action or event as being complete in some sense...
; by default, a bare stem is inherently atelic), and an inherent value for transitivity (transitive, intransitive or impersonal). These inherent values can be changed by morphological addition in order to yield a verb stem with any of the other possible values. Aspect reversal is indicated by initial reduplication. Transitivity change is indicated by the use of one (or more) of a number of derivational suffixes with which verbs are constructed.
The full verb structure can be summarized as (A) + B + (C) + (D), where B is the verb root, and the other positions (all optional) represent classes of morphemes. A indicates initial reduplication, which can occur only once per word. C indicates a class of derivational morphemes, which can be divided into ten ordered positions, each of which allows at most one morpheme per word. D is the final position; there are nine possible morphemes in final position, but only one can occur in any single word.
The C class morphemes are given with examples in the table below. When these morphemes co-occur in a word, they must occur in the order given. Transitivity changing morphemes are marked with *. These morphemes have a different effect depending on the inherent transitivity of the verb root, as well as the presence of other transitivity-changing morphology.
Suffix | Gloss | Example word | Gloss |
---|---|---|
causative * | hɔːhinat | 's/he is coughing (through the agency of a crumb)' |
benefactive * | weleʔanat kɔːimi | 's/he is crawling to the woman (perhaps in the sense of "he is crawling there for the erotic benefit of the woman")' |
movement | ʔɨtːɨkːamin | 's/he ate it here and went away' |
distributive | ʔawaʃiniːnɨm | 's/he dug first here, then there' |
pretending to | ʔanaŋaːlilɔːɡibaʔat | 's/he wants to go along pretending he is crying' |
desiderative | ʔamaɡiːibaʔ | 's/he is on the verge of learning about it' |
future | ʔapaʔaniʃa | 'it will get plugged up' |
passive * | weːhiwat | 's/he is being licked (e.g. kitten by mother cat)' |
collective-intensive | ʔapahkaniwɨːdiʃa | 'they will speak Tübatulabal' |
similative | wɨʃɨpuwat | 'it seems to be ripening' |
The possible verbal final morphemes (class D) are shown below. Unlike the class C morphemes, only one of these final-position morphemes can occur in any single word. Therefore the ordering of morphemes in this table does not indicate anything about a linear relationship among these morphemes.
Suffix/suffix type | Gloss | Example word | Gloss |
---|---|---|---|
Nominalizers | – | kabobaːʔinaːnat͡siŋwajinɨʔɨŋ | 'my partner in rattling for it (the dance)' |
Subordinaters | – | ʔalaːwiʔima tɨkːat | 's/he is eating while talking' |
Imperatives | – | tɔhaːhai tɔhiːla | 'hunt the deer after a while' |
present tense | ʔɔhtatni | 's/he is asking me' | |
exhortative | waʃamaːala | 'let's dig it' | |
permissive | wɔːʔiʃɨhatd͡za | 's/he might get jealous' | |
past habituative | t͡saːijinaːniukaŋ | 's/he used to make lace' | |
irrealis | muːdakaːhaiwɨt | 's/he should have dodged' | |
adversative | pɨːminahtajat | 's/he is making it full (despite the fact that the thing to be filled is very large)' |
Noun morphology
All nouns (whether derived from verb stems or noun stems) are obligatorily marked as absolute or relative. Nouns must also be marked with one of the three basic casesGrammatical case
In grammar, the case of a noun or pronoun is an inflectional form that indicates its grammatical function in a phrase, clause, or sentence. For example, a pronoun may play the role of subject , of direct object , or of possessor...
: subject, object or genitive. Relative nouns make a finer distinction between suus and ejus objects and genitives. In addition to this obligatory morphology, nouns may also receive suffixes indicating several secondary cases (inessive, ablative, allative and instrumental
Instrumental case
The instrumental case is a grammatical case used to indicate that a noun is the instrument or means by or with which the subject achieves or accomplishes an action...
) as well as many other derivational suffixes.
