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{{short description|Siouan language spoken by the Lakota people of the Sioux tribes}}
{{COI|date=December 2021}}
{{Infobox language
{{Infobox language
|name=Lakota
| name = Lakota
|nativename=Lakȟótiyapi
| nativename = {{lang|lkt|Lakȟótiyapi}}
|pronunciation={{IPA-sio|la.ˈkχo.ti.ja.pi|}}
| pronunciation = {{IPA-lkt|laˈkˣɔtɪjapɪ|}}
|states=[[United States]], with some speakers in [[Canada]]
| states = [[United States]], with some speakers in [[Canada]]
|region=Primarily [[North Dakota]] and [[South Dakota]], but also northern [[Nebraska]], southern [[Minnesota]], and northern [[Montana]]
| region = Primarily [[North Dakota]] and [[South Dakota]], but also northern [[Nebraska]], southern [[Minnesota]], and northern [[Montana]]
|ethnicity=[[Lakota people|Teton Sioux]]
| ethnicity = [[Lakota people|Teton Sioux]]
| speakers = 2,100, 29% of ethnic population
|speakers= {{sigfig|6,190|1}}
| date = 1997–2016
|date=1997
|ref=e18
| ref = e25
|familycolor=American
| familycolor = American
|fam1=[[Siouan languages|Siouan]]
| fam1 = [[Siouan languages|Siouan]]
|fam2=[[Western Siouan languages|Western Siouan]]
| fam2 = [[Western Siouan languages|Western Siouan]]
|fam3=Mississippi Valley Siouan
| fam3 = Mississippi Valley Siouan
|fam4=Dakotan
| fam4 = Dakotan
|fam5=[[Sioux language|Sioux]]
| fam5 = [[Sioux language|Sioux]]
|iso3=lkt
| iso3 = lkt
|glotto=lako1247
| glotto = lako1247
|glottorefname=Lakota
| glottorefname = Lakota
|notice=IPA
| notice = IPA
| map = Lakota map.svg
| imagecaption =
| mapcaption = Map of core pre-contact Lakota territory
| map2 = Lang Status 60-DE.svg
| mapcaption2 = {{center|Lakota is classified as Definitely Endangered by the UNESCO [[Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger]].}}
}}
}}
{{Infobox ethnonym|root=[[Lakota people|Lakota]]<br/><small>"ally / friend"</small>|person=|people=[[Lakota people|Lakȟóta Oyáte]]|language=Lakȟótiyapi|country= Lakȟóta Makóce, [[Sioux|Očhéthi Šakówiŋ]]}}
'''Lakota''' ({{lang|lkt|Lakȟótiyapi}} {{IPA-lkt|laˈkˣɔtɪjapɪ|}}), also referred to as '''Lakhota''', '''Teton''' or '''Teton Sioux''', is a [[Siouan languages|Siouan language]] spoken by the [[Lakota people]] of the [[Sioux]] tribes. Lakota is mutually intelligible with the two dialects of the [[Dakota language]], especially [[Dakota language#Comparison of the dialects|Western Dakota]], and is one of the three major [[variety (linguistics)|varieties]] of the [[Sioux language]].


Speakers of the Lakota language make up one of the largest [[Native American language]] speech communities in the [[United States]], with approximately 2,000 speakers, who live mostly in the northern plains states of [[North Dakota]] and [[South Dakota]].<ref name=e25/> Many communities have immersion programs for both children and adults.
'''Lakota''' (''Lakȟótiyapi''), also referred to as '''Lakhota''', '''Teton''' or '''Teton Sioux''', is a [[Siouan languages|Siouan language]] spoken by the [[Lakota people]] of the [[Sioux]] tribes. Though generally taught and considered by speakers as a separate language, Lakota is mutually intelligible with the other two languages (cf. [[Dakota language]]), and is considered by most linguists one of the three major [[Variety (linguistics)|varieties]] of the [[Sioux language]]. The Lakota language represents one of the largest [[Native American language]] speech communities in the United States, with approximately 2,000 speakers living mostly in northern plains states of [[North Dakota]] and [[South Dakota]].<ref name="ethnologue">{{cite web |url= http://www.ethnologue.com/show_language.asp?code=lkt |title= Lakota |last=Gordon |first= Raymond G., Jr. |year=2005 |website= Ethnologue: Languages of the World |edition=15th |publisher= SIL International |accessdate= 2009-05-16}}</ref> There is a Lakota language program online available for children to use.<ref name="lakhota.org">{{cite web|title=Lakota Language Consortium|url=http://www.lakhota.org |accessdate=28 July 2016}}</ref> There is also a Lakota Language Program with classes for children at Red Cloud Indian School.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.redcloudschool.org/LLP|title=About the Lakota Language Program - Red Cloud Indian School |accessdate=28 July 2016}}</ref>


The language was first put into written form by missionaries around 1840 and has since evolved to reflect contemporary needs and usage.
Like many indigenous languages, the Lakota language did not have a written form traditionally. However, efforts to develop a written form of Lakota began, primarily through the work of Christian missionaries and linguists, in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The orthography has since evolved to reflect contemporary needs and usage.

