Crow language
Crow is a Missouri Valley Siouan language spoken primarily by the Crow Nation in present-day southeastern Montana. The word, Apsáalooke, translates to "children of the large beaked bird." It is one of the larger populations of American Indian languages with 2,480 speakers according to the 1990 US Census.
Dialects
Crow is closely related to Hidatsa spoken by the Hidatsa tribe of the Dakotas; the two languages are the only members of the Missouri Valley Siouan family. Despite their similarities, Crow and Hidatsa are not entirely mutually intelligible.Status
According to Ethnologue with figures from 1998, 77% of Crow people over 66 years old speak the language; "some" parents and older adults, "few" high school students and "no pre-schoolers" speak Crow. 80% of the Crow Nation prefers to speak in English. The language was defined as "definitely endangered" by UNESCO as of 2012.However, R. Graczyk claims in his A Grammar of Crow that "nlike many other native languages of North America in general, and the northern plain in particular, the Crow language still exhibits considerable vitality: there are fluent speakers of all ages, and at least some children are still acquiring Crow as their first language." Many of the younger population who do not speak Crow are able to understand it. Almost all of those who do speak Crow are also bilingual in English. Graczyk cites the reservation community as the reason for both the high level of bilingual Crow-English speakers and the continued use and prevalence of the Crow language. Daily contact with non-American Indians on the reservation for over one hundred years has led to high usage of English. Traditional culture within the community, however, has preserved the language via religious ceremonies and the traditional clan system.
Currently, most speakers of Crow are 30 and older but a few younger speakers are learning it. There are increased efforts for children to learn Crow as their first language and many do on the Crow Reservation of Montana, particularly through a Crow language immersion school that was sponsored in 2012. Development for the language includes a Crow language dictionary and portions of the Bible published from 1980-2007. The current literacy rate is around 1-5% for first language speakers and 75-100% for second language learners. Teens are immersed in Crow at the Apsaalooke language camp sponsored by the Crow Nation.
Classification
Crow is closely related to Hidatsa spoken by the Hidatsa tribe of the Dakotas; the two languages are the only members of the Missouri Valley Siouan family. The ancestor of Crow-Hidatsa may have constituted the initial split from Proto-Siouan. Crow and Hidatsa are not mutually intelligible, however the two languages share many phonological features, cognates and have similar morphologies and syntax. The split between Crow and Hidatsa may have occurred between 300 and 800 years ago.Phonology
Vowels
There are five distinct vowels in Crow, which occur either long or short with the exception of the mid vowels.There is also a marginal diphthong ea that only occurs in two native Crow stems: déaxa 'clear' and béaxa 'intermittent'.
Consonants
Crow has a very sparse consonant inventory, much like many other languages of the Great Plains.Labial | Alveolar | Palatal | Velar | Glottal | |
Plosive | |||||
Fricative | |||||
Sonorant |
Stops are aspirated word-initially, word-finally, when geminated and when following another stop. Stops in a consonant cluster with h as the initial radical are unaspirated and lax. Gemination in stops only occurs intervocalically. Intervocalic single, nongeminating stops are lax, unaspirated, and generally voiced. The difference between voiced stops b and d and voiceless stops is hardly discernible when following a fricative, since both are unaspirated and lax. The phoneme k has a palatalized allophone that occurs after i, e, ch and sh, often word-finally.
Fricatives are tense; they are only lax when intervocalic. Palatal sh is often voiced intervocalically; s is sometimes voiced intervocalically; x is never voiced. The alveolar fricative /s/ has an optional allophone /h/ in phrase-initial position:
- sáapa "what" >
- sapée "who" >
Structure
Vowel sequences across morpheme boundaries can be quite varied, but short vowels cannot appear alone in the morpheme: V:V, V:V: and diphthong+V. Word finally, only a, o, and u can occur after a long vowel.A wide variety of consonant clusters can occur in Crow. All consonants except for /h/ can be geminated. Voiced labials and dentals are resistant to clustering. Because they only occur intervocallically, l and w do not occur in clusters. The plosive allophones b and d only occur in clusters as the second consonant and only at morpheme boundaries. The nasal allophones m and n can only occur with each other with the exception of nm, or occur with h at a morpheme boundary. Clusters in general occur at morphemic boundaries.