Nouns may be divided into three basic classes according to their stem shape and morphological behavior, and sometimes according to their semantic contribution as well. The basic test for classification is how the noun occurs when it is absolute. The absolute suffix has a different allomorph
Allomorph
In linguistics, an allomorph is a variant form of a morpheme. The concept occurs when a unit of meaning can vary in sound without changing meaning. The term allomorph explains the comprehension of phonological variations for specific morphemes....
when it occurs with a noun from each of these classes. Class A nouns all have vowel-final stems, and add the absolute suffix as -l. Class B noun stems may be vowel-final or consonant-final, but in either case the absolute suffix is -t. Class C is a small class of nouns, many of which are kinship terms or other inalienable nouns. The absolute noun is phonologically null when it occurs with class C nouns.
Each of these classes can be subdivided into two or more classes, depending on phonological differences in the noun stem which lead to divergent behavior in certain case forms. Specifically, class A is divided into A1 nouns (stems end with a long vowel) and A2 nouns (stems end with a short vowel). Class B is divided into five subclasses, depending on whether the stem ends in a short vowel, a long vowel, n, m, or a voiceless consonant. Class C is divided into C1 (nouns which take an overt relative suffix) and C2 (nouns with no overt relative suffix).
The following table illustrates each of the noun classes and subclasses, with all of the obligatory cases.
Class | Example stem | Gloss | Absolute | Relative | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Subject | Object | Genitive | Subject | Suus object | Ejus object | Suus genitive | Ejus genitive | |||||||
A1 | haniː | house | haniːl | haniːla | haniːliŋ | haniːn | haniː | haniːjin | haniː | haniːnin | ||||
A2 | t͡ʃaːmi | acorn gravy | t͡ʃaːmil | t͡ʃaːmila | t͡ʃaːmilaʔaŋ | t͡ʃaːmin | t͡ʃaːmi | t͡ʃaːmijin | t͡ʃaːmiʔin | t͡ʃaːmiʔinin | ||||
B1 | pit͡ʃiliː | squirrel | pit͡ʃiliːt | pit͡ʃiliːida | pit͡ʃiliːidiŋ | pit͡ʃiliːn | pit͡ʃiliː | pit͡ʃiliːijip | pit͡ʃiliʔin | pit͡ʃiliːʔinin | ||||
B2 | maːaʃa | sack | maːaʃat | maːʃata | maːʃatiŋ | maːaʃap | maːaʃat͡s | maːʃat͡sip | maːʃaʔadin | maːaʃaʔinin | ||||
B3 | ʃulun | fingernail | ʃulunt | ʃulunda | ʃulundiŋ | ʃulunin * | ʃulun | ʃuluninip | ʃulunʔin | ʃulunʔinin | ||||
B4 | pɔm | egg | pɔmt | pɔmda | pɔmdiŋ | pɔmin * | pɔm | pɔmd͡zip | pɔmin * | pɔminin | ||||
B5 | muːʃ | fish spear | muːʃt | muːʃta | muːʃtiŋ | muːʃn * | muːʃ * | muːʃip | muːʃin | muːʃinin | ||||
C1 | tahambiʃ | old man | tahambiʃ | tahambiʃi | tahambiʃiŋ | tahambiʃin * | tahambiʃ | tahambiʃin * | tahambiʃʔin | tahambiʃʔinin | ||||
C2 | naːadɨʔ | cat | naːadɨʔ | naːadɨʔi | naːadɨʔiŋ | naːadɨʔap | naːadɨʔai | naːadɨʔajin | naːadɨʔaʔin | naːadɨʔaʔinin |
Particle morphology
Morphemes belonging to the particle class are distinguished by the fact that they undergo little or no inflection and suffixation, unlike verbs and nouns. The particle class includes two subclasses of morphemes which behave quite differently: conjunctive particles and independent particles.Conjunctive particles resemble clitics in that they never appear independently (that is, they always lean on another word). However, unlike clitics, conjunctive particles typically bear their own stress, and they do not alter the stress of the word on which they lean. Conjunctive particles include various discourse and modal morphemes, as well as the typical pronominal agreement morphemes which occur with verbs.
