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{{Short description|Native American language}}
{{Short description|Algonquian language}}
{{Infobox language
{{Infobox language
| name = Cheyenne
| name = Cheyenne
| nativename = {{lang|chy|Tsėhésenėstsestȯtse}}
| nativename = {{lang|chy|Tsėhesenėstsestȯtse}}
| states = [[United States]]
| states = [[United States]]
| region = [[Montana]] and [[Oklahoma]]
| region = [[Montana]] and [[Oklahoma]]
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| map = Cheyenne USC2000 PHS.svg
| map = Cheyenne USC2000 PHS.svg
| map2 = Lang Status 60-DE.svg
| map2 = Lang Status 60-DE.svg
| mapcaption2 = {{center|{{small|Cheyenne is classified as Definitely Endangered by the [[UNESCO]] [[Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger]]}}}}
| mapcaption2 = {{center|Cheyenne is classified as Definitely Endangered by the [[UNESCO]] [[Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger]].}}
| pronunciation = {{IPA|[tse̥hésene̥stsesto̥tse]}}
}}
}}
The '''Cheyenne language''' ('''{{lang|chy|Tsėhésenėstsestȯtse}},''' {{IPA|[tse̥hésene̥stsesto̥tse]|lang=chy}}) (informal spelling ''Tsisinstsistots''), is the [[Native Americans in the United States|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 languages|Algonquian language]] family. Like all other Algonquian languages, it has complex [[agglutinative]] [[polysynthetic]] [[morphology (linguistics)|morphology]]. This language is considered endangered, at different levels, in both states.
The '''Cheyenne language''' ('''{{lang|chy|Tsėhesenėstsestȯtse}}''', {{IPA|chy|tse̥hésene̥stsesto̥tse|}}, informal spelling {{lang|chy|Tsisinstsistots}}) is the [[Native Americans in the United States|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 languages|Algonquian language]] family. Like all other Algonquian languages, it has complex [[agglutinative]] [[polysynthetic]] [[morphology (linguistics)|morphology]]. This language is considered endangered, at different levels, in both states.


==Classification==
==Classification==
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=== Current status ===
=== Current status ===
The Cheyenne language is considered "definitely [[Endangered language|endangered]]" in Montana and "critically endangered" in Oklahoma by the [[UNESCO]]. In Montana the number of speakers were about 1700 in 2012 according to the UNESCO. In 2021 there are approximately 300 elderly speakers. In 2021 in Oklahoma there are fewer than 20 elderly speakers. There is no current information on any other state in the United States regarding the Cheyenne language.<ref>
The Cheyenne language is considered "definitely [[Endangered language|endangered]]" in Montana and "critically endangered" in Oklahoma by the [[UNESCO]]. In Montana the number of speakers were about 1700 in 2012 according to the UNESCO. In 2021 there were approximately 300 elderly speakers. In 2021 in Oklahoma there were fewer than 20 elderly speakers. There is no current information on any other state in the United States regarding the Cheyenne language.<ref>
{{Cite web
{{Cite web
| title = UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in danger
| title = UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in danger
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Cheyenne has three basic [[vowels|vowel qualities]] {{IPA|/e a o/}}. The phoneme called {{IPA|/e/}} here is usually pronounced as a phonetic {{IPA|[ɪ]}}, and sometimes varies to {{IPA|[ɛ]}}.
Cheyenne has three basic [[vowels|vowel qualities]] {{IPA|/e a o/}}. The phoneme called {{IPA|/e/}} here is usually pronounced as a phonetic {{IPA|[ɪ]}}, and sometimes varies to {{IPA|[ɛ]}}.


These vowel qualities take four [[tone (linguistics)|tone]]s: [[high tone]] as in '''á''' {{IPA|[á]}}); [[low tone]] as in '''a''' {{IPA|[à]}}; [[mid tone]] as in '''ā''' {{IPA|[ā]}}; and [[rising tone]] as in '''ô''' {{IPA|[ǒ]}}. Tones are often not represented in the orthography. Vowels can also be [[voicelessness|voiceless]] (e.g. '''ė''' {{IPA|[e̥]}}).<ref>Linguist Wayne Leman included one more variant in his ''International Journal of American Linguistics''[http://www.journals.uchicago.edu/IJAL/home.html] (1981) article on Cheyenne pitch rules, a lowered-high pitch (e.g. à), but has since recognized that this posited pitch is the same as a low tone.</ref> The high and low tones are [[phonemic]], while voiceless vowels' occurrence is determined by the [[phonetic environment|phonetic context]], making them [[allophone]]s of the voiced vowels.
These vowel qualities take four [[tone (linguistics)|tone]]s: [[high tone]] as in '''{{lang|chy|á}}''' {{IPA|[á]}}); [[low tone]] as in '''{{lang|chy|a}}''' {{IPA|[à]}}; [[mid tone]] as in '''{{lang|chy|ā}}''' {{IPA|[ā]}}; and [[rising tone]] as in '''{{lang|chy|ô}}''' {{IPA|[ǒ]}}. Tones are often not represented in the orthography. Vowels can also be [[voicelessness|voiceless]] (e.g. '''{{lang|chy|ė}}''' {{IPA|[e̥]}}).<ref>Linguist Wayne Leman included one more variant in his 1981 article on Cheyenne pitch rules, a lowered-high pitch (e.g. à), but has since recognized that this posited pitch is the same as a low tone.</ref> The high and low tones are [[phonemic]], while voiceless vowels' occurrence is determined by the [[phonetic environment|phonetic context]], making them [[allophone]]s of the voiced vowels.


{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center;"
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center;"
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===Consonants===
===Consonants===
The [[phoneme]] {{IPA|/h/}} is realized as {{IPA|[s]}} in the environment between {{IPA|/e/}} and {{IPA|/t/}} (h > s / e _ t). {{IPA|/h/}} is realized as {{IPA|[ʃ]}} between {{IPA|[e]}} and {{IPA|[k]}} (h > ʃ / e _ k) i.e. {{IPA|/nahtóna/|lang=chy}} {{Lang|chy|nȧhtona}} – 'alien', {{IPA|/nehtóna/|lang=chy}} {{Lang|chy|nėstona}} – 'your daughter', {{IPA|/hehke/|lang=chy}} {{Lang|chy|heške}} – 'his mother'. The digraph {{Grapheme|ts}} represents assibilated {{IPA|/t/}}; a phonological rule of Cheyenne is that [[underlying representation|underlying]] {{IPA|/t/}} becomes [[affricate]]d before an {{IPA|/e/}} {{IPA|(t > ts/_e)}}. Therefore, "ts" is not a separate phoneme, but an [[allophone]] of {{IPA|/t/}}. The sound {{IPA|[x]}} is not a phoneme, but derives from other phonemes, including {{IPA|/ʃ/}} (when {{IPA|/ʃ/}} precedes or follows a non-front vowel, {{IPA|/a/}} or {{IPA|/o/}}), and the past tense [[morpheme]] {{IPA|/h/}} which is pronounced {{IPA|[x]}} when it precedes a morpheme which starts with {{IPA|/h/}}.
* The [[phoneme]] {{IPA|/h/}} is realized as {{IPA|[s]}} in the environment between {{IPA|/e/}} and {{IPA|/t/}} (h > s / e _ t). {{IPA|/h/}} is realized as {{IPA|[ʃ]}} between {{IPA|[e]}} and {{IPA|[k]}} (h > ʃ / e _ k) i.e. {{IPA|/nahtóna/|lang=chy}} {{Lang|chy|nȧhtona}} – 'alien', {{IPA|/nehtóna/|lang=chy}} {{Lang|chy|nėstona}} – 'your daughter', {{IPA|/hehke/|lang=chy}} {{Lang|chy|heške}} – 'his mother'.
* The digraph {{Grapheme|ts}} represents assibilated {{IPA|/t/}}; a phonological rule of Cheyenne is that [[underlying representation|underlying]] {{IPA|/t/}} becomes [[affricate]]d before an {{IPA|/e/}} {{IPA|(t > ts/_e)}}. Therefore, "ts" is not a separate phoneme, but an [[allophone]] of {{IPA|/t/}}.
* The sound {{IPA|[x]}} is not a phoneme, but derives from other phonemes, including {{IPA|/ʃ/}} (when {{IPA|/ʃ/}} precedes or follows a non-front vowel, {{IPA|/a/}} or {{IPA|/o/}}), and the past tense [[morpheme]] {{IPA|/h/}} which is pronounced {{IPA|[x]}} when it precedes a morpheme which starts with {{IPA|/h/}}.


