Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Kitanemuk language

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Native to
  
United States

Ethnicity
  
Kitanemuk

Region
  
Southern California

ISO 639-3
  
None (mis)

Extinct
  
Last spoken in the 1940s by Marcelino Rivera, Isabella Gonzales, and Refugia Duran

Language family
  
Uto-Aztecan Serran Kitanemuk

Kitanemuk was a Northern Uto-Aztecan language of the Serran branch. It was very closely related to Serrano, and may have been a dialect. It was spoken in the San Gabriel Mountains and foothill environs of Southern California. The last speakers lived some time in the 1940s, though the last fieldwork was carried out in 1937. J. P. Harrington took copious notes in the 1916 and 1917, however, which has allowed for a fairly detailed knowledge of the language.

Contents

Morphology

Kitanemuk is an agglutinative language, where words use suffix complexes for a variety of purposes with several morphemes strung together.

Consonants

The consonant phonemes of Kitanemuk, as reconstructed by Anderton (1988) based on Harrington's field notes, were (with some standard Americanist phonetic notation in ⟨angle brackets⟩:

Word-finally, /h/ becomes [r], and all voiced consonants become voiceless before other voiceless consonants or word-finally.

References

Kitanemuk language Wikipedia