One significant figure in the development of a written form of Lakota was [[Ella Cara Deloria]], also called Aŋpétu Wašté Wiŋ (Beautiful Day Woman), a Yankton Dakota ethnologist, linguist, and novelist who worked extensively with the Dakota and Lakota peoples, documenting their languages and cultures. She collaborated with linguists such as [[Franz Boas]] and [[Edward Sapir]] to create written materials for Lakota, including dictionaries and grammars.<ref>{{cite web |title=Ella Cara Deloria |url=https://awis.org/historical-women/ella-cara-deloria/ |website=Association for Women in Science |publisher=Association for Women in Science |access-date=22 February 2024}}</ref>

Another key figure was [[Albert White Hat|Albert White Hat Sr.]], who taught at and later became the chair of the Lakota language program at his alma mater, [[Sinte Gleska University]] at Mission, South Dakota, one of the first tribal-based universities in the US.<ref>{{cite web |title=Winged Messenger Nations: Birds in American Indian Oral Tradition: Albert White Hat Sr. & Francis Cut |url=https://nativeede.wixsite.com/wingedmessenger/albert-white-hat-sr--francis-cut |website=The Winged Messenger Project |publisher=The Winged Messenger Project |access-date=22 February 2024}}</ref> His work focused on the [[Sicangu]] dialect using an orthography developed by Lakota in 1982 and which today is slowly supplanting older systems provided by linguists and missionaries.


==History and origin==
==History and origin==
The [[Lakota people]]'s creation stories say that language originated from the creation of the tribe.<ref>{{cite journal | last1 = Sneve | first1 = Paul | year = 2013 | title = Anamnesis in the Lakota Language and Lakota Concepts of Time and Matter | url = | journal = Anglican Theological Review | volume = 95 | issue = 3| pages = 487–493 }}</ref><ref name="Andrews">{{cite journal | last1 = Andrews | first1 = Thomas G | year = 2002 | title = TURNING THE TABLES ON ASSIMILATION: OGLALA LAKOTAS AND THE PINE RIDGE DAY SCHOOLS, 1889-1920s | url = | journal = Western Historical Quarterly | volume = 33 | issue = 4| page = 407 | doi=10.2307/4144766}}</ref>
The [[Lakota people]]'s creation stories say that language originated from the creation of the tribe.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Sneve |first1=Paul |year=2013 |title=Anamnesis in the Lakota Language and Lakota Concepts of Time and Matter |journal=Anglican Theological Review |volume=95 |issue=3 |pages=487–493 }}</ref><ref name="Andrews">{{cite journal |last1=Andrews |first1=Thomas G |year=2002 |title=Turning the Tables on Assimilation: Oglala Lakotas and the Pine Ridge Day Schools 1889–1920s |journal=Western Historical Quarterly |volume=33 |issue=4 |pages=407–430 |doi=10.2307/4144766 |jstor=4144766 }}</ref> Other creation stories say language was invented by [[Iktomi]].<ref name="Walker DeMallie Jahner 1980 p.106">{{cite book | last1=Walker | first1=J.R. | last2=DeMallie | first2=R.J. | last3=Jahner | first3=E. | title=Lakota Belief and Ritual | publisher=U of Nebraska Press | series=Bison books | year=1980 | isbn=978-0-8032-9867-5 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=PYwV956P_UgC | access-date=December 18, 2021 | page=106}}</ref>

A wholly Lakota newspaper named the ''Anpao Kin'' ("Daybreak") circulated from 1878 by the Protestant Episcopal Church in [[Niobrara, Nebraska|Niobrara Mission]], Nebraska until its move to [[Mission, South Dakota]] in 1908 continuing until its closure in 1937. The print alongside its [[Dakota language|Dakota]] counterpart ''Iapi Oaye'' ("The Word Carrier") played an important role in documenting the enlistment and affairs including obituaries of Native [[Sioux]] soldiers into the army as America became [[American entry into World War I|involved in World War I]].<ref>{{cite thesis |last= Little |first=John A. |date=May 2020 |title=Vietnam Akíčita: Lakota and Dakota Military Tradition in the Twentieth Century |degree=PhD |publisher=University of Minnesota |url=https://conservancy.umn.edu/server/enwiki/api/core/bitstreams/5361ba2e-4da0-45d3-98b3-73a51c456125/content|pages=58-64}}</ref>


==Phonology==
==Phonology==
{{WikiIPA|Lakota}}


===Vowels===
===Vowels===
Lakota has five oral vowels, {{IPA|/i e a o u/}}, and three nasal vowels, {{IPA|/ĩ ã ũ/}} (phonetically {{IPA|[ɪ̃ ə̃ ʊ̃]}}). Lakota {{IPA|/e/}} and {{IPA|/o/}} are said to be more [[Open-mid vowel|open]] than the corresponding cardinal vowels, perhaps closer to {{IPA|[ɛ]}} and {{IPA|[ɔ]}}. Orthographically, the nasal vowels are written with a following {{angle bracket|ƞ}}, {{angle bracket|ŋ}}, or {{angle bracket|n}}; historically, these were written with [[ogonek]]s underneath, {{angle bracket|į ą ų}}.<ref>''Elementary Bilingual Dictionary English-Lakhóta Lakhóta-English'' (1976) CU Lakhóta Project University of Colorado</ref> No syllables end with consonantal {{IPA|/n/}}.
Lakota has five oral vowels, {{IPA|/i e a o u/}}, and three nasal vowels, {{IPA|/ĩ ã ũ/}} (phonetically {{IPA|[ɪ̃ ə̃ ʊ̃]}}). Lakota {{IPA|/e/}} and {{IPA|/o/}} are said to be [[open-mid vowel|more open]] than the corresponding cardinal vowels, perhaps closer to {{IPA|[ɛ]}} and {{IPA|[ɔ]}}. Orthographically, the nasal vowels are written with a following {{angle bracket|ƞ}}, {{angle bracket|ŋ}}, or {{angle bracket|n}}; historically, these were written with [[ogonek]]s underneath, {{angle bracket|į ą ų}}.<ref>''Elementary Bilingual Dictionary English–Lakhóta Lakhóta–English'' (1976) CU Lakhóta Project University of Colorado</ref> No syllables end with consonantal {{IPA|/n/}}.