{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center;"
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center;"
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![[Bilabial consonant|Bilabial]]
![[Bilabial consonant|Bilabial]]
![[Dental consonant|Dental]]
![[Dental consonant|Dental]]
![[Postalveolar consonant|Post-<br>alveolar]]
![[Postalveolar consonant|Post-<br/>alveolar]]
![[Velar consonant|Velar]]
![[Velar consonant|Velar]]
![[Glottal consonant|Glottal]]
![[Glottal consonant|Glottal]]
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=== Feature system for phonemes ===
=== 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:<ref name=":0" />
The systematic phonemes of Cheyenne are distinguished by seven two-valued features. Scholar Donald G. Frantz defined these features as follows:{{sfn|Frantz|1972a}}
* Oral: primary articulation is oral (vs. at the glottis)
* Oral: primary articulation is oral (vs. at the glottis)
* Vocoid (voc): central resonant (oral) continuant
* Vocoid (voc): central resonant (oral) continuant
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* Diffuse (dif): primary articulation is relatively front ['anterior']
* Diffuse (dif): primary articulation is relatively front ['anterior']


{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
! || ʔ || h || a || o || e || m || n || p || k || t || b || s || š || x
! || ʔ || h || a || o || e || m || n || p || k || t || b || s || š || x
|-
|-
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|}
|}


0 indicates the value is indeterminable/irrelevant. A blank indicates the value is specifiable, but context is required (even though any value could be inserted because the post-cyclical rules would change the value to the correct one). [[Bracket|Parentheses]] enclose values that are redundant according to the phonological rules; these values simply represent the results of these rules.<ref name=":0">{{Cite journal|last=Frantz|first=Donald G.|date=1972-01-01|title=Cheyenne Distinctive Features and Phonological Rules|journal=International Journal of American Linguistics|volume=38|issue=1|pages=6–13|doi=10.1086/465178|jstor=1264497|s2cid=144308038}}</ref>
0 indicates the value is indeterminable/irrelevant. A blank indicates the value is specifiable, but context is required (even though any value could be inserted because the post-cyclical rules would change the value to the correct one). [[Bracket|Parentheses]] enclose values that are redundant according to the phonological rules; these values simply represent the results of these rules.{{sfn|Frantz|1972a}}


=== Voicing ===
=== Voicing ===
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* {{IPA|/mótehk/|lang=chy}} {{Lang|chy|motš'''ė'''ške}} 'knife'
* {{IPA|/mótehk/|lang=chy}} {{Lang|chy|motš'''ė'''ške}} 'knife'


Devoicing occurs when certain vowels directly precede the consonants {{IPA|[t]}}, {{IPA|[s]}}, {{IPA|[ʃ]}}, {{IPA|[k]}}, or {{IPA|[x]}} followed by an {{IPA|[e]}}. The rule is linked to the rule of ''e''-[[epenthesis]], which states simply that [e] appears in the environment of a consonant and a word boundary.<ref name="Leman 1979, p. 215">Leman, 1979, ''Cheyenne Grammar Notes'' p. 215</ref>
Devoicing occurs when certain vowels directly precede the consonants {{IPA|[t]}}, {{IPA|[s]}}, {{IPA|[ʃ]}}, {{IPA|[k]}}, or {{IPA|[x]}} followed by an {{IPA|[e]}}. The rule is linked to the rule of ''e''-[[epenthesis]], which states simply that [e] appears in the environment of a consonant and a word boundary.{{sfn|Leman|1979|p=215}}


==== Prepenultimate devoicing ====
==== Prepenultimate devoicing ====
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* {{IPA|/mahnohtehtovot/|lang=chy}} {{Lang|chy|m'''ȧ'''hn'''ȯ'''hts'''ė'''stovȯtse}} 'if you ask him'
* {{IPA|/mahnohtehtovot/|lang=chy}} {{Lang|chy|m'''ȧ'''hn'''ȯ'''hts'''ė'''stovȯtse}} 'if you ask him'


A vowel that does not have a high pitch is devoiced if it is followed by a voiceless fricative and not preceded by {{IPA|[h]}}.<ref name="Leman 1979, p. 215"/>
A vowel that does not have a high pitch is devoiced if it is followed by a voiceless fricative and not preceded by {{IPA|[h]}}.{{sfn|Leman|1979|p=215}}


==== Special {{IPA|[a]}} and {{IPA|[o]}} devoicing ====
==== Special {{IPA|[a]}} and {{IPA|[o]}} devoicing ====
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* {{IPA|/nápóahtenáhnó/|lang=chy}} {{Lang|chy|nápô'''ȧ'''htsenáhno}} 'I punched him in the mouth'
* {{IPA|/nápóahtenáhnó/|lang=chy}} {{Lang|chy|nápô'''ȧ'''htsenáhno}} 'I punched him in the mouth'


Non-high {{IPA|[a]}} and {{IPA|[o]}} become at least partially devoiced when they are preceded by a voiced vowel and followed by an {{IPA|[h]}}, a consonant, and two or more syllables.<ref name="Leman 1979, p. 218">Leman, 1979, ''Cheyenne Grammar Notes'' p. 218</ref>
Non-high {{IPA|[a]}} and {{IPA|[o]}} become at least partially devoiced when they are preceded by a voiced vowel and followed by an {{IPA|[h]}}, a consonant, and two or more syllables.{{sfn|Leman|1979|p=218}}


==== Consonant devoicing ====
==== Consonant devoicing ====
{{Lang|chy|émane}} {{IPA|[ímaṅi]|lang=chy}} 'He is drinking.'
{{Lang|chy|émane}} {{IPA|[ɪmaṅɪ]|lang=chy}} 'He is drinking.'


Before a voiceless segment, a consonant is devoiced.<ref name="Leman 1979, p. 218"/>
Before a voiceless segment, a consonant is devoiced.{{sfn|Leman|1979|p=218}}


==== ''h''-absorption ====
==== ''h''-absorption ====
* {{Lang|chy|-pėhévoestomo'he}} 'kind' + {{Lang|chy|-htse}} 'imperative suffix' > {{Lang|chy|-pėhévoestomo'ėstse}}
* {{Lang|chy|-pėhévoéstomo'he}} 'kind' + {{Lang|chy|-htse}} 'imperative suffix' > {{Lang|chy|-pėhévoéstomo'ėstse}}
* {{Lang|chy|tsé-}} 'conjunct prefix' + {{Lang|chy|-éna'he}} 'old' + {{Lang|chy|-tse}} '3rd pers. suffix' > {{Lang|chy|tsééna'ėstse}} 'the one who is old'
* {{Lang|chy|tsé-}} 'conjunct prefix' + {{Lang|chy|-éna'he}} 'old' + {{Lang|chy|-tse}} '3rd pers. suffix' > {{Lang|chy|tsééna'ėstse}} 'the one who is old'
* {{Lang|chy|né}} + 'you' + {{Lang|chy|-one'xȧho'he}} 'burn' + {{Lang|chy|tse}} 'suffix for some 'you-me' transitive animate forms' > {{Lang|chy|néone'xȧho'ėstse}} ' you burn me'
* {{Lang|chy|né}} + 'you' + {{Lang|chy|-one'xȧho'he}} 'burn' + {{Lang|chy|tse}} 'suffix for some 'you-me' transitive animate forms' > {{Lang|chy|néone'xȧho'ėstse}} ' you burn me'


The {{IPA|[h]}} is absorbed if it is preceded or followed by voiceless vowels.<ref>Leman, 1979, ''Cheyenne Grammar Notes'' p. 217</ref>
The {{IPA|[h]}} is absorbed if it is preceded or followed by voiceless vowels.{{sfn|Leman|1979|p=217}}


=== Pitch and tone ===
=== 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.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Leman|first=Wayne|date=1981-01-01|title=Cheyenne Pitch Rules|journal=International Journal of American Linguistics|volume=47|issue=4|pages=283–309|doi=10.1086/465700|jstor=1265058|s2cid=145668413}}</ref>
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.{{sfn|Leman|1981}}


====High-raising====
====High-raising====
A high pitch becomes a raised high when it is not preceded by another high vowel and precedes an underlying word-final high.<ref name="Leman 1979, p. 219">Leman, 1979, ''Cheyenne Grammar Notes'' p. 219</ref>
A high pitch becomes a raised high when it is not preceded by another high vowel and precedes an underlying word-final high.{{sfn|Leman|1979|p=219}}
* {{IPA|/ʃéʔʃé/|lang=chy}} {{Lang|chy|š'''ê'''<nowiki>'</nowiki>še}} 'duck';
* {{IPA|/ʃéʔʃé/|lang=chy}} {{Lang|chy|š'''ê'''<nowiki>'</nowiki>še}} 'duck';
* {{IPA|/sémón/|lang=chy}} {{Lang|chy|s'''ê'''mo}} 'boat'
* {{IPA|/sémón/|lang=chy}} {{Lang|chy|s'''ê'''mo}} 'boat'