Some morphemic constraints:
- A word begins either with a V or a single C; no word-initial consonant clusters
- Consonant clusters only occur word-internally; exception: sht as a single morpheme is an emphatic sentence-final declarative marker.
- A word can end in any C except for p and x; ch only occurs in one word as a plural demonstrative
- All lexical nouns and verb stems end in a vowel
- Generally, nonderived noun and verb stems consist of between 1-4 syllables.
- Only V: or diphthongs occur in one-syllable word
Stress
Stress helps predict the tones of all the vowels in a word: stressed vowels are high in pitch; all vowels following the stressed vowel are low in pitch; all short vowels preceding the stressed vowel are low in pitch; all long vowels preceding the stressed vowel are high in pitch; short vowels occurring between a long vowel and the accented vowel assimilate to a high pitch.
In words composed of more than one morpheme, there are several rules to determine the placement of the stress:
- If the first stressed morpheme is stressed anywhere except for the final mora of a stem-final vowel, the subsequent morpheme is unstressed.
- If the first stressed morpheme has its accent of the stem-final vowel mora, that morpheme loses its stress.
- If the morpheme following the first stress lacks lexical stress, the stress remains on the first morpheme.
- If a stress stem-final vowel is deleted when the following morpheme lacks lexical stress, the stress is transferred to the preceding vowel mora of the deleted vowel.
- A few stems with final falling accent have long high stress for the purposes of word formation.
- The punctual aspectual marker áhi overrides the regular word accent - it is always accented
- The exclamative sentence-final marker wík is stressed in addition to the stress of the stem to which it is combined. Vowel morae that occur between the first stress and the exclamative suffix are low in pitch.
Phonological processes
- short vowel deletion: stem-final short vowels are deleted at a morpheme boundary unless a three-consonant cluster or a nasal plus voiceless obstruent would occur. Stem-final vowels do not delete before dak, the coordinate noun-phrase conjunction. Sentence-final evidential suffixes also do not cause the final short vowel to be deleted.
- nasal assimilation: n assimilates to m in a cluster; nm clusters do not occur.
- sibilant assimilation: alveolar s and ss are realized as /sh/ at morpheme boundaries before all consonants except x and s.
- vowel neutralization: word-finally, stem-final short vowels i, a and u are neutralized to their corresponding mid nonround or round vowel: i, a become e; u becomes o.
- identical vowel reduction: with suffixes beginning with a, sequences of 3-4 identical vowel morae are reduced to two ; exceptions are compounds and prefixes.
- long vowel reduction before h: long vowels shorten before h in a syllable coda.
- final schwa deletion: the final schwa of a diphthong is deleted before suffixes beginning with a and before the plural; before other vowels, it is otherwise retained.
- palatal-dental alternation: stem-final ch and t are complementary; t occurs before a-initial suffixes and plural u, and ch everywhere else. This relations holds parallel for š - s; and geminates čč and šš. The č and š alternates occur before nonlow vowels, whereas t and s occur before low vowels. There are, however, a few exceptions to this complementary relationship, therefore these phonemes cannot be considered as allophones.
- palatal-velar alternation: there is a lexically conditioned č to k alternation; k occurs before the plural and before suffixes beginning with a, not producing t.
- stem ablaut: lexically conditioned alternation affecting stem-final long vowels triggered by the plural morphemes, the imperative, and a-initial suffixes. (ii to aa ablaut; ee to ii ablaut; ee to aa ablaut.
Morphology
Nominal morphology
Basic stems consist of one to four syllables and always end in a vowel. Monosyllabic stems have long vowels or diphthongs, e.g., bií, 'stone, rock'; bía, 'woman'. The vast majority of nouns in Crow are derived stems. Derivational processes in nominal morphology include affixation and compounding.Suffixes
An exhaustive list of nominal suffixes:- aachí/lichí - 'approximative': aachí follows a stem-final short vowel, lichí follows a stem-final long vowel. Marks resemblance or similarity: 'kind of, sort of, like, around the time of.'