{|class="wikitable" style=text-align:center
{|class="wikitable" style=text-align:center
! colspan=2|
! colspan=2|
! [[Front vowel|Front]]
! scope="col" | [[Front vowel|Front]]
! [[Central vowel|Central]]
! scope="col" | [[Central vowel|Central]]
! [[Back vowel|Back]]
! scope="col" | [[Back vowel|Back]]
|-
|-
! rowspan=2|high
! rowspan="2" scope="row" | [[Close vowel|Close/High]]
! scope="row" | <small>oral</small>
! oral
| {{IPA link|i}} {{angbr|i}}
| i
|
|
| {{IPA link|u}} {{angbr|u}}
| u
|-
|-
! scope="row" | <small>[[Nasal vowel|nasal]]</small>
! nasal
| {{IPA link|ĩ}} {{angbr|iŋ}}
| ĩ
|
|
| {{IPA link|ũ}} {{angbr|uŋ}}
| ũ
|-
|-
! scope="row" | [[Mid vowel|Mid]]
! mid
!
!
| {{IPA link|e}} {{angbr|e}}
| e
|
|
| {{IPA link|o}} {{angbr|o}}
| o
|-
|-
! rowspan=2|low
! rowspan="2" scope="row" | [[Open vowel|Open/Low]]
! scope="row" | <small>oral</small>
! oral
|
|
| {{IPA link|a}} {{angbr|a}}
| a
|
|
|-
|-
! scope="row" | <small>[[Nasal vowel|nasal]]</small>
! nasal
|
|
| {{IPA link|ã}} {{angbr|aŋ}}
| ã
|
|
|}
|}


A neutral vowel ([[schwa]]) is [[epenthesis|automatically inserted]] between certain consonants, e.g. into the pairs <gl>, <bl> and <gm>. So the clan name written phonemically as <Oglala> has become the place name ''[[Ogallala, Nebraska|Ogallala]]''.
A neutral vowel ([[schwa]]) is [[epenthesis|automatically inserted]] between certain consonants, e.g. into the pairs {{angle bracket|gl}}, {{angle bracket|bl}} and {{angle bracket|gm}}. So the clan name written phonemically as {{angle bracket|Oglala}} has become the place name ''[[Ogallala, Nebraska|Ogallala]]''.