====Low-to-high raising====
====Low-to-high raising====
A low vowel is raised to the high position when it follows a high and is followed by a word final high.<ref name="Leman 1979, p. 219"/>
A low vowel is raised to the high position when it follows a high and is followed by a word final high.{{sfn|Leman|1979|p=219}}
* {{IPA|/méʃené/|lang=chy}} {{Lang|chy|méš'''é'''ne}} 'ticks';
* {{IPA|/méʃené/|lang=chy}} {{Lang|chy|méš'''é'''ne}} 'ticks';
* {{IPA|/návóomó/|lang=chy}} {{Lang|chy|návó'''ó'''mo}} 'I see him';
* {{IPA|/návóomó/|lang=chy}} {{Lang|chy|návó'''ó'''mo}} 'I see him';
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====Low-to-mid raising====
====Low-to-mid raising====
A low vowel becomes a mid when it is followed by a word-final high but not directly preceded by a high vowel.<ref name="Leman 1979, p. 219"/>
A low vowel becomes a mid when it is followed by a word-final high but not directly preceded by a high vowel.{{sfn|Leman|1979|p=219}}
* {{IPA|/kosán/|lang=chy}} {{Lang|chy|k'''ō'''sa}} 'sheep (sg.)';
* {{IPA|/kosán/|lang=chy}} {{Lang|chy|k'''ō'''sa}} 'sheep (sg.)';
* {{IPA|/heʔé/|lang=chy}} {{Lang|chy|h'''ē'''<nowiki>'</nowiki>e}} 'woman';
* {{IPA|/heʔé/|lang=chy}} {{Lang|chy|h'''ē'''<nowiki>'</nowiki>e}} 'woman';
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===High pushover===
===High pushover===
A high vowel becomes low if it comes after a high and followed by a phonetic low.<ref name="Leman 1979, p. 219"/>
A high vowel becomes low if it comes after a high and followed by a phonetic low.{{sfn|Leman|1979|p=219}}
* {{IPA|/néháóénáma/|lang=chy}} {{Lang|chy|néhâ'''oe'''n'''a'''ma}} 'we (incl) prayed';
* {{IPA|/néháóénáma/|lang=chy}} {{Lang|chy|néhâ'''oe'''n'''a'''ma}} 'we (incl) prayed';
* {{IPA|/néméhótóne/|lang=chy}} {{Lang|chy|némêh'''o'''t'''o'''ne}} 'we (incl) love him';
* {{IPA|/néméhótóne/|lang=chy}} {{Lang|chy|némêh'''o'''t'''o'''ne}} 'we (incl) love him';
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====Word-medial high raising====
====Word-medial high raising====
According to Leman, "some verbal prefixes and preverbs go through the process of Word-Medial High-Raising. A high is raised if it follows a high (which is not a trigger for the High Push-Over rule) and precedes a phonetic low. One or more voiceless syllables may come between the two highs. (A devoiced vowel in this process must be underlyingly low, not an underlyingly high vowel which has been devoiced by the High-Pitch Devoicing rule.)"<ref>Leman, 1979, ''Cheyenne Grammar Notes'' p. 220</ref>
According to Leman, "some verbal prefixes and preverbs go through the process of Word-Medial High-Raising. A high is raised if it follows a high (which is not a trigger for the High Push-Over rule) and precedes a phonetic low. One or more voiceless syllables may come between the two highs. (A devoiced vowel in this process must be underlyingly low, not an underlyingly high vowel which has been devoiced by the High-Pitch Devoicing rule.)"{{sfn|Leman|1979|p=220}}
* {{IPA|/émésehe/|lang=chy}} {{Lang|chy|ém'''ê'''sehe}} 'he is eating';
* {{IPA|/émésehe/|lang=chy}} {{Lang|chy|ém'''ê'''sehe}} 'he is eating';
* {{IPA|/téhnémenétó/|lang=chy}} {{Lang|chy|tséhn'''ê'''menéto}} 'when I sang';
* {{IPA|/téhnémenétó/|lang=chy}} {{Lang|chy|tséhn'''ê'''menéto}} 'when I sang';
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* {{Lang|chy|hótame}} ('dog')
* {{Lang|chy|hótame}} ('dog')
* {{Lang|chy|hotāme}} ('dogs')
* {{Lang|chy|hotāme}} ('dogs')
As noted by Donald G. Frantz, phonological rules dictate some pitch patterns, as indicated by the frequent shift of accent when suffixes are added (e.g. compare {{Lang|chy|matšėškōme}} 'raccoon'&nbsp;and {{Lang|chy|mátšėškomeo'o}}&nbsp;'raccoons'). In order for the rules to work, certain vowels are assigned inherent accent. For example, the word for 'badger' has a permanent accent position: {{Lang|chy|ma'háhko'e}} (sg.), {{Lang|chy|ma'háhko'eo'o}} (pl.)<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Frantz|first=Donald G.|date=1972-01-01|title=The Origin of Cheyenne Pitch Accent|journal=International Journal of American Linguistics|volume=38|issue=4|pages=223–225|doi=10.1086/465218|jstor=1264297|s2cid=143834373}}</ref>
As noted by Donald G. Frantz, phonological rules dictate some pitch patterns, as indicated by the frequent shift of accent when suffixes are added (e.g. compare {{Lang|chy|matšėškōme}} 'raccoon'&nbsp;and {{Lang|chy|mátšėškomeo'o}}&nbsp;'raccoons'). In order for the rules to work, certain vowels are assigned inherent accent. For example, the word for 'badger' has a permanent accent position: {{Lang|chy|ma'háhko'e}} (sg.), {{Lang|chy|ma'háhko'eo'o}} (pl.){{sfn|Frantz|1972b}}


=== Nonnasal reflexes of Proto-Algonquian *''k'' ===
=== 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'' (replaced by ''š'' after ''e'') ) in words originating in the Cheyenne Proper dialect, and a vowel in those originating in the Sutaio (So'taa'e) dialect. In the latter dialect the *''k'' gives glottal catch in a word-final syllable (after the loss of some final syllables) and drops elsewhere, leaving the vowel increment. Sutaio '''k'' clusters are all reduced to glottal catch."<ref name=":1" />
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'' (replaced by ''š'' after ''e'') ) in words originating in the Cheyenne Proper dialect, and a vowel in those originating in the Sutaio (So'taa'e) dialect. In the latter dialect the *''k'' gives glottal catch in a word-final syllable (after the loss of some final syllables) and drops elsewhere, leaving the vowel increment. Sutaio '''k''' clusters are all reduced to glottal catch."{{sfn|Proulx|1982}}


==Grammar==
==Grammar==
Cheyenne is a [[Morphology (linguistics)|morphologically]] [[polysynthetic language]] with a sophisticated, [[Agglutinating language|agglutinating]] verb system contrasting a relatively simple noun structure.<ref>Mithun 1999, p.338.</ref> 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 class]]ification paradigm, an obviative third person and distinction of [[clusivity]] in the first person plural pronoun.<ref>Mithun 1999, p.338-40.</ref>
Cheyenne is a [[Morphology (linguistics)|morphologically]] [[polysynthetic language]] with a sophisticated, [[Agglutinating language|agglutinating]] verb system contrasting a relatively simple noun structure.{{sfn|Mithun|1999|p=338}} 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 class]]ification paradigm, an obviative third person and distinction of [[clusivity]] in the first person plural pronoun.{{sfn|Mithun|1999|pp=338-340}}


===Order and mode===
===Order and mode===
Like all Algonquian languages, Cheyenne shows a highly developed modal paradigm.<ref name="Mithun 1999, p.172">Mithun 1999, p.172.</ref> 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.<ref name="Mithun 1999, p.172"/><ref>Leman 2011, p.24.</ref><ref name="Murray 2016, p.243">Murray 2016, p.243.</ref> The charts below provide examples of verb forms of every order in each mode, after Leman (2011)<ref>Leman 2011, p.24-42.</ref> and Mithun (1999).<ref name="Mithun 1999, p.172"/>
Like all Algonquian languages, Cheyenne shows a highly developed modal paradigm.{{sfn|Mithun|1999|p=172}} 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.{{sfn|Mithun|1999|p=172}}{{sfn|Leman|2011|p=24}}{{sfn|Murray|2012|p=243}} The charts below provide examples of verb forms of every order in each mode, after Leman (2011){{sfn|Leman|2011|pp=24-42}} and Mithun (1999).{{sfn|Mithun|1999|p=172}}


====Independent order====
====Independent order====
This order governs both declarative and interrogative statements. The modes of this order are generally subdivided along lines of [[evidentiality]].<ref name="Murray 2016, p.243"/>
This order governs both declarative and interrogative statements. The modes of this order are generally subdivided along lines of [[evidentiality]].{{sfn|Murray|2012|p=243}}


{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable"
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====Conjunct order====
====Conjunct order====
This order governs a variety of dependent clause types.<ref name="Murray 2016, p.243"/> Leman (2011) characterizes this order of verbs as requiring other verbal elements in order to establish complete meaning.<ref>Leman 2011, p.19.</ref> Verbs in the conjunct order are marked with a mode-specific prefix and a suffix marking person, number and animacy.<ref name="Murray 2016, p.244">Murray 2016, p.244.</ref>
This order governs a variety of dependent clause types.{{sfn|Murray|2012|p=243}} Leman (2011) characterizes this order of verbs as requiring other verbal elements in order to establish complete meaning.{{sfn|Leman|2011|p=19}} Verbs in the conjunct order are marked with a mode-specific prefix and a suffix marking person, number and animacy.{{sfn|Murray|2012|p=244}}


{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable"
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====Imperative order====
====Imperative order====
The third order governs commands. Cheyenne, in common with several other North American languages,<ref name="Mithun 1999, p.172"/> distinguishes two types of [[imperative mood]], one indicating immediate action, and the other indicating delayed action.<ref>Leman 2011, p.18.</ref><ref>Murray 2016, p.242.</ref>
The third order governs commands. Cheyenne, in common with several other North American languages,{{sfn|Mithun|1999|p=172}} distinguishes two types of [[imperative mood]], one indicating immediate action, and the other indicating delayed action.{{sfn|Leman|2011|p=18}}{{sfn|Murray|2012|p=242}}


