Cheyenne language
The Cheyenne language, is the Native American language spoken by the Cheyenne people, predominantly in present-day Montana and Oklahoma, in the United States. It is part of the Algonquian language family. Like all other Algonquian languages, it has complex agglutinative morphology. This language is considered endangered, at different levels, in both states.
Classification
Cheyenne is one of the Algonquian languages, which is a sub-category of the Algic languages. Specifically, it is a Plains Algonquian language. However, Plains Algonquian, which also includes Arapaho and Blackfoot, is an areal rather than genetic subgrouping.Geographic distribution
Cheyenne is spoken on the Northern Cheyenne Indian Reservation in Montana and in Oklahoma. At the Northern Cheyenne Indian Reservation, where as of March 2013, there were approximately 10,050 enrolled tribal members, of which about 4,939 resided on the reservation; slightly more than a quarter of the population five years or older spoke a language other than English.Current status
The Cheyenne language is considered "definitely endangered" in Montana and "critically endangered" in Oklahoma by the UNESCO. In Montana the number of speakers are about 1700 according to the UNESCO. In the state of Oklahoma, there are only 400 elderly speakers. There is no current information on any other state in the United States regarding the Cheyenne language.The 2017 film Hostiles features extensive dialogue in Northern Cheyenne. The film's producers hired experts in the language and culture to ensure authenticity.
Revitalization efforts and education
In 1997, the Cultural Affairs Department of Chief Dull Knife College applied to the Administration for Native Americans for an approximately $50,000 language preservation planning grant. The department wanted to use this money to assess the degree to which Cheyenne was being spoken on the Northern Cheyenne Reservation. Following this, the department wanted to use the compiled data to establish long-term community language goals, and to prepare Chief Dull Knife College to implement a Cheyenne Language Center and curriculum guide. In 2015, the Chief Dull Knife College sponsored the 18th Annual Language Immersion Camp. This event was organized into two weeklong sessions, and its aim was to educate the younger generation on their ancestral language. The first session focused on educating 5-10 year olds, while the second session focused on 11- to 18-year-olds. Certified Cheyenne language instructors taught daily classes. Ultimately, the camp provided approximately ten temporary jobs for fluent speakers on the impoverished reservation. The state of Montana has passed a law that guarantees support for tribal language preservation for Montana tribes. Classes in the Cheyenne language are available at Chief Dull Knife College in Lame Deer, Montana, at Southwestern Oklahoma State University, and at Watonga High School in Watonga, Oklahoma.Phonology
Vowels
Cheyenne has three basic vowel qualities ; low tone as in a ; mid tone as in ā ; and rising tone as in ô . Tones are often not represented in the orthography. Vowels can also be voiceless. The high and low tones are phonemic, while voiceless vowels' occurrence is determined by the phonetic context, making them allophones of the voiced vowels.Front | Central | Back | |
Mid | |||
Low |
Consonants
The phoneme /h/ is realized as in the environment between /e/ and /t/. /h/ is realized as between and i.e. /nahtóna/ nȧhtona - "alien", /nehtóna/ nėstona - "your daughter", /hehke/ heške - "his mother". The digraph "ts" represents assibilated /t/; a phonological rule of Cheyenne is that underlying /t/ becomes affricated before an /e/. Therefore, "ts" is not a separate phoneme, but an allophone of /t/. The sound is not a phoneme, but derives from other phonemes, including , and the past tense morpheme /h/ which is pronounced when it precedes a morpheme which starts with /h/.Bilabial | Dental | Postalveolar | Velar | Glottal | |
Stop | |||||
Fricative | |||||
Nasal |
Orthography
