Plains Apache language: Difference between revisions

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{{distinguish|Kiowa language}}
{{Infobox language
| name = Plains Apache
| altname = Kiowa Apache
| states = [[United States]]
| region = [[Caddo County]], [[Oklahoma]]
| ethnicity = [[Plains Apache]]
| extinct = 2008, with the death of Alfred Chalepah Jr.
| familycolor = Dené-Yeniseian
| fam2 = [[Na-Dene languages|Na-Dene]]
| fam3 = [[Athabaskan languages|Athabaskan]]
| fam4 = [[Southern Athabaskan languages|Southern Athabaskan]]
| map = Southern_Athabaskan_languages.svg
| mapcaption = Historical distribution of Southern Athabaskan languages. Plains Apache (labeled Kiowa Apache) is located in northwestern Oklahoma.
| iso3 = apk
| glotto = kiow1264
| glottorefname = Kiowa Apache
| notice = IPA
}}
 
The '''Plains Apache''' language (or '''Kiowa Apache''' language) wasis a [[Southern Athabaskan languages|Southern Athabaskan language]] formerly spoken by the [[Plains Apache]], organized as the [[Apache Tribe of Oklahoma]], living primarily around [[Anadarko, Oklahoma|Anadarko]] in southwest [[Oklahoma]].<ref>{{cite web |last1=Everett |first1=Dianna |title=Apache Tribe of Oklahoma |url=https://www.okhistory.org/publications/enc/entry.php?entry=AP002 |website=The Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture |publisher=Oklahoma Historical Society |access-date=20 January 2020}}</ref> The language is [[extinct language|extinct]] as of 2008, when Alfred Chalepah, Jr., the last native speaker, died.<ref>Morgan, J. L. (2012). ''Classificatory Verbs in Plains Apache'' (Doctoral dissertation, University of Oklahoma).</ref>
 
Plains Apache is the most divergent member of the Southern Athabaskan languages, a family which also includes [[Navajo language|Navajo]], [[Chiricahua language|Chiricahua Apache]], [[Mescalero language|Mescalero Apache]], [[Lipan Apache language|Lipan Apache]], [[Western Apache language|Western Apache]], and [[Jicarilla Apache language|Jicarilla Apache]]. As a member of the broader Athabaskan family, it has an extremely complex system of verbal morphology, often enabling entire sentences to be constructed with only a verb.
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| {{IPAIPAlink|tɬʰ}} {{angbr|tł}}
| {{IPAIPAlink|tsʰ}} {{angbr|ts}}
| {{IPAIPAlink|tʃʰ}} {{angbr|tš}}
| {{IPAIPAlink|kʰ}} {{angbr|k}}
|-
! <small>[[Glottalized consonant|glottalized]]</small>
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!<small>[[Prenasalized consonant|prenasalised]]</small>
|
|{{IPAIPAlink|ⁿd}}
|
|
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=== Nouns ===
Almost every noun in Plains Apache can optionally take a pronominal prefix to indicate its possessor. These prefixes are as follows (some of the prefixes have multiple forms in free variation; in these cases, the more common variant is listed first).
 
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align: center;"
! colspan="2" |
! Singular
! [[Plural]]
|-
! colspan="2" | 1st person
| ší-
| rowspan="2" lang=apk | dàxí- ~ dá-
|-
! colspan="2" | 2nd person
| dí-
|-
|! rowspan="2" lang=apk| |3rd ʔí-person
!
| colspan="2" | bí- ~ mí-
! [[Grammatical person|First<br/>person]]
! [[Grammatical person|Second<br/>person]]
! [[Grammatical person|Third<br/>person]]
! Third person<br/>[[indefinite pronoun|indefinite]]
! [[Fourth person|Fourth<br/>person]]
|-
! [[Singularindefinite numberpronoun|Singularindefinite]]
| langcolspan=apk"2" | šíʔí-
| lang=apk | dí-
| rowspan="2" lang=apk | bí-
~ mí-
| rowspan="2" lang=apk | ʔí-
| rowspan="2" lang=apk | góó-
~ gó-
|-
! colspan="2" | [[Fourth person|Fourth<br/>4th person]]
! [[Plural]]
| colspan="2" lang=apk | dàxígóó- ~ -
|}
 
