Kalpana Kalpana (Editor)

Central Kalapuya language

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Region
  
Northwest Oregon

ISO 639-3
  
kyl

Language family
  
Kalapuyan Santiam

Glottolog
  
kala1400

Extinct
  
c. 1954 with the death of John B. Hudson

Central Kalapuyan, or Santiam, was a Kalapuyan language indigenous to the central and southern Willamette Valley in Oregon in the United States. It was spoken by various bands of the Kalapuya peoples who inhabited the valley up through the middle of the 19th century. The language is closely related to Northern Kalapuya, spoken in the Tualatin and Yamhill valleys. Dialects of Central Kalapuya that have been identified include:

Contents

  • Ahantchuyuk dialect, spoken in the northeastern Willamette Valley along the Pudding and Molalla rivers
  • Santiam dialect, spoken in the central Willamette Valley along the lower Santiam River
  • Luckiamute dialect, spoken in the central Willamette Valley along the Luckiamute River
  • Chepenafa dialect, spoken in the central Willamette Valley along Marys River
  • Chemapho dialect, spoken in central Willamette Valley along Muddy Creek.
  • Chelamela dialect, spoken in the southwestern Willamette Valley along the Long Tom River
  • Tsankupi dialect, spoken in the southeastern Willamette Valley along the Calapooia River
  • Winefelly-Mohawk dialects, spoken in the southeastern Willamette Valley along the McKenzie, Mohawk, and Coast Fork Willamette rivers
  • Phonology

    The phonology of the Santiam dialect, as described by Jacobs (1945) and analyzed by Banks (2007), is listed below. Banks notes that Jacobs' analysis does not rigorously account for allophonic variation, and that, according to Jacobs, there may have been some interchangeability between the velar and uvular series.

    Consonants

    The nasals [m] and [n] likely had syllabic forms: [m̩] and [n̩]. Banks also notes that /h/, /hʷ/, and /ɸʷ/ may have been allophones.

    Vowels

    Santiam Kalapuya had three diphthongs: [ai], [au], and [ui]. Vowel length may have been phonemic, and /ɔ/ may have been an allophone of /u/.

    References

    Central Kalapuya language Wikipedia