===Consonants===
===Consonants===
{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
! colspan=2|
! colspan=2|
! align="center"|[[Bilabial consonant|Bilabial]]
! [[Bilabial consonant|Bilabial]]
! align="center"|[[Dental consonant|Dental]]
! [[Dental consonant|Dental]]
! align="center"|[[Alveolar consonant|Alveolar]]
! [[Alveolar consonant|Alveolar]]
! align="center"|[[Postalveolar consonant|Postalveolar]]
! [[Postalveolar consonant|Postalveolar]]
! align="center"|[[Velar consonant|Velar]]
! [[Velar consonant|Velar]]
! align="center"|[[Uvular consonant|Uvular]]<ref name="rood96" /><ref name="lako04">(2004). [http://www.lakhota.org/ALPHABET/alphabet.htm Lakota letters and sounds].</ref>
! [[Uvular consonant|Uvular]]<ref name="rood96" /><ref name="lako04">(2004). [http://www.lakhota.org/ALPHABET/alphabet.htm Lakota letters and sounds].</ref>
! align="center"|[[Glottal consonant|Glottal]]
! [[Glottal consonant|Glottal]]
|-
|-
! colspan=2|[[Nasal stop|Nasals]]
! colspan="2" | [[Nasal stop|Nasals]]
| align="center"|'''m''' {{IPA|[m]}}
| {{IPA link|m}} {{angbr|m}}
|
| align="center"|'''n''' {{IPA|[n]}}
|
|
| {{IPA link|n}} {{angbr|n}}
|
|
| {{IPA link|ŋ}} {{angbr|ň}}
|
|
|
|
|-
|-
! rowspan=4|[[Plosives]]<br/>and [[Affricate consonant|affricates]]
! rowspan="4" | [[Plosives]]<br/>and [[affricate consonant|affricates]]
! <small>[[Voiceless consonant|voiceless]]</small>
! <small>[[voiceless consonant|voiceless]]</small>
| align="center"|'''p''' {{IPA|[p]}}
| {{IPA link|p}} {{angbr|p}}
| align="center"|'''t''' {{IPA|[t]}}
| {{IPA link|t}} {{angbr|t}}
|
|
| align="center"|'''č''' {{IPA|[]}}
| {{IPA link|tʃ}} {{angbr|č}}
| align="center"|'''k''' {{IPA|[k]}}
| {{IPA link|k}} {{angbr|k}}
|
|
| align="center"|'''’''' {{IPA|[ʔ]}}
| {{IPA link}} {{angbr|ʼ}}
|-
|-
!<small> [[Voiced consonant|voiced]]</small>
! <small> [[voiced consonant|voiced]]</small>
| align="center"|'''b''' {{IPA|[b]}}
| {{IPA link|b}} {{angbr|b}}
|
|
|
|
|
|
| align="center"|'''g''' {{IPA|[ɡ]}}
| {{IPA link}} {{angbr|g}}
|
|
|
|
|-
|-
! <small>[[Aspiration (phonetics)|aspirated]]</small>
! <small>[[aspiration (phonetics)|aspirated]]</small>
| align="center"|'''ph''' {{IPA|[]}} / '''pȟ''' {{IPA|[]}}
| {{IPA|pʰ}} {{angbr|ph}} /<br>{{IPA|pˣ}} {{angbr|pȟ}}
| align="center"|'''th''' {{IPA|[]}} / '''tȟ''' {{IPA|[]}}
| {{IPA|tʰ}} {{angbr|th}} /<br>{{IPA|tˣ}} {{angbr|tȟ}}
|
|
| align="center"|'''čh''' {{IPA|[tʃʰ]}}
| {{IPA|tʃʰ}} {{angbr|čh}}
| align="center"|'''kh''' {{IPA|[]}} / '''kȟ''' {{IPA|[]}}
| {{IPA|kʰ}} {{angbr|kh}} /<br>{{IPA|kˣ}} {{angbr|kȟ}}
|
|
|
|
|-
|-
! <small>[[Ejective consonant|ejective]]</small>
! <small>[[ejective consonant|ejective]]</small>
| align="center"|'''p’''' {{IPA|[]}}
| {{IPA link|pʼ}} {{angbr|pʼ}}
| align="center"|'''t’''' {{IPA|[]}}
| {{IPA link|tʼ}} {{angbr|tʼ}}
|
|
| align="center"|'''č’''' {{IPA|[tʃʼ]}}
| {{IPA link|tʃʼ}} {{angbr|čʼ}}
| align="center"|'''k’''' {{IPA|[]}}
| {{IPA link|kʼ}} {{angbr|kʼ}}
|
|
|
|
|-
|-
! rowspan=3|[[Fricative]]
! rowspan="3" | [[Fricative]]
! <small>[[Voiceless consonant|voiceless]]</small>
! <small>[[voiceless consonant|voiceless]]</small>
|
|
|
| align="center"|'''s''' {{IPA|[s]}}
| align="center"|'''š''' {{IPA|[ʃ]}}
|
|
| align="center"|'''ȟ''' {{IPA|[χ]}}
| {{IPA link|s}} {{angbr|s}}
| {{IPA link|ʃ}} {{angbr|š}}
|
|
| {{IPA link|χ}} {{angbr|ȟ}}
|{{IPA link|h}} {{angbr|h}}
|-
|-
! <small>[[Voiced consonant|voiced]]</small>
! <small>[[Voiced consonant|voiced]]</small>
|
|
|
|
| align="center"|'''z''' {{IPA|[z]}}
| {{IPA link|z}} {{angbr|z}}
| align="center"|'''ž''' {{IPA|[ʒ]}}
| {{IPA link}} {{angbr|ž}}
|
|
| align="center"|'''ǧ''' {{IPA|[ʁ]}}
| {{IPA link}} {{angbr|ǧ}}
|
|
|-
|-
! <small>[[Ejective consonant|ejective]]
! <small>[[ejective consonant|ejective]]</small>
<ref name="ReferenceA">''New Lakota dictionary''. Lakota Language Consortium, 2008</ref></small>
|
|
|
|
| align="center"|'''s’''' {{IPA|[]}}
| {{IPA link|sʼ}} {{angbr|sʼ}}
| align="center"|'''š’''' {{IPA|[ʃʼ]}}
| {{IPA link|ʃʼ}} {{angbr|šʼ}}
|
|
| align="center"|'''ȟ’''' {{IPA|[χʼ]}}
| {{IPA link|χʼ}} {{angbr|ȟʼ}}
|
|
|-
|-
! colspan=2|[[Approximant consonant|Approximant]]
! colspan="2" | [[Approximant consonant|Approximant]]
| align="center"|'''w''' {{IPA|[w]}}
| {{IPA link|w}} {{angbr|w}}
|
| {{IPA link|l}} {{angbr|l}}
| {{IPA link|j}} {{angbr|y}}
|
|
| align="center"|'''l''' {{IPA|[l]}}
| align="center"|'''y''' {{IPA|[j]}}
|
|
|
|
| align="center"|'''h''' {{IPA|[h]}}
|}
|}