{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable"
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===Verb morphology===
===Verb morphology===
The Cheyenne verb system is very complex and verb constructions are central to the morphosyntax of the language,<ref>Leman 2011, p.17.</ref><ref>Petter 1905, p.451.</ref> to the point that even adjectives<ref>Petter 1905, p.457.</ref> and even some nouns<ref>Petter 1915, p.iv.</ref> are largely substantive in nature. Verbs change according to a number of factors, such as [[Modal verb|modality]], [[Grammatical person|person]] and [[Transitivity (grammar)|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.<ref name="Leman 2011, p.22">Leman 2011, p.22.</ref> There are also several [[Instrumental case|instrumental]], [[Locative case|locative]] and [[adverb]]ial 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.
The Cheyenne verb system is very complex and verb constructions are central to the morphosyntax of the language,{{sfn|Leman|2011|p=17}}{{sfn|Petter|1905|p=451}} to the point that even adjectives{{sfn|Petter|1905|p=457}} and even some nouns{{sfn|Petter|1915|p=iv}} are largely substantive{{clarify|date=December 2023|reason=Substantive in Latin grammar is a synonym of noun in English grammar. What does it mean in Cheyenne grammar?}} in nature. Verbs change according to a number of factors, such as [[Modal verb|modality]], [[Grammatical person|person]] and [[Transitivity (grammar)|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.{{sfn|Leman|2011|p=22}} There are also several [[Instrumental case|instrumental]], [[Locative case|locative]] and [[adverb]]ial 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.<ref name="Murray 2016, p.244"/> The affixes are placed according to the following paradigm:
All Cheyenne verbs have a rigid templatic structure.{{sfn|Murray|2012|p=244}} The affixes are placed according to the following paradigm:


<div style="text-align: center;">person – (tense) – (directional) – (preverb) – ROOT – (medial) – final<ref name="Leman 2011, p.22"/></div>
<div style="text-align: center;">person – (tense) – (directional) – (preverb) – ROOT – (medial) – final{{sfn|Leman|2011|p=22}}</div>


====Pronominal affixes====
====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:<ref name="Leman 2011, p.20">Leman 2011, p.20.</ref>
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:{{sfn|Leman|2011|p=20}}
*{{Lang|chy|ná-}}{{in5|6}}first person
*{{Lang|chy|ná-}}{{in5|6}}first person
*{{Lang|chy|né-}}{{in5|6}}second person
*{{Lang|chy|né-}}{{in5|6}}second person
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====Tense====
====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, {{Lang|chy|návóómo}} could mean both 'I see him' and 'I saw him'<ref name="Leman 2011, p.191">Leman 2011, p.191.</ref> depending on the context.
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, {{Lang|chy|návóómo}} could mean both 'I see him' and 'I saw him' depending on the context.{{sfn|Leman|2011|p=191}}


Far past tense is expressed by the morpheme {{IPA|/-h-/}}, which changes to {{IPA|/-x-/}}, {{IPA|/-s-/}}, {{IPA|/-š-/}} or {{IPA|/-'-/}} before the -h, -t, -k and a vowel, respectively. Thus:
Far past tense is expressed by the morpheme {{IPA|/-h-/}}, which changes to {{IPA|/-x-/}}, {{IPA|/-s-/}}, {{IPA|/-š-/}} or {{IPA|/-'-/}} before the -h, -t, -k and a vowel, respectively. Thus:


*{{Lang|chy|návóómo}}&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 'I see him'
*{{Lang|chy|návóómo}} {{gloss|I see him}}
*{{Lang|chy|náhvóómo}}&nbsp; &nbsp; 'I saw him'
*{{Lang|chy|náhvóómo}} {{gloss|I saw him}}


Similarly, the future tense is expressed by the morpheme {{IPA|/-hte/}}, which changes to {{Lang|chy|-htse}} after the {{Lang|chy|ná-}} pronominal, {{Lang|chy|-stse}} after {{Lang|chy|ne-}} and {{Lang|chy|-tse}} in the third-person, with the third-person prefix dropped altogether.<ref name="Leman 2011, p.191" />
Similarly, the future tense is expressed by the morpheme {{IPA|/-hte/}}, which changes to {{Lang|chy|-htse}} after the {{Lang|chy|ná-}} pronominal, {{Lang|chy|-stse}} after {{Lang|chy|ne-}} and {{Lang|chy|-tse}} in the third-person, with the third-person prefix dropped altogether.{{sfn|Leman|2011|p=191}}


====Directional affixes====
====Directional affixes====
These prefixes address whether the action of the verb is moving "toward" or "away from" some entity, usually the speaker.<ref name="Leman 2011, p.23">Leman 2011, p.23.</ref>
These prefixes address whether the action of the verb is moving "toward" or "away from" some entity, usually the speaker.{{sfn|Leman|2011|p=23}}


*{{Lang|chy|-nėh-}}{{in5|8}}toward
*{{Lang|chy|-nėh-}}{{in5|8}}toward
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====Preverbs====
====Preverbs====
Following Algonquianist terminology, Leman (2011) describes "preverbs", morphemes which add adjectival or adverbial information to the verb stem. Multiple preverbs can be combined within one verb complex. The following list represents only a small sample.<ref>Leman 2011, p.181.</ref>
Following Algonquianist terminology, Leman (2011) describes "preverbs", morphemes which add adjectival or adverbial information to the verb stem. Multiple preverbs can be combined within one verb complex. The following list represents only a small sample.{{sfn|Leman|2011|p=181}}


*{{Lang|chy|-emóose-}}{{in5|10}}secretly
*{{Lang|chy|-emóose-}}{{in5|10}}secretly
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====Medial affixes====
====Medial affixes====
This large group of suffixes provide information about something associated with the root, usually communicating that the action is done with or to a body part.<ref name="Leman 2011, p.23" /> Thus: {{Lang|chy|énėše'xahtse}} ('he-wash-mouth') = 'he gargled'.<ref name="Leman 2011, p.165">Leman 2011, p.165.</ref> Following is a sample of medial suffixes:<ref>Leman 2011, p.163.</ref>
This large group of suffixes provide information about something associated with the root, usually communicating that the action is done with or to a body part.{{sfn|Leman|2011|p=23}} Thus: {{Lang|chy|énėše'xahtse}} ('he-wash-mouth') = 'he gargled'.{{sfn|Leman|2011|p=165}} Following is a sample of medial suffixes:{{sfn|Leman|2011|p=163}}


*{{Lang|chy|-ahtse}}{{in5|14}}mouth
*{{Lang|chy|-ahtse}}{{in5|14}}mouth
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Medial suffixes can also be used with nouns to create compound words or to coin entirely new words from existing morphemes, as in:
Medial suffixes can also be used with nouns to create compound words or to coin entirely new words from existing morphemes, as in:


{{Lang|chy|ka'énė-hôtame}} [short-face-dog] = 'bulldog'<ref name="Leman 2011, p.165" />
{{Lang|chy|ka'énė-hôtame}} [short-face-dog] = 'bulldog'{{sfn|Leman|2011|p=165}}


====Final affixes====
====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 (AI), Inanimate Instransitive (II), Transitive Animate (TA) and Transitive Inanimate (TI).<ref>Leman 2011, p.17-18.</ref> Following are the most common object agreement markers for each verb class.<ref name="Leman 2011, p.23" />
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 (AI), Inanimate Instransitive (II), Transitive Animate (TA) and Transitive Inanimate (TI).{{sfn|Leman|2011|pp=17-18}} Following are the most common object agreement markers for each verb class.{{sfn|Leman|2011|p=23}}


*{{Lang|chy|-e}}{{in5|16}}Animate Intransitive (AI)
*{{Lang|chy|-e}}{{in5|16}}Animate Intransitive (AI)
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====Negation====
====Negation====
Verbs are negated by the addition of the infix {{Lang|chy|-sâa-}} immediately after the pronominal affix. This morpheme changes to {{Lang|chy|sáa-}} in the absence of a pronominal affix, as occurs in the imperative and in some future tense constructions.<ref>Leman 2011, p.25</ref>
Verbs are negated by the addition of the infix {{Lang|chy|-sâa-}} immediately after the pronominal affix. This morpheme changes to {{Lang|chy|sáa-}} in the absence of a pronominal affix, as occurs in the imperative and in some future tense constructions.{{sfn|Leman|2011|p=25}}


===Nouns===
===Nouns===
Nouns are classified according to animacy.<ref>Leman 2011, p.5.</ref> They change according to [[grammatical number]] (singular and plural) but are not distinguished according to [[Grammatical gender|gender]]<ref>Petter 1905, p.456.</ref> or [[definiteness]].<ref>Petter 1905, p.459.</ref>
Nouns are classified according to animacy.{{sfn|Leman|2011|p=5}} They change according to [[grammatical number]] (singular and plural) but are not distinguished according to [[Grammatical gender|gender]]{{sfn|Petter|1905|p=456}} or [[definiteness]].{{sfn|Petter|1905|p=459}}


====Obviation====
====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."<ref>Leman 2011, p.21.</ref> It is essentially an "out of focus" third person.<ref name="Leman 2011, p.11">Leman 2011, p.11.</ref> 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 {{Lang|chy|-o}} or {{Lang|chy|-óho}}. For example:
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."{{sfn|Leman|2011|p=21}} It is essentially an "out of focus" third person.{{sfn|Leman|2011|p=11}} 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 {{Lang|chy|-o}} or {{Lang|chy|-óho}}. For example:


*{{Lang|chy|návóómo hetane}}&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 'I saw a man'
*{{Lang|chy|návóómo hetane}}&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; 'I saw a man'
*{{Lang|chy|he'e évôomóho hetanóho}}&nbsp; 'The woman saw a man'
*{{Lang|chy|he'e évôomóho hetanóho}}&nbsp; 'The woman saw a man'