- kaáshi - 'real, true; very'
- káata - 'diminutive': Can add the diminutive meaning 'small, little' or the endearing, affectionate meaning 'dear' according to the semantics of the noun.
- kíishi - 'sportive, imitative': Marks resemblance or imitation.
- táali - 'real, genuine': Marks an object's reality, its genuineness. Often reduced to táali.
- ahi - 'here and there': Most commonly occurs with verbs, though occasionally is attached with nouns.
- ht - 'even': Marks concessive subordinate clauses as 'although, even though, even if.' Also occurs as a noun suffix glossed as 'even.' Htaa is a rare suffix that combines with the bare nominal stem of the noun.
Prefixes
- ak - 'agent nominalizer': creates agentive nouns from active verbs or verbs plus incorporated objects.
- ala - 'locative, temporal, or manner nominalizer': 'where, when, how' derived from verbs or verbs plus incorporated nouns. In some cases, ala may follow the noun creating a lexicalized relative clause.
- baa - 'indefinite nominalizer': Derived from stative verbs, inalienably possessed nouns plus stative verbs, active transtivie verbs, and from active intransitive verbs.
- ii - 'instrumental nominalizer': Derived from active transitive and intransitive verbs, and from transitive verbs plus incorporated nouns.
- bale - 'depossessivizer': Allows an inalienably possessed noun to occur without a possessor.
Compounding
Noun-noun compounds often involve a whole-part relationship: the first noun refers to the whole and the second to the part. Members of the compound may also be themselves compounds or derived nouns.
- íi-wili 'saliva' < íi 'mouth' + bilí 'water'
- áal-isshi 'sleeve' < áali 'arm' + ísshi 'container''
Possession
Nouns are classified as either inalienably or alienably possessed, according to which possessive markers they occur with. Inalienably possessed nouns are those that are inherently possessed or nondetachable associations, specifically body parts and family members, opposed to alienably possessed nouns whose entity is not inherently possessed. This rule is not absolute as some body parts and kin nouns can be considered alienable and some nouns with close associations to its possessor can be considered inalienable.The affixed possession paradigm for inalienable and alienable possessives can be derived. The alienable possessives only use the first consonant of the alienable prefixes and do not mark the possessor when the prefix begins with a vowel. The final suffix transforms into a diphthong from /-o/.
Personal names
Personal names constitute a distinct morphological class of nouns in Crow. They are marked with the definite determiner suffix /sh/, which attaches to the stem rather than to the citation form.Pronouns
Crow has three pronominal forms: bound; emphatic and contrastive; and interrogative-indefinite pronouns. With the first two types, there is a correlation between morphology and syntax. Argument pronouns are generally bound whereas emphatic and contrastive pronouns are generally independent. Bound pronominals function as direct and oblique arguments.- A-set pronominals mark only subjects of active verbs, both transitive and intransitive.
- B-set pronominals mark subjects of stative verbs, direct objects, and objects of postpositions.
Verbal morphology
Verbal derivational morphology is composed of prefixes, suffixes, one infix and reduplication, which expresses an "iterative, distributive, or intensive sense to the meaning of the stem."Active–stative verbs
The morphological verb classes in Crow mirror a semantic distinction: Crow is an active–stative language, meaning that the subject of an active verb is treated differently than the subject of a stative verb. Active verbs and stative verbs are marked with distinct sets of pronomical affixes: the "A-set" for active verbs and the "B-set" for stative verbs.Active verbs may have one, two, or three arguments. An intransitive verb takes a subject, a transitive verb takes a subject and an object and a ditransitive verb takes a subject and two objects. In a relative clause built on an active verb, when the subject of the verb is the head of the relative clause and it is an animate noun phrase, it is marked by ak.
Stative verbs may have zero, one, or two arguments. In a relative clause, the subject of a stative verb is marked with m or in elevated discourse, dak. There may also be an absence of marking on the head noun where the entire relative clause is marked with the indefinite nonspecific determiner m.