Independent particles are fully independent words. They include prepositional, modal and exclamatory morphemes, numerals, and one class of pronouns.
The table below shows the pronominal morphemes of Tübatulabal. Like nouns, pronouns distinguish between three cases: subject, object and possessive. (Unsurprisingly, pronouns do not make a distinction between absolute and relative entities.) Different forms exist for first, second and third person entities. Second and third person forms distinguish only singular and plural numbers, while first person forms distinguish between singular, dual inclusive, dual exclusive, and plural numbers. All pronouns may be expressed through conjunctive particles. The subject pronouns are unique in that they can also be expressed by an independent particle.
Subject | Object | Possessive | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
independent | conjunctive | conjunctive | conjunctive | |||
1sg. | nik | -ɡi | -ni | -nɨʔɨŋ | ||
1d.inc. | iŋɡila | -ɡila | ? | ? | ||
1d.exc. | iŋɡilaʔaŋ | -ɡilaʔaŋ | -d͡ʒijaʔaŋ | -t͡ʃ | ||
1pl. | iŋɡiluːt͡s | -ɡiluːt͡s | -d͡ziː | -t͡s | ||
2sg. | imbi | -bi | -diŋ | -iŋ | ||
2pl. | imbuːmu | -buːmu | -dulu | ulu | ||
3sg. | in | (-d͡za) | – | -n | ||
3pl. | inda | -da | -tɨpɨ | -p |
The first person subject conjunctive forms have special allomorphs when they occur with the exhortative suffix -ma:
1sg. | -- |
1d.inc. |
1d.inc. |
1pl. |
The third person conjunctive form is usually null, but it is expressed by -d͡za when it occurs after the exhortative or permissive suffixes. (This suffix often undergoes syncope and devoicing, yielding -t͡s.) The second person conjunctive plural subject form may also syncopate, in which case the medial vowel shortens as well, yielding -bum. The first person conjuncitve singular subject form may also syncopate, triggering devoicing but no irregular phonology; in these cases the suffix has the form -k.
Subject pronouns typically lean on verbs (if conjunctive) and correspond to grammatical subject, e.g. iwikkːɨki "I discarded (it)" (with devoicing); anabaːhaʃta "they can throw it" (with metathesis of the components of the affricate, and consequent change of s > ʃ).
Object pronouns also lean on verbs, and indicate any non-possessive oblique function, including transitive objects, ditransitive objects or benefactives, objects of imperative verbs, as well as subjects of subordinate verbs if not equivalent to the subject of the matrix verb.
Possessive pronouns typically lean on the possessum, e.g. haniːnɨʔɨŋ "my house"; ʃɔːɔjin "his wife".
Syntax
Word order in Tübatulabal is generally flexible. According to , "Word-order in general is stylistic rather than obligatory." (p. 185)Orthography
Transcriptions in this article follow the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA). Much published material concerning Tübatulabal uses the AmericanistAmericanist phonetic notation
Americanist phonetic notation is a system of phonetic notation originally developed by European and American anthropologists and language scientists for the phonetic and phonemic transcription of Native American and European languages...
orthography. In addition, the most important linguistic work on Tübatulabal, the original grammatical description of the language, uses a somewhat different orthography.
Voegelin writes ɨ as ï and ɔ as ô. He also writes ʃ as c, t͡ʃ as tc, ʔ as ‘, d͡ʒ as dž and j as y. He also uses a number of special symbols for vocalic allomorphs. ι is an allomorph of i, μ is an allomorph of u, o is an allomorph of ô (IPA ɔ), and ŏ is an allomorph of both a and ô.
The letter ü in the name Tübatulabal represents the central unrounded vowel ɨ.
External links
- Tubatulabal language overview at the Survey of California and Other Indian LanguagesSurvey of California and Other Indian LanguagesThe Survey of California and Other Indian Languages at the University of California at Berkeley documents, catalogs, and archives the indigenous languages of the Americas...
- "Tubatulabal Language" at native-languages.org
- Recordings of Tübatulabal recorded by JP Harrington