Verbs register the presence of obviated participants whether or not they are present as nouns. These forms could be likened to a kind of [[passive voice]], although Esteban (2012) argues that since Cheyenne is a "reference-dominated language where case marking and word order are governed by the necessity to code pragmatic roles," a passive-like construction is assumed.<ref>Esteban 2012, p.93.</ref> This phenomenon is an example of typical Algonquian "person hierarchy," in which animacy and first personhood take precedence over other forms.<ref name="Leman 2011, p.22" />
Verbs register the presence of obviated participants whether or not they are present as nouns. These forms could be likened to a kind of [[passive voice]], although Esteban (2012) argues that since Cheyenne is a "reference-dominated language where case marking and word order are governed by the necessity to code pragmatic roles," a passive-like construction is assumed.{{sfn|Corral Esteban|2012|p=93}} This phenomenon is an example of typical Algonquian "person hierarchy," in which animacy and first personhood take precedence over other forms.{{sfn|Leman|2011|p=22}}


====Number====
====Number====
Both animate and inanimate nouns are pluralized by the addition of suffixes.<ref>Leman 2011, p.8.</ref><ref>Petter 1905, p.454.</ref> These suffixes are irregular and can change slightly according to a complex system of phonological rules.<ref>Leman 2011, p.214.</ref>
Both animate and inanimate nouns are pluralized by the addition of suffixes.{{sfn|Leman|2011|p=8}}{{sfn|Petter|1905|p=454}} These suffixes are irregular and can change slightly according to a complex system of phonological rules.{{sfn|Leman|2011|p=214}}


*{{Lang|chy|-(h)o}}, {{Lang|chy|-(n)é}}{{in5|6}}Inanimate plural
*{{Lang|chy|-(h)o}}, {{Lang|chy|-(n)é}}{{in5|6}}Inanimate plural
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====Possession====
====Possession====
Possession is denoted by a special set of pronominal suffixes. Following is a list of the most common possession prefixes, although rarely some words take different prefixes.<ref name="Leman 2011, p.11" /><ref>Petter 1905, p.455.</ref>
Possession is denoted by a special set of pronominal suffixes. Following is a list of the most common possession prefixes, although rarely some words take different prefixes.{{sfn|Leman|2011|p=11}}{{sfn|Petter|1905|p=455}}
*{{Lang|chy|na-}}{{in5|6}}first person
*{{Lang|chy|na-}}{{in5|6}}first person
*{{Lang|chy|ne-}}{{in5|6}}second person
*{{Lang|chy|ne-}}{{in5|6}}second person
*{{Lang|chy|he-}}{{in5|8}}third person
*{{Lang|chy|he-}}{{in5|8}}third person


Generally, possessive prefixes take a low pitch on the following vowel.<ref name="Leman 2011, p.20"/>
Generally, possessive prefixes take a low pitch on the following vowel.{{sfn|Leman|2011|p=20}}


When a third person animate noun is possessed by another third person, the noun becomes [[Obviative|obviated]] and takes a different form. Much of the time, this obviated form is identical to the noun's regular plural form,<ref name="Leman 2011, p.11"/> with only a few exceptions.<ref>Leman 2011, p.171.</ref> This introduces ambiguity in that it is not always possible to tell whether an obviated noun is singular or plural.<ref name="Leman 2011, p.11"/>
When a third person animate noun is possessed by another third person, the noun becomes [[Obviative|obviated]] and takes a different form. Much of the time, this obviated form is identical to the noun's regular plural form,{{sfn|Leman|2011|p=11}} with only a few exceptions.{{sfn|Leman|2011|p=171}} This introduces ambiguity in that it is not always possible to tell whether an obviated noun is singular or plural.{{sfn|Leman|2011|p=11}}


==Historical development==
==Historical development==
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*{{IPA|/h/}} is added before word-initial vowels ({{Lang|alg-x-proto|*heteni}})
*{{IPA|/h/}} is added before word-initial vowels ({{Lang|alg-x-proto|*heteni}})
*Due to a vowel chain-shift, the vowels in the word wind up as {{IPA|/e/}}, {{IPA|/a/}} and {{IPA|/e/}} (PA *{{IPA|/e/}} sometimes corresponds to Cheyenne {{IPA|/e/}} and sometimes to Cheyenne {{IPA|/a/}}; PA *{{IPA|/i/}} almost always corresponds to Cheyenne {{IPA|/e/}}, however) ({{Lang|chy|hetane}}).
*Due to a vowel chain-shift, the vowels in the word wind up as {{IPA|/e/}}, {{IPA|/a/}} and {{IPA|/e/}} (PA *{{IPA|/e/}} sometimes corresponds to Cheyenne {{IPA|/e/}} and sometimes to Cheyenne {{IPA|/a/}}; PA *{{IPA|/i/}} almost always corresponds to Cheyenne {{IPA|/e/}}, however) ({{Lang|chy|hetane}}).
PA *''θk'' has the Sutaio reflex ' in {{Lang|chy|e-nete'e}} 'she tells lies', but the Cheyenne-Proper reflex '''k'' in {{Lang|chy|hetone'ke}} 'tree-bark'. According to linguist Paul Proulx, this gave off the appearance that "speakers of both Cheyenne dialects—perhaps mixed bands—were involved in the Arapaho contact that led to this unusual reflex of PA *k.".<ref name=":1">{{Cite journal|last=Proulx|first=Paul|date=1982-01-01|title=Proto-Algonquian *k in Cheyenne|journal=International Journal of American Linguistics|volume=48|issue=4|pages=467–471|doi=10.1086/465756|jstor=1264849|s2cid=143457331}}</ref>
PA *''θk'' has the Sutaio reflex ' in {{Lang|chy|e-nete'e}} 'she tells lies', but the Cheyenne-Proper reflex '''k'' in {{Lang|chy|hetone'ke}} 'tree-bark'. According to linguist Paul Proulx, this gave off the appearance that "speakers of both Cheyenne dialects—perhaps mixed bands—were involved in the Arapaho contact that led to this unusual reflex of PA *k.".{{sfn|Proulx|1982}}


==Lexicon==
==Lexicon==
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=== Current translations ===
=== Current translations ===
Currently there are many online resources that allow for the instant translation from any language to the Cheyenne language. There are online vocabulary lists,<ref>{{cite web |title=Cheyenne Words |url=http://www.native-languages.org/cheyenne_words.htm |website=www.native-languages.org |access-date=7 December 2020}}</ref> pronunciation guides,<ref>{{cite web |title=Cheyenne Pronunciation Guide, Alphabet and Phonology |url=http://www.native-languages.org/cheyenne_guide.htm |website=www.native-languages.org |access-date=7 December 2020}}</ref> dictionaries,<ref>{{cite web |title=English-Cheyenne Student Dictionary |url=http://www.native-languages.org/cheyenne.htm |website=Native Languages of North America: Cheyenne |publisher=Council for Indian Education |access-date=7 December 2020}}</ref> etc. Along with these resources, there are numbers of published books regarding the history of the language as well as explain its grammar<ref>{{cite book |last1=Leman |first1=Wayne |title=A Reference Grammar of the Cheyenne Language |date=1979 |pages=289 }}</ref> These resources can be found online or in libraries that carry these published books.
Currently there are many online resources that allow for the instant translation from any language to the Cheyenne language. There are online vocabulary lists,<ref>{{cite web |title=Cheyenne Words |url=http://www.native-languages.org/cheyenne_words.htm |website=www.native-languages.org |access-date=7 December 2020}}</ref> pronunciation guides,<ref>{{cite web |title=Cheyenne Pronunciation Guide, Alphabet and Phonology |url=http://www.native-languages.org/cheyenne_guide.htm |website=www.native-languages.org |access-date=7 December 2020}}</ref> dictionaries,<ref>{{cite web |title=English-Cheyenne Student Dictionary |url=http://www.native-languages.org/cheyenne.htm |website=Native Languages of North America: Cheyenne |publisher=Council for Indian Education |access-date=7 December 2020}}</ref> etc. Along with these resources, there are numbers of published books regarding the history of the language that also explain its grammar.{{sfn|Leman|1979|p=289}} These resources can be found online or in libraries that carry these published books.

The latest edition of an online Cheyenne dictionary is accessible from cheyennelanguage.org.<ref>{{cite web |title=Cheyenne Dictionary |url=http://www.cheyennelanguage.org/dictionary/lexicon.php |website=www.cheyennelanguage.org}}</ref>