The [[voiced uvular fricative]] {{IPA|/ʁ/}} becomes a [[uvular trill]] ({{IPA|[ʀ]}}) before {{IPA|/i/}}<ref name="rood96">Rood, David S., and Taylor, Allan R. (1996). [https://web.archive.org/web/20050405024744/http://lakxotaiyapi.freecyberzone.com/sk1uni.htm Sketch of Lakhota, a Siouan Language, Part I]. Handbook of North American Indians, Vol. 17 (Languages), pp. 440–482.</ref><ref name="lako04"/> and in fast speech it is often realized as a [[voiced velar fricative]] {{IPA|[ɣ]}}. The voiceless aspirated plosives have two allophonic variants each: those with a delay in voicing {{IPA|([pʰ tʰ kʰ])}}, and those with velar friction {{IPA|([pˣ tˣ kˣ])}}, which occur before {{IPA|/a/}}, {{IPA|/ã/}}, {{IPA|/o/}}, {{IPA|/ĩ/}}, and {{IPA|/ũ/}} (thus, ''lakhóta'', {{IPA|/laˈkʰota/}} is phonetically {{IPA|[laˈkˣota]}}). For some speakers, there is a phonemic distinction between the two, and both occur before {{IPA|/e/}}. No such variation occurs for the affricate /tʃʰ/. Some orthographies mark this distinction; others do not. The uvular fricatives {{IPA|/χ/}} and {{IPA|/ʁ/}} are commonly spelled {{angle bracket|ȟ}} and {{angle bracket|ǧ}}.
The [[voiced uvular fricative]] {{IPA|/ʁ/}} becomes a [[uvular trill]] ({{IPA|[ʀ]}}) before {{IPA|/i/}}<ref name="rood96">Rood, David S., and Taylor, Allan R. (1996). [https://web.archive.org/web/20050405024744/http://lakxotaiyapi.freecyberzone.com/sk1uni.htm Sketch of Lakhota, a Siouan Language, Part I]. Handbook of North American Indians, Vol. 17 (Languages), pp. 440–482.</ref><ref name="lako04"/> and in fast speech it is often realized as a [[voiced velar fricative]] {{IPA|[ɣ]}}. The voiceless aspirated plosives have two allophonic variants each: those with a delay in voicing {{IPA|([pʰ tʰ kʰ])}}, and those with velar friction {{IPA|([pˣ tˣ kˣ])}}, which occur before {{IPA|/a/}}, {{IPA|/ã/}}, {{IPA|/o/}}, {{IPA|/ĩ/}}, and {{IPA|/ũ/}} (thus, {{lang|lkt|lakhóta}}, {{IPA|/laˈkʰota/}} is phonetically {{IPA|[laˈkˣota]}}). For some speakers, there is a phonemic distinction between the two, and both occur before {{IPA|/e/}}. No such variation occurs for the affricate /tʃʰ/. Some orthographies mark this distinction; others do not. The uvular fricatives {{IPA|/χ/}} and {{IPA|/ʁ/}} are commonly spelled {{angle bracket|ȟ}} and {{angle bracket|ǧ}}.

All [[morpheme|monomorphemic]] words have one vowel which carries primary [[stress (linguistics)|stress]] and has a higher tone than all other vowels in the word. This is generally the vowel of the second syllable of the word, but often the first syllable can be stressed, and occasionally other syllables as well. Stress is generally indicated with an acute accent: {{angle bracket|á}}, etc. Compound words will have stressed vowels in each component; proper spelling will write compounds with a hyphen. Thus {{lang|lkt|máza-ská}}, literally "metal-white", i.e. "silver; money" has two stressed vowels, the first ''a'' in each component. If it were written without the hyphen, as {{lang|lkt|mazaska}}, it would imply a single main stress.

===Phonological processes===

A common phonological process which occurs in rapid speech is ''vowel contraction'', which generally results from the loss of an intervocalic glide. Vowel contraction results in phonetic long vowels ([[phoneme|phonemically]] a sequence of two identical vowels), with falling pitch if the first underlying vowel is stressed, and rising pitch if the second underlying vowel is stressed: ''kê:'' (falling tone), "he said that", from {{lang|lkt|kéye}}; ''hǎ:pi'' (rising tone), "clothing", from {{lang|lkt|hayápi}}. If one of the vowels is nasalized, the resulting long vowel is also nasalized: ''čhaŋ̌:pi'', "sugar", from {{lang|lkt|čhaŋháŋpi}}.<ref name="rood96" />

When two vowels of unequal height contract, or when feature contrasts exist between the vowels and the glide, two new phonetic vowels, {{IPA|[æː]}} and {{IPA|[ɔː]}}, result:<ref name="rood96" /> ''iyæ̂:'', "he left for there", from {{lang|lkt|iyáye}}; ''mitȟa:'', "it's mine", from {{lang|lkt|mitȟáwa}}.

The plural [[clitic|enclitic]] ''=pi'' is frequently changed in rapid speech when preceding the enclitics ''=kte'', ''=kiŋ'', ''=kštó'', or ''=na''. If the vowel preceding ''=pi'' is high/open, ''=pi'' becomes [u]; if the vowel is non-high (mid or closed), ''=pi'' becomes [o] (if the preceding vowel is nasalized, then the resulting vowel is also nasalized): ''hi=pi=kte'', "they will arrive here", [hiukte]; ''yatkáŋ=pi=na'', "they drank it and...", {{IPA|[jatkə̃õna]}}.<ref name="rood96" />

Lakota also exhibits some traces of sound symbolism among fricatives, where the [[point of articulation]] changes to reflect intensity: {{lang|lkt|zí}}, "it's yellow", {{lang|lkt|ží}}, "it's tawny", {{lang|lkt|ǧí}}, "it's brown".<ref>{{cite book|last=Mithun |first=Marianne |year=2007 |title=The Languages of Native North America|location=Cambridge |publisher=Cambridge University Press|page=33}}</ref> (Compare with the similar examples in [[Mandan language#Vocabulary|Mandan]].)

==Orthographies, standardization, and teaching materials==
Several orthographies as well as ''[[ad hoc]]'' spelling are used to write the Lakota language, with varying perspectives on whether standardization should be implemented.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.lmp.ucla.edu/Profile.aspx?menu=004&LangID=3 |title=Language Materials Project: Lakota |publisher=UCLA |access-date=23 Dec 2010 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101230063102/http://www.lmp.ucla.edu/Profile.aspx?menu=004&LangID=3 |archive-date=30 December 2010 |url-status=dead |df=dmy-all }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|last=Powers |first=William K. |title=Comments on the Politics of Orthography |journal=American Anthropologist |volume=92 |issue=2 |pages=496–498 |year=1990 |doi=10.1525/aa.1990.92.2.02a00190|jstor=680162 }}</ref><ref>Palmer, 2</ref> In 2002, Rosebud Cultural Studies teacher Randy Emery argued that standardization of the language could cause problems "because the language is utilized diversely. If standardization is determined to be the approach... then the question is whose version will be adopted? This will cause dissent and politics to become a factor in the process."<ref name=LakotaJournal2002/>