Some of these forms require further explanation. The indefinite third person may be used when the possessor is unknown, and is similar in meaning to 'someone's' (e.g. {{lang|apk|ʔí-bą̀ą̀s}}, 'a hoop owned by some unknown person'). The fourth person is reserved for possessors who are deemed to be in some way remote from the speaker, usually socially; compare {{lang|apk|bí-bą̀ą̀s}}, which would refer to a hoop belonging to someone who the speaker is familiar with and interacts with frequently and informally, and {{lang|apk|góó-bą̀ą̀s}}, used for someone who the speaker has a purely formal relationship with and does not know well.
 
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==References==
{{Refbegin|30em}}
* {{Citation |last=Bittle, |first=William E. (n.d.). |title=Plains Apache field notes |date=n.d. (|type=Unpublished manuscript).}}
* {{Cite thesis |last=Bittle, |first=William E. (1956). ''|title=The position of Kiowa-Apache in the Apachean group''. (Doctoral dissertation,|degree=PhD |publisher=University of California, |year=1956 |___location=Los Angeles).}}
* {{Cite book |last=Bittle, |first=William E. (1963).|title=Studies Kiowa-Apache.in the InAthapaskan H.languages Hoijer|publisher=University (Ed.),of ''StudiesCalifornia inPress the|year=1963 Athapaskan|editor-last=Hoijer languages'' (pp.&nbsp;76–101)|editor-first=H. |series=University of California publications in linguistics (No. |volume=29). |___location=Berkeley: University|pages=76–101 of|chapter=Kiowa-Apache California Press.|oclc=574743}}
* {{Cite book |last=Bittle, |first=William E. (1967). Kiowa-Apache. In H. Hoijer (Ed.), ''|title=Studies in Southwestern ethnolinguistics: meaning and history in the languages of the American Southwest.'' Berkeley: |publisher=University of California Press |year=1967 |editor-last=Hoijer |editor-first=H. |___location=Berkeley |chapter=Kiowa-Apache}}
* {{Cite journal |last=Bittle, |first=William E. (|year=1971). |title=A brief history of the Kiowa-Apache. |journal=Oklahoma Papers in Anthropology |volume=12( |issue=1): 1-34.|pages=1–34}}
* {{Cite journal |last=Bittle, |first=William E. (|year=1979). |title=Kiowa Apache Raiding Behavior. |journal=Oklahoma Papers in Anthropology |volume=20( |issue=2): 33-47.|pages=33–47}}
* {{Cite thesis |last=Collins, |first=Melanie Ruth. (1983). |title=Plains Apache: Strength Relations Among the Phonological Elements in a Dying Language. |degree=MA thesis, |publisher=University of Oklahoma. |year=1983}}
* Gatschet, Albert S. (1884). Na-isha Band, Apache (Kiowa Apache). Vocabulary and brief texts with interlinear translation November - December, 1884. Manuscript 62, National Anthropological Archives, Smithsonian Institution. Washington, DC.
* Goddard, Pliny Earle. (1911). Field notes in California Athabascan languages. American Council of Learned Societies Committee on Native American Languages, American Philosophical Society. Philadelphia, PA.
* {{Cite book |last=Hoijer, |first=Harry. (1971). The Position of the Apachean Languages in the Athapaskan Stock. |title=Apachean Culture History and Ethnology, ed.|year=1971 by|editor-last=Basso |editor-first=Keith H. Basso and Morris E. Opler. |series=Anthropological Papers of the University of Arizona |volume=21.3 |pages=3–6 |chapter=The Position of the Apachean Languages in the Athapaskan Stock |editor-6last2=Opler |editor-first2=Morris E.}}
* {{Cite thesis |last=Morgan, |first=J. L. (2012). ''|title=Classificatory Verbs in Plains Apache'' (Doctoral dissertation,|degree=PhD |publisher=University of Oklahoma). |year=2012}}
{{Refend}}
 
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[[Category:Extinct languages of North America]]
[[Category:Languages extinct in the 2000s]]
[[Category:Plains Apache]]
 
 
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