==Notes==
==Notes==
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==References==
==References==
* Esteban, Avelino Corral. "Does There Exist Passive Voice in Lakhota and Cheyenne?" Revista de Lingüística y Lenguas Aplicadas vol.7 (2012): 93.
* {{cite journal |last=Corral Esteban |first=Avelino |title=Does There Exist Passive Voice in Lakhota and Cheyenne? |lang=en |journal=Revista de Lingüística y Lenguas Aplicadas |volume=7 |year=2012 |pages=77–96 |doi=10.4995/rlyla.2012.1126 |doi-access=free|hdl=10251/16758 |hdl-access=free }}
* Fisher Louise, Leroy Pine Sr., Marie Sanchez, and Wayne Leman, 2004. ''Cheyenne Dictionary''. Lame Deer, Montana: Chief Dull Knife College.
* {{cite book |last1=Fisher |first1=Louise |last2=Pine |first2=Leroy Sr. |last3=Sanchez |first3=Marie |last4=Leman |first4=Wayne |year=2004 |title=Cheyenne Dictionary |location=Lame Deer, MT |publisher=Chief Dull Knife College}}
* {{Cite journal|last=Frantz|first=Donald G.|date=1972a|title=Cheyenne Distinctive Features and Phonological Rules|journal=International Journal of American Linguistics|volume=38|issue=1|pages=6–13|doi=10.1086/465178|jstor=1264497|s2cid=144308038}}
* Goddard, Ives. [https://repository.si.edu/bitstream/handle/10088/31967/Goddard%2c%20Ives%20Historical%20Origins%20Cheyenne%20Inflections.pdf "The historical origins of Cheyenne inflections."]  Papers of the Thirty-First Algonquian Conference, edited by John D. Nichols. Winnnipeg: University of Manitoba, 2000. pp.78-129.
* {{Cite journal|last=Frantz|first=Donald G.|date=1972b|title=The Origin of Cheyenne Pitch Accent|journal=International Journal of American Linguistics|volume=38|issue=4|pages=223–225|doi=10.1086/465218|jstor=1264297|s2cid=143834373}}
* Mithun, Marianne. "The Languages of Native North America." Cambridge University Press, 1999
* {{cite journal |last=Goddard |first=Ives |url=https://repository.si.edu/bitstream/handle/10088/31967/Goddard%2c%20Ives%20Historical%20Origins%20Cheyenne%20Inflections.pdf |title=The historical origins of Cheyenne inflections |journal=Papers of the Algonquian Conference |volume=31 |editor-first=John D. |editor-last=Nichols |location=Winnnipeg |publisher=University of Manitoba |year=2000 |pages=78–129 |hdl=10088/31967 |hdl-access=free}}
* Murray, Sarah E. "Two Imperatives in Cheyenne: Some Preliminary Distinctions." In Monica Macaulay, et al. Papers of the Forty-Fourth Algonquian Conference. State University of New York Press. pp.&nbsp;242–56.
* {{cite book |last=Leman |first=Wayne |title=Cheyenne Grammar Notes |publisher=Northern Cheyenne Bilingual Education Program |location=Lame Deer, MT |year=1979 |oclc=5355398}}
* Petter, Rodolphe. "English-Cheyenne Dictionary." Kettle Falls, WA: Rodolphe Petter, 1915
* {{Cite journal |last=Leman |first=Wayne |date=October 1981 |title=Cheyenne Pitch Rules |journal=International Journal of American Linguistics |volume=47 |issue=4 |pages=283–309 |doi=10.1086/465700 |jstor=1265058 |s2cid=145668413}}
* Petter, Rodolphe. "Sketch of the Cheyenne Grammar." Lancaster, PA: American Anthropological Association, 1905
* Leman, Wayne. "A Reference Grammar of the Cheyenne Language." Lulu Press, 2011
* {{cite book |last=Leman |first=Wayne |title=A Reference Grammar of the Cheyenne Language |publisher=Lulu Press |isbn=978-1-304-42524-9 |year=2011 |edition=4th}}
* {{cite book |last=Mithun |first=Marianne |title=The Languages of Native North America |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=1999}}
* {{cite journal |last=Murray |first=Sarah E. |year=2012 |title=Two Imperatives in Cheyenne: Some Preliminary Distinctions |journal=Papers of the Algonquian Conference |volume=44 |publisher=State University of New York Press |pages=242–256 |url=https://ojs.library.carleton.ca/index.php/ALGQP/article/view/2327/2101}}
* {{cite book |last=Petter |first=Rodolphe |title=Sketch of the Cheyenne Grammar |location=Lancaster, PA |publisher=American Anthropological Association |year=1905}}
* {{cite book |last=Petter |first=Rodolphe |title=English-Cheyenne Dictionary |location=Kettle Falls, WA |publisher=Rodolphe Petter |year=1915}}
* {{Cite journal|last=Proulx|first=Paul|date=1982-01-01|title=Proto-Algonquian *k in Cheyenne|journal=International Journal of American Linguistics|volume=48|issue=4|pages=467–471|doi=10.1086/465756|jstor=1264849|s2cid=143457331}}


== External links ==
== External links ==
{{Sister project links|auto=1|wikt=Category:Cheyenne language|iw=chy|display=Cheyenne }}
{{Sister project links|auto=1|wikt=Category:Cheyenne language|iw=chy|display=Cheyenne }}


*[http://www.cdkc.edu/cheyennedictionary/index.html Cheyenne online dictionary], maintained at [[Chief Dull Knife College]]
*[https://www.cheyennelanguage.org/dictionary/index.html Cheyenne online dictionary]
*[http://www.angelfire.com/ok3/dogg/language.html Modern Southern Cheyenne alphabet and pronunciation key]
*[http://www.cdkc.edu/cheyennedictionary/index.html an older Cheyenne online dictionary], maintained at [[Chief Dull Knife College]]
*[http://www.freelang.net/online/cheyenne.php FREELANG Cheyenne-English and English-Cheyenne online dictionary]
*[https://www.angelfire.com/ok3/dogg/language.html Modern Southern Cheyenne alphabet and pronunciation key]
*[https://www.freelang.net/online/cheyenne.php FREELANG Cheyenne-English and English-Cheyenne online dictionary]
*[http://quizlet.com/subject/cheyenne-language/ Cheyenne language flashcards] at [[Quizlet]], based on {{Cite book
*[http://quizlet.com/subject/cheyenne-language/ Cheyenne language flashcards] at [[Quizlet]], based on {{Cite book
| last1 = Risingsun
| last1 = Risingsun
Line 507: Line 518:
| title = Let's Talk Cheyenne (2 Audio CDs with Booklet)
| title = Let's Talk Cheyenne (2 Audio CDs with Booklet)
| date = 1999
| date = 1999
| publisher = Jeffrey Norton
| isbn = 9781579700928
| isbn = 9781579700928
}}
}}
*[http://www.cheyennelanguage.org/ Cheyenne Language Website]
*[https://www.cheyennelanguage.org/ Cheyenne Language Website]
*[http://www.native-languages.org/cheyenne.htm Native Languages of the Americas: Cheyenne]
*[http://www.native-languages.org/cheyenne.htm Native Languages of the Americas: Cheyenne]
*[http://justus.anglican.org/resources/bcp/1892/cheyenne.html Portions of the Anglican/Episcopal Prayer Book Cheyenne]
*[http://justus.anglican.org/resources/bcp/1892/cheyenne.html Portions of the Anglican/Episcopal Prayer Book Cheyenne]
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[[Category:Agglutinative languages]]
[[Category:Agglutinative languages]]
[[Category:Endangered languages of the United States]]
[[Category:Endangered languages of the United States]]
[[Category:Tonal languages]]
[[Category:Tonal languages in non-tonal families]]

Latest revision as of 01:24, 28 October 2024

Cheyenne
Tsėhesenėstsestȯtse
Pronunciation[tse̥hésene̥stsesto̥tse]
Native toUnited States
RegionMontana and Oklahoma
EthnicityCheyenne
Native speakers
380 (2020)[1]
Language codes
ISO 639-2chy
ISO 639-3chy
Glottologchey1247
ELPCheyenne
Cheyenne is classified as Definitely Endangered by the UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger.
This article contains IPA phonetic symbols. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters. For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA.

The Cheyenne language (Tsėhesenėstsestȯtse, [tse̥hésene̥stsesto̥tse], informal spelling Tsisinstsistots) 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 polysynthetic morphology. This language is considered endangered, at different levels, in both states.

Classification

[edit]

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

[edit]
Tipi parts in Cheyenne

Cheyenne is spoken on the Northern Cheyenne Indian Reservation in Montana and in Oklahoma. On the Northern Cheyenne Indian Reservation in 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.[2]

Current status

[edit]

The Cheyenne language is considered "definitely endangered" in Montana and "critically endangered" in Oklahoma by the UNESCO. In Montana the number of speakers were about 1700 in 2012 according to the UNESCO. In 2021 there were approximately 300 elderly speakers. In 2021 in Oklahoma there were fewer than 20 elderly speakers. There is no current information on any other state in the United States regarding the Cheyenne language.[3]

The 2017 film Hostiles features extensive dialogue in Northern Cheyenne. The film's producers hired experts in the language and culture to ensure authenticity.[4]

Revitalization efforts and education

[edit]

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.[5] 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.[6] 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. There are also holistic approaches to language revitalization taken upon by the Cheyenne people to try and keep their language vital. This is done by recognizing the integrated nature of the Cheyenne language with games, crafts, and ceremony which are integrated in youth and community programs.[7] The language is very often not being taught in the home so instead of just teaching grammar as a revitalization effort, holistic approaches attract more attention from new speakers and educate the new generation and counter language and culture loss.

Phonology

[edit]

Vowels

[edit]

Cheyenne has three basic vowel qualities /e a o/. The phoneme called /e/ here is usually pronounced as a phonetic [ɪ], and sometimes varies to [ɛ].

These vowel qualities take four tones: high tone as in á [á]); low tone as in a [à]; mid tone as in ā [ā]; and rising tone as in ô [ǒ]. Tones are often not represented in the orthography. Vowels can also be voiceless (e.g. ė [e̥]).[8] The high and low tones are phonemic, while voiceless vowels' occurrence is determined by the phonetic context, making them allophones of the voiced vowels.

Vowels
Front Central Back
Mid e o
Low a

Consonants

[edit]
  • The phoneme /h/ is realized as [s] in the environment between /e/ and /t/ (h > s / e _ t). /h/ is realized as [ʃ] between [e] and [k] (h > ʃ / e _ k) 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/ (t > ts/_e). Therefore, "ts" is not a separate phoneme, but an allophone of /t/.
  • The sound [x] is not a phoneme, but derives from other phonemes, including /ʃ/ (when /ʃ/ precedes or follows a non-front vowel, /a/ or /o/), and the past tense morpheme /h/ which is pronounced [x] when it precedes a morpheme which starts with /h/.
Consonants
Bilabial Dental Post-
alveolar
Velar Glottal
Nasal m n
Plosive p t k ʔ
Fricative v s ʃ (x) h

Orthography

[edit]

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. ⟨e⟩ represents the phoneme symbolized /e/, and ⟨š⟩ represents /ʃ/.