The Cheyenne orthography of 14 letters is neither a pure phonemic system nor a phonetic transcription; it is, in the words of linguist Wayne Leman, a "pronunciation orthography". In other words, it is a practical spelling system designed to facilitate proper pronunciation. Some allophonic variants, such as voiceless vowels, are shown. represents the phoneme symbolized /e/, but is usually pronounced as a phonetic and sometimes varies to. represents.Feature system for phonemes
The systematic phonemes of Cheyenne are distinguished by seven two-valued features. Scholar Donald G. Frantz defined these features as follows:- Oral: primary articulation is oral
- Vocoid : central resonant continuant
- Syllabic : nuclear to syllable
- Closure : stoppage of air flow at point of primary articulation
- Nasal : velic is open
- Grave : primary articulation at oral extremity
- Diffuse : primary articulation is relatively front
ʔ | h | a | o | e | m | n | p | k | t | b | s | š | x | |
oral | − | ' | ' | ' | ' | ' | ' | + | + | + | ' | ' | ' | ' |
voc | ' | + | ' | ' | ' | ' | ' | ' | ' | ' | − | − | − | − |
syl | ' | − | + | + | + | ' | ' | ' | ' | ' | ' | ' | ' | ' |
clos | ' | ' | ' | ' | ' | ' | ' | + | + | + | − | − | − | − |
nas | 0 | ' | ' | ' | ' | + | + | − | ' | − | ' | ' | ' | ' |
grv | 0 | − | + | ' | + | − | + | + | − | + | − | − | + | |
dif | 0 | − | − | + | + | ' | + | − | ' | + | + | − | − |
0 indicates the value is indeterminable/irrelevant. A blank indicates the value is specifiable, but context is required. Parentheses enclose values that are redundant according to the phonological rules; these values simply represent the results of these rules.
Voicing
Cheyenne has 14 orthographic letters representing 13 phonemes. is written as x orthographically but is not a phoneme. This count excludes the results of allophonic devoicing, which are spelled with a dot overtop vowels. Devoicing naturally occurs in the last vowel of a word or phrase. It can also occur in vowels at the penultimate and prepenultimate positions within a word. Non-high and is also usually devoiced preceding h plus a stop. Phonemic /h/ is absorbed by a preceding voiceless vowel. Examples are given below.Penultimate devoicing
- /hohkoʃ/ hohkȯxe 'ax';
- /tétahpetáht/ tsétȧhpétȧhtse 'the one who is big';
- /mótehk/ motšėške 'knife'
Prepenultimate devoicing
- /tahpeno/ tȧhpeno 'flute';
- /kosáné/ kȯsâne 'sheep ';
- /mahnohtehtovot/ mȧhnȯhtsė'stovȯtse'' 'if you ask him'
Special a and o devoicing
- /émóheeohtéo/ émôheeȯhtseo'o 'they are gathering';
- /náohkeho'sóe/ náȯhkėho'soo'e 'I regularly dance';
- /nápóahtenáhnó/ nápôȧhtsenáhno 'I punched him in the mouth'
Consonant devoicing
émane 'He is drinking.'When preceding a voiceless segment, a consonant is devoiced.
''h''-absorption
- -pėhévoestomo'he 'kind' + -htse 'imperative suffix' > -pėhévoestomo'ėstse
- tsé- 'conjunct prefix' + -éna'he 'old' + -tse '3rd pers. Suffix' > tsééna'ėstse 'the one who is old'
- né + 'you' + -one'xȧho'he 'burn' + tse 'suffix for some 'you-me' transitive animate forms' > néone'xȧho'ėstse ' you burn me'
Pitch and tone
There are several rules that govern pitch use in Cheyenne. Pitch can be ˊ = high, unmarked = low, ˉ = mid, and ˆ = raised high. According to linguist Wayne Leman, some research shows that Cheyenne may have a stress system independent from that of pitch. If this is the case, the stress system's role is very minor in Cheyenne prosody. It would have no grammatical or lexical function, unlike pitch.High-raising
A high pitch becomes a raised high when it is not followed by another high vowel and precedes an underlying word-final high.- /ʃéʔʃé/ šê'še 'duck';
- /sémón/ sêmo 'boat'
Low-to-high raising
- /méʃené/ méšéne 'ticks';
- /návóomó/ návóómo 'I see him';
- /póesón/ póéso 'cat'
Low-to-mid raising
- /kosán/ kōsa 'sheep ';
- /heʔé/ hē'e 'woman';
- /éhomosé/ éhomōse 'he is cooking'
High pushover
- /néháóénáma/ néhâoenama 'we prayed';
- /néméhótóne/ némêhotone 'we love him';
- /náméhósanémé/ námêhosanême 'we love'
Word-medial high raising
- /émésehe/ émêsehe 'he is eating';
- /téhnémenétó/ tséhnêmenéto 'when I sang';