Also in 2002, [[Sinte Gleska University]] rejected a partnership with the European-owned Lakota Language Consortium.<ref name=LakotaJournal2002/> Sinte Gleska uses the orthography developed by [[Albert White Hat]],<ref name=Hirschfelder>{{cite book|author=Arlene B. Hirschfelder|title=Native Heritage: Personal Accounts by American Indians, 1790 to the Present|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=a2OhBCKfo-sC|year=1995|publisher=VNR AG|isbn=978-0-02-860412-1}}</ref> which on December 13, 2012, was formally adopted by the [[Rosebud Sioux Tribe]] per Tribal Resolution No. 2012–343. This resolution also banned the Lakota Language Consortium and its "[[Czech orthography]]" from the reservation and its educational system.<ref name=John98>{{cite book|author=John, Sonja |editor-first1=Sebastian|editor-last1=Fink |editor2=Lang, Martin|editor3=Schretter, Manfred|chapter=Orality Overwritten: Power Relations in Textualization|title=Mehrsprachigkeit. Vom Alten Orient bis zum Esperanto |url=http://www.sonjajohn.net/OralityOverwritten_PowerRelationsInTextualization_SonjaJohn.pdf|year=2018|publisher=Zaphon, Münster www.zaphon.de |page=98|isbn=978-3-96327-004-8|language=en|quote=In a next step, the Rosebud Sioux Tribe adopted Tribal Resolution No. 2012–343, on December 13, 2012, declaring Albert White Hat's Lakota orthography to be the standard on the Rosebud reservation: "THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED, the Rosebud Sioux Tribe hereby adopts the Official Rosebud Sioux Tribe Lakota Language Orthography recommended by the Rosebud Sioux Tribe Education Department." The tribe thus banned the LLC and its "Czech orthography" from the reservation and its educational system.}}</ref> This ban was a response to a series of protests by community members and grassroots language preservation workers, at Rosebud and other Lakota communities, against the Lakota Language Consortium (LLC).<ref name=LakotaJournal2002/><ref name=John86-87/> Despite its name, the LLC is an organization formed by two Europeans.<ref name=John86-87/> Concerns arose due to the LLC's promotion of their ''New Lakota Dictionary'', websites and other Internet projects aimed at revising and standardizing their new spelling of the Lakota language. "Lakota first language speakers and Lakota language teachers criticize the "Czech orthography" for being overloaded with markings and – foremost – for the way it is being brought into Lakota schools"; it has been criticized as "[[neocolonialism|neocolonial]] domination."<ref name=John86-87>{{cite book|author=John, Sonja|editor-first1=Sebastian|editor-last1=Fink |editor2=Lang, Martin|editor3=Schretter, Manfred|chapter=Orality Overwritten: Power Relations in Textualization|title=Mehrsprachigkeit. Vom Alten Orient bis zum Esperanto |url=http://www.sonjajohn.net/OralityOverwritten_PowerRelationsInTextualization_SonjaJohn.pdf|year=2018|publisher=Zaphon, Münster www.zaphon.de |pages=86–87|isbn=978-3-96327-004-8|language=en}}</ref> Sonja John writes that "The new orthography the Czech linguist advocates resembles the Czech orthography – making it easier for Czech people to read. The Europeans predominantly use the internet to give the impression that this "Czech orthography" is a Lakota product and the standard for writing Lakota."<ref name=John73>{{cite book|author=John, Sonja|editor-first1=Sebastian|editor-last1=Fink |editor2=Lang, Martin|editor3=Schretter, Manfred|chapter=Orality Overwritten: Power Relations in Textualization|title=Mehrsprachigkeit. Vom Alten Orient bis zum Esperanto |url=http://www.sonjajohn.net/OralityOverwritten_PowerRelationsInTextualization_SonjaJohn.pdf|year=2018|publisher=Zaphon, Münster www.zaphon.de |page=73|isbn=978-3-96327-004-8|language=en}}</ref> "The Rosebud Sioux Tribe was the first of the Lakota tribes to take legal action against the self-authorizing practices the LLC committed by utilizing names of Lakota language experts without their consent to obtain funding for their projects."<ref name=John97-98/> Rosebud Resolution No. 2008–295 goes further and compares these actions to what was done to children taken from their families by the [[American Indian residential schools|residential schools]].<ref name=John97-98>{{cite book|author=John, Sonja|editor-first1=Sebastian|editor-last1=Fink |editor2=Lang, Martin|editor3=Schretter, Manfred|chapter=Orality Overwritten: Power Relations in Textualization|title=Mehrsprachigkeit. Vom Alten Orient bis zum Esperanto |url=http://www.sonjajohn.net/OralityOverwritten_PowerRelationsInTextualization_SonjaJohn.pdf|year=2018|publisher=Zaphon, Münster www.zaphon.de| pages=97–98|isbn=978-3-96327-004-8|language=en|quote=In addition the residential schools aimed at separating children from the influence of their parents in order to educate them in the non-Native way.<br> &nbsp; &nbsp; WHEREAS, issues of non-native American sources entering the reservation and school systems with their own welfare in mind; and their entities are utilizing individuals' names without consent for the sake of contributors lists to mislead the public and further receive support of unsuspecting school districts, school boards, or programs<br> &nbsp; &nbsp; BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, that any individual, entity, or any other source that wishes to research or document any information regarding the Lakota Language, History, and Culture must first go through the approval of the Rosebud Sioux Tribal Council and Administration or designated entity such as Education Committee, RST Tribal Education, local Collaborations Groups, or Advisory Committee.}}</ref>