Vowels

[edit]
  • a – [a]
  • e – [e/ɪ/ɛ]
  • o – [o]

Consonants

[edit]
  • h – [h/s/ʃ]
  • k – [k]
  • ' – [ʔ]
  • m – [m]
  • n – [n]
  • p – [p]
  • s – [s]
  • š – [ʃ]
  • t – [t]
  • v – [v]
  • x – [x]

Tones

[edit]
  • á, é, ó – high tone
  • ȧ, ė, ȯ or â, ê, ô – voiceless or whispered

Low tone is usually unmarked.[9]

Feature system for phonemes

[edit]

The systematic phonemes of Cheyenne are distinguished by seven two-valued features. Scholar Donald G. Frantz defined these features as follows:[10]

  • Oral: primary articulation is oral (vs. at the glottis)
  • Vocoid (voc): central resonant (oral) continuant
  • Syllabic (syl): nuclear to syllable (vs. marginal)
  • Closure (clos): stoppage of air flow at point of primary articulation ['non-continuant']
  • Nasal (nas): velic is open
  • Grave (grv): primary articulation at oral extremity (lips or velum) ['non-coronal' for consonants, 'back' for vowels]
  • Diffuse (dif): primary articulation is relatively front ['anterior']
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 (even though any value could be inserted because the post-cyclical rules would change the value to the correct one). Parentheses enclose values that are redundant according to the phonological rules; these values simply represent the results of these rules.[10]

Voicing

[edit]

Cheyenne has 14 orthographic letters representing 13 phonemes. [x] is written as ⟨x⟩ orthographically but is not a phoneme. This count excludes the results of allophonic devoicing, which are spelled with a dot over vowels. Devoicing naturally occurs in the last vowel of a word or phrase but can also occur in vowels at the penultimate and prepenultimate positions within a word. Non-high [a] and [o] is also usually devoiced preceding h followed by a stop. Phonemic /h/ is absorbed by a preceding voiceless vowel. Examples are given below.

Penultimate devoicing

[edit]
  • /hohkoʃ/ hohkȯxe 'ax';
  • /tétahpetáht/ tsétȧhpétȧhtse 'the one who is big';
  • /mótehk/ motšėške 'knife'

Devoicing occurs when certain vowels directly precede the consonants [t], [s], [ʃ], [k], or [x] followed by an [e]. The rule is linked to the rule of e-epenthesis, which states simply that [e] appears in the environment of a consonant and a word boundary.[11]

Prepenultimate devoicing

[edit]
  • /tahpeno/ tȧhpeno 'flute';
  • /kosáné/ kȯsâne 'sheep (pl.)';
  • /mahnohtehtovot/ mȧhnȯhtsėstovȯtse 'if you ask him'

A vowel that does not have a high pitch is devoiced if it is followed by a voiceless fricative and not preceded by [h].[11]

Special [a] and [o] devoicing

[edit]
  • /émóheeohtéo/ émôheeȯhtseo'o 'they are gathering';
  • /náohkeho'sóe/ ȯhkėho'soo'e 'I regularly dance';
  • /nápóahtenáhnó/ nápôȧhtsenáhno 'I punched him in the mouth'

Non-high [a] and [o] become at least partially devoiced when they are preceded by a voiced vowel and followed by an [h], a consonant, and two or more syllables.[12]

Consonant devoicing

[edit]

émane [ɪmaṅɪ] 'He is drinking.'

Before a voiceless segment, a consonant is devoiced.[12]

h-absorption

[edit]
  • -pėhévoéstomo'he 'kind' + -htse 'imperative suffix' > -pėhévoéstomo'ėstse
  • tsé- 'conjunct prefix' + -éna'he 'old' + -tse '3rd pers. suffix' > tsééna'ėstse 'the one who is old'
  • + 'you' + -one'xȧho'he 'burn' + tse 'suffix for some 'you-me' transitive animate forms' > néone'xȧho'ėstse ' you burn me'

The [h] is absorbed if it is preceded or followed by voiceless vowels.[13]

Pitch and tone

[edit]

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.[14]

High-raising

[edit]

A high pitch becomes a raised high when it is not preceded by another high vowel and precedes an underlying word-final high.[15]

  • /ʃéʔʃé/ šê'še 'duck';
  • /sémón/ sêmo 'boat'

Low-to-high raising

[edit]

A low vowel is raised to the high position when it follows a high and is followed by a word final high.[15]

  • /méʃené/ méšéne 'ticks';
  • /návóomó/ návóómo 'I see him';
  • /póesón/ éso 'cat'

Low-to-mid raising

[edit]

A low vowel becomes a mid when it is followed by a word-final high but not directly preceded by a high vowel.[15]

  • /kosán/ kōsa 'sheep (sg.)';
  • /heʔé/ hē'e 'woman';
  • /éhomosé/ éhomōse 'he is cooking'

High pushover

[edit]

A high vowel becomes low if it comes after a high and followed by a phonetic low.[15]

  • /néháóénáma/ néhâoenama 'we (incl) prayed';
  • /néméhótóne/ némêhotone 'we (incl) love him';
  • /náméhósanémé/ námêhosanême 'we (excl) love'

Word-medial high raising

[edit]

According to Leman, "some verbal prefixes and preverbs go through the process of Word-Medial High-Raising. A high is raised if it follows a high (which is not a trigger for the High Push-Over rule) and precedes a phonetic low. One or more voiceless syllables may come between the two highs. (A devoiced vowel in this process must be underlyingly low, not an underlyingly high vowel which has been devoiced by the High-Pitch Devoicing rule.)"[16]

  • /émésehe/ émêsehe 'he is eating';
  • /téhnémenétó/ tséhnêmenéto 'when I sang';
  • /násáamétohénoto/ násâamétȯhênoto 'I didn't give him to him'

Tone

[edit]

Syllables with high pitch (tone) are relatively high pitched and are marked by an acute accent, ⟨á⟩, ⟨é⟩, and ⟨ó⟩. The following pairs of phrases demonstrate pitch contrasts in the Cheyenne language:

  • maxháeanáto ('if I am hungry')
  • maxháeanato ('if you are hungry')
  • hótame ('dog')
  • hotāme ('dogs')

As noted by Donald G. Frantz, phonological rules dictate some pitch patterns, as indicated by the frequent shift of accent when suffixes are added (e.g. compare matšėškōme 'raccoon' and mátšėškomeo'o 'raccoons'). In order for the rules to work, certain vowels are assigned inherent accent. For example, the word for 'badger' has a permanent accent position: ma'háhko'e (sg.), ma'háhko'eo'o (pl.)[17]

Nonnasal reflexes of Proto-Algonquian *k

[edit]

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 (replaced by š after e) ) in words originating in the Cheyenne Proper dialect, and a vowel in those originating in the Sutaio (So'taa'e) dialect. In the latter dialect the *k gives glottal catch in a word-final syllable (after the loss of some final syllables) and drops elsewhere, leaving the vowel increment. Sutaio k clusters are all reduced to glottal catch."[18]

Grammar

[edit]

Cheyenne is a morphologically polysynthetic language with a sophisticated, agglutinating verb system contrasting a relatively simple noun structure.[19] 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.[20]

Order and mode

[edit]

Like all Algonquian languages, Cheyenne shows a highly developed modal paradigm.[21] 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.[21][22][23] The charts below provide examples of verb forms of every order in each mode, after Leman (2011)[24] and Mithun (1999).[21]

Independent order

[edit]

This order governs both declarative and interrogative statements. The modes of this order are generally subdivided along lines of evidentiality.[23]

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

[edit]

This order governs a variety of dependent clause types.[23] Leman (2011) characterizes this order of verbs as requiring other verbal elements in order to establish complete meaning.[25] Verbs in the conjunct order are marked with a mode-specific prefix and a suffix marking person, number and animacy.[26]

Mode Example Translation
Indicative tséhpėhêvaese 'when he was good'
Subjunctive mȧhpėhévaestse 'when he is good' (unrealized)
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

[edit]

The third order governs commands. Cheyenne, in common with several other North American languages,[21] distinguishes two types of imperative mood, one indicating immediate action, and the other indicating delayed action.[27][28]

Mode Example Translation
Immediate méseestse 'eat!'
Delayed méseheo'o 'eat later!'
Hortative mésėheha 'let him eat!'

Verb morphology

[edit]

The Cheyenne verb system is very complex and verb constructions are central to the morphosyntax of the language,[29][30] to the point that even adjectives[31] and even some nouns[32] are largely substantive[clarification needed] 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.[33] 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.[26] The affixes are placed according to the following paradigm:

person – (tense) – (directional) – (preverb) – ROOT – (medial) – final[33]

Pronominal affixes

[edit]

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:[34]

  • ná-      first person
  • né-      second person
  • é-        third person

These three basic prefixes can be combined with various suffixes to express all of Cheyenne's pronominal distinctions. For example, the prefix ná- can be combined on a verb with the suffix -me to express the first person plural exclusive.