- /násáamétohénoto/ násâamétȯhênoto 'I didn't give him to him'
Tone
- maxháeanáto
- maxháeanato
- hótame
- hotāme
Nonnasal reflexes of Proto-Algonquian *''k''
The research of linguist Paul Proulx provides an explanation for how these reflexes develop in Cheyenne: "First, *n and *h drop and all other consonants give glottal catch before *k. *k then drops except in element-final position. Next, there is an increment before any remaining *k not preceded by a glottal catch: a secondary h in words originating in the Cheyenne Proper dialect, and a vowel in those originating in the Sutaio dialect. In the latter dialect the *k gives glottal catch in a word-final syllable and drops elsewhere, leaving the vowel increment. Sutaio 'k clusters are all reduced to glottal catch."Grammar
Cheyenne is a morphologically polysynthetic language with a sophisticated, agglutinating verb system contrasting a relatively simple noun structure. Many Cheyenne verbs can stand alone in sentences, and can be translated by complete English sentences. Aside from its verb structure, Cheyenne has several grammatical features that are typical of Algonquian languages, including an animate/inanimate noun classification paradigm, an obviative third person and distinction of clusivity in the first person plural pronoun.Order and mode
Like all Algonquian languages, Cheyenne shows a highly developed modal paradigm. Algonquianists traditionally describe the inflections of verbs in these languages as being divided into three "orders," with each order further subdivided into a series of "modes," each of which communicates some aspect of modality. The charts below provide examples of verb forms of every order in each mode, after Leman and Mithun.Independent order
This order governs both declarative and interrogative statements. The modes of this order are generally subdivided along lines of evidentiality.Mode | Example | Translation |
Indicative | épėhêvahe | "he is good" |
Interrogative | épėhêvȧhehe | "is he good?" |
Inferential | mópėhêvȧhehêhe | "he must be good" |
Attributive | épėhêvahesėstse | "he is said to be good" |
Mediate | éhpehêvahêhoo'o | "long ago he was good" |
Conjunct order
This order governs a variety of dependent clause types. Leman characterizes this order of verbs as requiring other verbal elements in order to establish complete meaning. Verbs in the conjunct order are marked with a mode-specific prefix and a suffix marking person, number and animacy.Mode | Example | Translation |
Indicative | tséhpėhêvaese | "when he was good" |
Subjunctive | mȧhpėhévaestse | "when he is good" |
Iterative | ho'pėhévȧhesėstse | "whenever he is good" |
Subjunctive Iterative | ohpėhévȧhesėstse | "when he is generally good" |
Participle | tséhpėhêvaestse | "the one who is good" |
Interrogative | éópėhêvaestse | "whether he is good" |
Obligative | ahpėhêvȧhesėstse | "he ought to be good" |
Optative | momóxepėhévaestse | "I wish he would be good" |
Negative inferential | móho'nópėhévaestse | "he must not be good" |
Imperative order
The third order governs commands. Cheyenne, in common with several other North American languages, distinguishes two types of imperative mood, one indicating immediate action, and the other indicating delayed action.Mode | Example | Translation |
Immediate | méseestse | "eat!" |
Delayed | méseheo'o | "eat later!" |
Hortative | mésėheha | "let him eat!" |
Verb morphology
The Cheyenne verb system is very complex and verb constructions are central to the morphosyntax of the language, to the point that even adjectives and even some nouns are largely substantive in nature. Verbs change according to a number of factors, such as modality, person and transitivity, as well as the animacy of the referent, each of these categories being indicated by the addition of an affix to the basic verb stem. There are also several instrumental, locative and adverbial affixes that add further information to the larger verb construction. This can result in very long, complex verbs that are able to stand alone as entire sentences in their own right.All Cheyenne verbs have a rigid templatic structure. The affixes are placed according to the following paradigm:
person – – – – ROOT – – final
Pronominal affixes
Cheyenne represents the participants of an expression not as separate pronoun words but as affixes on the verb. There are three basic pronominal prefixes in Cheyenne:- ná-first person
- né-second person
- é-third person
Tense
Tense in Cheyenne is expressed by the addition of a specific tense morpheme between the pronominal prefix and the verb stem. Verbs do not always contain tense information, and an unmarked present tense verb can be used to express both past and "recent" present tense in conversation. Thus, návóómo could mean both "I see him" and "I saw him" depending on the context.Far past tense is expressed by the morpheme /-h-/, which changes to /-x-/, /-s-/, /-š-/ or /-'-/ before the -h, -t, -k and a vowel, respectively. Thus:
- návóómo I see him
- náhvóómo I saw him
Directional affixes
These prefixes address whether the action of the verb is moving "toward" or "away from" some entity, usually the speaker.- -nėh-toward
- -nex-toward
- -ne'-toward
- -nes-toward
- -ta-away from
Preverbs
- -emóose-secretly
- -nésta-previously
- -sé'hove-suddenly
- -áhane-extremely
- -táve-slightly
- -ohke-regularly
- -pȧháve-good, well
- -ma'xe-much, a lot
- -hé-for the purpose of
- -ha'ke-slowly, softly
- -hoove-mistakenly
Medial affixes
- -ahtsemouth
- -énéface
- -na'eváarm
- -vétovábody
- -he'onáhand
- -hahtáfoot
ka'énė-hôtame = bulldog
Final affixes
Cheyenne verbs take different object agreement endings depending upon the animacy of the subject and the transitivity of the verb itself. Intransitive verbs take endings depending upon the animacy of their subject, whereas transitive verbs take endings that depend upon the animacy of their object. All verbs can therefore be broadly categorized into one of four classes: Animate Intransitive, Inanimate Instransitive, Transitive Animate and Transitive Inanimate. Following are the most common object agreement markers for each verb class.- -eAnimate Intransitive
- -óInanimate Intransitive
- -oTransitive Animate
- -á/-éTransitive Inanimate
Negation
Nouns
Nouns are classified according to animacy. They change according to grammatical number but are not distinguished according to gender or definiteness.Obviation
When two third persons are referred to by the same verb, the object of the sentence becomes obviated, what Algonquianists refer to as a "fourth person." It is essentially an "out of focus" third person. As with possessive obviation above, the presence of a fourth person triggers morphological changes in both the verb and noun. If the obviated entity is an animate noun, it will be marked with an obviative suffix, typically -o or -óho. For example:- návóómo hetane "I saw a man"
- he'e évôomóho hetanóho "The woman saw a man"
Number
Both animate and inanimate nouns are pluralized by the addition of suffixes. These suffixes are irregular and can change slightly according to a complex system of phonological rules.- -o, -éInanimate plural
- -ȯtseAnimate plural
Possession
- na-first person
- ne-second person
- he-third person
When a third person animate noun is possessed by another third person, the noun becomes obviated and takes a different form. Much of the time, this obviated form is identical to the noun's regular plural form, with only a few exceptions. This introduces ambiguity in that it is not always possible to tell whether an obviated noun is singular or plural.
Historical development
Like all the Algonquian languages, Cheyenne developed from a reconstructed ancestor referred to as Proto-Algonquian. The sound changes on the road from PA to modern Cheyenne are complex, as exhibited by the development of the PA word *erenyiwa "man" into Cheyenne hetane:- First, the PA suffix -wa drops
- The geminate vowel sequence -yi- simplifies to /i/
- PA */r/ changes to /t/
- /h/ is added before word-initial vowels
- Due to a vowel chain-shift, the vowels in the word wind up as /e/, /a/ and /e/ .
Lexicon
Some Cheyenne words :- ' "grease"
- ' "his liver"
- ' "woman"
- ' "man"
- "milk"
Translations