In 2006 some of the Lakota language teachers at [[Standing Rock Indian Reservation|Standing Rock]] chose to collaborate with [[Sitting Bull College]], and the Lakota Language Consortium (LLC), with the aim of expanding their language curriculum. Teachers at Standing Rock use several different orthographies.<ref name="Tausha Hauff PhD"/> Language activists at Standing Rock also refer to it as simply the "SLO" or even "Suggested Lakota Orthography."<ref name="Tausha Hauff PhD">{{cite web |last1=Hauff |first1=Tasha |title=Beyond Colors, Numbers and Animals |url=https://par.nsf.gov/servlets/purl/10234881 |website=JSTOR |publisher=University of Minnesota Press |access-date=December 16, 2021}}</ref> Tasha Hauff writes,
{{blockquote|Choosing a writing system, or orthography, is often a serious point of contention in Indigenous communities engaging in revitalization work (Hinton, 2014). While writing a traditionally oral language can itself be considered a colonial act, standardizing a writing system is fraught with political as well as pedagogical complications. Because teachers at Standing Rock were in need of language-teaching materials, and the LLC was one of the few organizations developing such resources, Standing Rock adopted the new orthography, but not without resistance from members of the community. ... The new writing system at Standing Rock was often criticized or even rejected within the community. Some fluent speakers at Standing Rock have not accepted the new writing system. There are some who continue to work in language education and who use the LLC materials but do not write in the orthography. These are usually Elders who remain in the habit of writing the way they learned. A few people at Standing Rock, however, have been offended by the notion of a standard way of writing Lakota/Dakota, especially one that seems unlike any of the systems used by Elders. Community members have been particularly wary of the SLO ["Standard Lakota Orthography"], which appears to be developed by outsiders who are not fluent speakers and would require considerable study for a fluent speaker to use.<ref name="Tausha Hauff PhD"/>}}

In 2013 Lakota teachers at [[Red Cloud Indian School]] on [[Pine Ridge Indian Reservation]] discussed their use of orthography for their K–12 students as well as adult learners. The orthography used at Red Cloud "is meant to be more phonetic than other orthographies... That means there are usually more 'H's than other versions. While many orthographies use [[tipi]]... Red Cloud spells it thípi." He continues, "the orthography also makes heavy use of diacritical marks... that is not popular among some educators and academics". Delphine Red Shirt, an Oglala Lakota tribal member and a lecturer on languages at [[Stanford University]], disagrees and prefers a Lakota orthography without diacritical marks. "I'm very against any orthography that requires a special keyboard to communicate," she said. First language speaker and veteran language teacher at Red Cloud, the late Philomine Lakota, had similar concerns with the orthography, and argues against changing the spelling forms she learned from her father. However, she did consider that, a shared curriculum could "create consistency across the region and encourage the long-term viability of the language. However, Philomine is also cognizant that it will take more than a school curriculum to preserve the language."<ref name="Rapid City Journal">{{cite web |last1=Simmons-Ritchie |first1=Daniel |title=Red Cloud School Fights to Save Lakota Language |url=https://www.nativetimes.com/index.php/culture/9382-red-cloud-school-fights-to-save-lakota-language?tmpl=component |website=Native Times |publisher=Rapid City Journal |access-date=December 16, 2021}}</ref> She added, "In order for a language to survive, it can't simply be taught from the top. A language is a living thing and students need to breathe life into it daily; talking with friends, family and elders in Lakota".<ref name="Rapid City Journal"/>

In 2018, at the [[Cheyenne River Indian Reservation]], Lakota speaker Manny Iron Hawk and his wife Renee Iron Hawk discussed opening an immersion school and the difficulties around choosing an orthography to write Lakota; Mr. Iron Hawk voiced support for the LLC (SLO) Orthography, saying it was accessible to second language learners, but know not all agreed with him.<ref name="West River Eagle">{{cite web |last1=Rust |first1=Jody |title=Immersion School Seeks to spark everyday use of Lakota language and preserve cultural identity |url=https://www.westrivereagle.com/articles/immersion-school-seeks-to-spark-everyday-use-of-lakota-language-preserve-cultural-identity/ |website=West River Eagle |date=8 August 2018 |access-date=December 16, 2021}}</ref> Others in the community voiced a preference for the tribe creating their own orthography. While Mr. Iron Hawk supports this approach, Renee Iron Hawk also expressed a sense of urgency, saying "We should just use what we have, and then fix and replace it, but we need to start speaking it now". The Iron Hawks both agreed that too much time has been spent arguing over which orthography to use or not use, and not enough time is spent teaching and speaking the language.<ref name="West River Eagle"/>