Tense

[edit]

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.[35]

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'

Similarly, the future tense is expressed by the morpheme /-hte/, which changes to -htse after the ná- pronominal, -stse after ne- and -tse in the third-person, with the third-person prefix dropped altogether.[35]

Directional affixes

[edit]

These prefixes address whether the action of the verb is moving "toward" or "away from" some entity, usually the speaker.[36]

  • -nėh-        toward
  • -nex-        toward (before -h)
  • -ne'-         toward (before a vowel)
  • -nes-        toward (before -t)
  • -ta-           away from

Preverbs

[edit]

Following Algonquianist terminology, Leman (2011) describes "preverbs", morphemes which add adjectival or adverbial information to the verb stem. Multiple preverbs can be combined within one verb complex. The following list represents only a small sample.[37]

  • -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

[edit]

This large group of suffixes provide information about something associated with the root, usually communicating that the action is done with or to a body part.[36] Thus: énėše'xahtse ('he-wash-mouth') = 'he gargled'.[38] Following is a sample of medial suffixes:[39]

  • -ahtse              mouth
  • -éné                 face
  • -na'evá            arm
  • -vétová            body
  • -he'oná            hand
  • -hahtá              foot

Medial suffixes can also be used with nouns to create compound words or to coin entirely new words from existing morphemes, as in:

ka'énė-hôtame [short-face-dog] = 'bulldog'[38]

Final affixes

[edit]

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 (AI), Inanimate Instransitive (II), Transitive Animate (TA) and Transitive Inanimate (TI).[40] Following are the most common object agreement markers for each verb class.[36]

  • -e                Animate Intransitive (AI)
  •                 Inanimate Intransitive (II)
  • -o                Transitive Animate (TA)
  • -á/-é            Transitive Inanimate (TI)

Negation

[edit]

Verbs are negated by the addition of the infix -sâa- immediately after the pronominal affix. This morpheme changes to sáa- in the absence of a pronominal affix, as occurs in the imperative and in some future tense constructions.[41]

Nouns

[edit]

Nouns are classified according to animacy.[42] They change according to grammatical number (singular and plural) but are not distinguished according to gender[43] or definiteness.[44]

Obviation

[edit]

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."[45] It is essentially an "out of focus" third person.[46] 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'

Verbs register the presence of obviated participants whether or not they are present as nouns. These forms could be likened to a kind of passive voice, although Esteban (2012) argues that since Cheyenne is a "reference-dominated language where case marking and word order are governed by the necessity to code pragmatic roles," a passive-like construction is assumed.[47] This phenomenon is an example of typical Algonquian "person hierarchy," in which animacy and first personhood take precedence over other forms.[33]

Number

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Both animate and inanimate nouns are pluralized by the addition of suffixes.[48][49] These suffixes are irregular and can change slightly according to a complex system of phonological rules.[50]

  • -(h)o, -(n)é      Inanimate plural
  • -(n)ȯtse           Animate plural

Possession

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Possession is denoted by a special set of pronominal suffixes. Following is a list of the most common possession prefixes, although rarely some words take different prefixes.[46][51]

  • na-      first person
  • ne-      second person
  • he-        third person

Generally, possessive prefixes take a low pitch on the following vowel.[34]

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,[46] with only a few exceptions.[52] This introduces ambiguity in that it is not always possible to tell whether an obviated noun is singular or plural.[46]

Historical development

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Cheyenne catechism page 9

Like all the Algonquian languages, Cheyenne developed from a reconstructed ancestor referred to as Proto-Algonquian (often abbreviated "PA"). 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 (*erenyi)
  • The geminate vowel sequence *-yi- simplifies to /i/ (semivowels were phonemically vowels in PA; when PA */i/ or */o/ appeared before another vowel, it became non-syllabic) (*ereni)
  • PA */r/ changes to /t/ (*eteni)
  • /h/ is added before word-initial vowels (*heteni)
  • Due to a vowel chain-shift, the vowels in the word wind up as /e/, /a/ and /e/ (PA */e/ sometimes corresponds to Cheyenne /e/ and sometimes to Cheyenne /a/; PA */i/ almost always corresponds to Cheyenne /e/, however) (hetane).

PA *θk has the Sutaio reflex ' in e-nete'e 'she tells lies', but the Cheyenne-Proper reflex 'k in hetone'ke 'tree-bark'. According to linguist Paul Proulx, this gave off the appearance that "speakers of both Cheyenne dialects—perhaps mixed bands—were involved in the Arapaho contact that led to this unusual reflex of PA *k.".[18]

Lexicon

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Some Cheyenne words (with the Proto-Algonquian reconstructions where known):

  • ame 'grease' (from PA *pemyi)
  • he'e 'his liver' (from PA *weθkweni)
  • hē'e 'woman' (from PA *eθkwe·wa)
  • hetane 'man' (from PA *erenyiwa)
  • matana 'milk' (from PA *meθenyi)

Translation history

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Early work was done on the Cheyenne language by Rodolphe Charles Petter, a Mennonite missionary based in Lame Deer, Montana, from 1916.[53] Petter published a mammoth dictionary of Cheyenne in 1915.[54]

Current translations

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Currently there are many online resources that allow for the instant translation from any language to the Cheyenne language. There are online vocabulary lists,[55] pronunciation guides,[56] dictionaries,[57] etc. Along with these resources, there are numbers of published books regarding the history of the language that also explain its grammar.[58] These resources can be found online or in libraries that carry these published books.

The latest edition of an online Cheyenne dictionary is accessible from cheyennelanguage.org.[59]

Notes

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  1. ^ Cheyenne at Ethnologue (21st ed., 2018) Closed access icon
  2. ^ "Northern Cheyenne Tribe website". Archived from the original on 2011-02-02. Retrieved 2020-07-19.
  3. ^ "UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in danger". Retrieved 2012-09-29.
  4. ^ Schilling, Vincent (January 8, 2018). "'Hostiles' Movie Starring Wes Studi, Christian Bale Will Screen in DC: National Congress of American Indians (NCAI), applauds Hostiles for 'authentic representation of Native peoples' and accurate speaking of Native languages". Indian Country Today. Archived from the original on January 22, 2018. Retrieved February 3, 2018.
  5. ^ Littlebear, Richard (2003). "Chief Dull Knife Community is Strengthening the Northern Cheyenne Language and Culture" (PDF). Arizona State University.
  6. ^ Caufield, Clara (2015). "Keeping the Cheyenne language alive". News from Indian Country. 29 (8): 19. ISSN 1548-4939.
  7. ^ Stiers, Catherine. "A Holistic Revitalization Approach from the Cheyenne and Arapaho Tribes". Recovering Voices.
  8. ^ Linguist Wayne Leman included one more variant in his 1981 article on Cheyenne pitch rules, a lowered-high pitch (e.g. à), but has since recognized that this posited pitch is the same as a low tone.
  9. ^ "Cheyenne language, alphabet, and pronunciation". Omniglot. Retrieved 27 June 2021.
  10. ^ a b Frantz 1972a.
  11. ^ a b Leman 1979, p. 215.
  12. ^ a b Leman 1979, p. 218.
  13. ^ Leman 1979, p. 217.
  14. ^ Leman 1981.
  15. ^ a b c d Leman 1979, p. 219.
  16. ^ Leman 1979, p. 220.
  17. ^ Frantz 1972b.
  18. ^ a b Proulx 1982.
  19. ^ Mithun 1999, p. 338.
  20. ^ Mithun 1999, pp. 338–340.
  21. ^ a b c d Mithun 1999, p. 172.
  22. ^ Leman 2011, p. 24.
  23. ^ a b c Murray 2012, p. 243.
  24. ^ Leman 2011, pp. 24–42.
  25. ^ Leman 2011, p. 19.
  26. ^ a b Murray 2012, p. 244.
  27. ^ Leman 2011, p. 18.
  28. ^ Murray 2012, p. 242.
  29. ^ Leman 2011, p. 17.
  30. ^ Petter 1905, p. 451.
  31. ^ Petter 1905, p. 457.
  32. ^ Petter 1915, p. iv.
  33. ^ a b c Leman 2011, p. 22.
  34. ^ a b Leman 2011, p. 20.
  35. ^ a b Leman 2011, p. 191.
  36. ^ a b c Leman 2011, p. 23.
  37. ^ Leman 2011, p. 181.
  38. ^ a b Leman 2011, p. 165.
  39. ^ Leman 2011, p. 163.
  40. ^ Leman 2011, pp. 17–18.
  41. ^ Leman 2011, p. 25.
  42. ^ Leman 2011, p. 5.
  43. ^ Petter 1905, p. 456.
  44. ^ Petter 1905, p. 459.
  45. ^ Leman 2011, p. 21.
  46. ^ a b c d Leman 2011, p. 11.
  47. ^ Corral Esteban 2012, p. 93.
  48. ^ Leman 2011, p. 8.
  49. ^ Petter 1905, p. 454.
  50. ^ Leman 2011, p. 214.
  51. ^ Petter 1905, p. 455.
  52. ^ Leman 2011, p. 171.
  53. ^ "Petter, Rodolphe Charles (1865-1947)" Archived June 4, 2011, at the Wayback Machine Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online, accessed September 20, 2009
  54. ^ "Petter, 1915, English-Cheyenne Dictionary.
  55. ^ "Cheyenne Words". www.native-languages.org. Retrieved 7 December 2020.
  56. ^ "Cheyenne Pronunciation Guide, Alphabet and Phonology". www.native-languages.org. Retrieved 7 December 2020.
  57. ^ "English-Cheyenne Student Dictionary". Native Languages of North America: Cheyenne. Council for Indian Education. Retrieved 7 December 2020.
  58. ^ Leman 1979, p. 289.
  59. ^ "Cheyenne Dictionary". www.cheyennelanguage.org.

References

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