Verb chain
Crow has a fairly complex ordering of verb phrase constituents. The following table demonstrates simple constructions of active-state intransitive and transitive verbs based on the first person.- 1-4) Active pronominals in Crow are very diverse coming in many different forms based on the based bound form. They are patterned by a certain list of lexical and phonological factors, such as the dú - by hand pattern which results in a 1sg bu and a 2sg di, or the dá - by mouth pattern which results in a 1sg ba and a 2sg da.
- 2) For Active-Intransitive Causative Verbs, 1-2 person singular causitive is marked by aa as in chart, 1-2 person plural is marked by uu, 3rd person singular is marked by ee or a determined lexically, and 3rd person plural is marked by either uu, o, or iio determined lexically.
- 4) For Active-Transitive Causative Verbs, the causative transitive verb subject is marked by wa in the first person, la in the second person and 0 in the third person. The Causative affixes are hc and hk.
- Mood in Crow is expressed by a variety of post-positionals. The standard indicative morpheme is k.
- Prefixes:
- *I: Adverbial proclitics:
- *II: B-set pronominal elements
- *III: A-set pronominal elements
- *IV: Locative prefixes
- *V: Instrumental prefixes
- Stem:
- *VI: Stem modification - reduplication or prefixation and infixation of chi/ku "again"
- Suffixes
- *VII: Derivational suffixes
- *VIII: Punctual áhi
- *IX: Continuative, modal, or benefactive auxiliary
- *X: Habitual i
- *XI: Plural
- *XII: Subordinate clause markers
- **a. Speech act and evidential markers
- **b. Switch reference markers
- **c. Subordinate clause markers
- **d. Clauses without final markers
- *XIII: Negative ssaa
Syntax
Crow is an active–stative language, with verbs divided into two classes, active and stative, largely on semantic grounds. This is also often called a "split intransitive" language.
Noun-phrase syntax
An analysis of Crow noun phrase syntax under generative grammar has yielded the following rules:- a. NP → N'
- b.
- * i. N' → N
- * ii. N' →
- * iii. N' → NP N'
- * iv. N' → PP N'
- c. Q → DP Q
- d. DP → DEM NP
- e. NP → NP NP
- f. NP → S
- g.
- * i. NP → ^n
- * ii. NP → ^n DET
A noun phrase can be marked as definite or indefinite by a suffixed determiner. The definite suffix is /-sh/ and the indefinite suffix is /-m/.
- *iisáakshee-sh
- **'the young man'
- *bía-m
- **'a woman'
- *-m húulee-sh aw-ákee]-sh
- *girl four-PL-DET yesterday-DET 1A-see-DET
- **'the four girls I saw yesterday'
- -sh aw-ákaa-k
- *young.man-DET ball-DET RELATIVIZER-steal-DET 1A-see-DECL
- *'I saw the young man who stole the ball'
- ham]-dappií-o-lahtaa
- *2B-among-PL some-kill-PL-even.if
- *'even if they kill some of you'
There are two classes of quantifiers that are distinguished syntactically. The first class heads a quantifier phrases that takes a demonstrative as its complement: xaxúa.
- hinne bía-sh hileen áxpa-m
- *this woman-DET these men-DET all marry-DS
- *this woman married all these men
Demonstrative Phrases: Q → DP Q
Demonstratives are deictic words; in Crow, they occur phrase-initially. They can also cooccur with determiners.
Appositives: NP → NP NP
/ko/ and /kon/ are used to modify each other.
- día-k
- *that man-DET PRO do-DECL
- *'that man is the one who did it'
Relative clauses
Relative clauses are marked with final determiners. If the definite referent of the relative clause has already been accounted in the discourse or is otherwise obvious, the relative clause is marked with the definite /-sh/. Relative clauses can also be marked with the indefinite determiner marker /-m/; generally this is used to imply that the referent is being introduced into the discourse for the first time. However, the nominal head is almost always marked by the indefinite determiner /-m/.