On May 3, 2022, the Tribal Council of the [[Standing Rock Sioux]], in a near-unanimous vote, banished the Lakota Language Consortium (and specifically, LLC linguist Jan Ullrich and co-founder Wilhelm Meya) from ever again setting foot on the reservation. The council's decision was based on the LLC's history with not only the Standing Rock community, but also with at least three other communities that also voiced concerns about Meya and the LLC, "saying he broke agreements over how to use recordings, language materials and historical records, or used them without permission."<ref name=NBC-LLCBanished>{{cite web|author-last=Brewer|author-first=Graham Lee|url=https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/native-american-language-preservation-rcna31396|title=Lakota elders helped a white man preserve their language. Then he tried to sell it back to them.|work=[[NBC News]]|date=3 June 2022|accessdate=3 June 2022}}</ref><ref name=Res150-22>{{cite web|author= Standing Rock Tribal Council|url=https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/22048660-standing-rock-banishment-resolution?responsive=1&title=1
All [[morpheme|monomorphemic]] words have one vowel which carries primary [[Stress (linguistics)|stress]] and has a higher tone than all other vowels in the word. This is generally the vowel of the second syllable of the word, but often the first syllable can be stressed, and occasionally other syllables as well. Stress is generally indicated with an acute accent: {{angle bracket|á}}, etc. Compound words will have stressed vowels in each component; proper spelling will write compounds with a hyphen. Thus ''máza-ská'', literally "metal-white", i.e. "silver; money" has two stressed vowels, the first ''a'' in each component. If it were written without the hyphen, as ''mazaska'', it would imply a single main stress.
|title=Standing Rock banishment resolution|work=[[NBC News]]|date=3 June 2022|accessdate=3 June 2022}}</ref>


===Orthography===
=== LLC alphabet ===
The majority of educational institutions across Lakota country adopted the writing system of the ''New Lakota Dictionary'' as the standard orthography. It is used, among other places, at the [[Sitting Bull College]], Oglala Lakota College, by all schools of the [[Standing Rock Sioux Tribe]], by the majority of teachers of the Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe, in almost all schools on Pine Ridge and Rosebud Reservations.<ref name="ReferenceA"/>. [[Sinte Gleska University]] is said to have been using an orthography developed by [[Albert White Hat]],<ref>{{cite book|author=Arlene B. Hirschfelder|title=Native Heritage: Personal Accounts by American Indians, 1790 to the Present|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=a2OhBCKfo-sC|year=1995|publisher=VNR AG|isbn=978-0-02-860412-1}}</ref> but apart from one elementary level textbook no literature, learning materials or dictionaries have been developed with this orthography and the spelling system is not used by Sinte Gleska University language instructors during classes. Historically several orthographies as well as ''[[ad hoc]]'' spelling have been used to write the Lakota language.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.lmp.ucla.edu/Profile.aspx?menu=004&LangID=3 |title=Language Materials Project: Lakota |publisher=UCLA |accessdate=23 Dec 2010}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|last=Powers |first=William K. |url=https://www.jstor.org/pss/680162 |title=Comments on the Politics of Orthography |journal=American Anthropologist |volume=92 |year=1990 |page=496 |accessdate=23 Dec 2010|doi=10.1525/aa.1990.92.2.02a00190}}</ref><ref>Palmer, 2</ref> The spelling system of the ''New Lakota Dictionary'' is presented below.


The "Standard Lakota Orthography" as the LLC calls it, is in principle phonemic, which means that each character ([[grapheme]]) represents one distinctive sound ([[phoneme]]), except for the distinction between glottal and velar aspiration, which is treated phonetically.
The vowels are ''a, e, i, o, u;'' nasal vowels are ''aŋ, iŋ, uŋ.'' [[Pitch accent]] is marked with an [[acute accent]]: á, é, í, ó, ú, áŋ, íŋ, úŋ on stressed vowels (which receive a higher tone than non-stressed ones)<ref>Cho, Taehong. Some phonological and phonetic aspects of stress and intonation in Lakhota: a preliminary report.
Published as a PDF at :[http://www.humnet.ucla.edu/linguistics/people/grads/taehong/Lakhota.pdf humnet.ucla.edu]</ref>


Lakota vowels are {{angbr|a, e, i, o, u}} nasal vowels are ''aŋ, iŋ, uŋ.'' [[Pitch accent]] is marked with an [[acute accent]]: {{angbr|á, é, í, ó, ú, áŋ, íŋ, úŋ}} on stressed vowels (which receive a higher tone than non-stressed ones)<ref>Cho, Taehong. "Some phonological and phonetic aspects of stress and intonation in Lakhota: a preliminary report", Published as a PDF at :[http://www.humnet.ucla.edu/linguistics/people/grads/taehong/Lakhota.pdf humnet.ucla.edu "Lakhota"], Linguistics, UCLA</ref>
The following consonants approximate their IPA values: ''b, g, h, k, l, m, n, p, s, t, w, z. Y'' has its English value of {{IPA|/j/}}. An apostrophe, ’, is used for [[glottal stop]].


The following consonants approximate their IPA values: {{angbr|b, g, h, k, l, m, n, ŋ, p, s, t, w, z}}. {{angbr|Y}} has its English value of {{IPA|/j/}}. An apostrophe, {{angbr|'}}, is used for the [[glottal stop]].
A [[caron]] is used for sounds which are not written with Latin letters in the IPA: ''č'' {{IPA|/tʃ/}}, ''ǧ'' {{IPA|/ʁ/}}, ''ȟ'' {{IPA|/χ/}}, ''š'' {{IPA|/ʃ/}}, ''ž'' {{IPA|/ʒ/}}. Aspirates are written with ''h: čh, kh, ph, th,'' and velar frication with ''ȟ: kȟ, pȟ, tȟ.'' Ejectives are written with an apostrophe: ''č’, ȟ’, k’, p’, s’, š’, t’.


The spelling used in modern popular texts is often written without diacritics. Besides failing to mark stress, this also results in the confusion of numerous consonants: {{IPA|/s/}} and {{IPA|/ʃ/}} are both written ''s'', {{IPA|/h/}} and {{IPA|/χ/}} are both written ''h'', and the aspirate stops are written like the unaspirates, as ''p, t, c, k''.
A [[caron]] is used for sounds, other than {{IPA|/ŋ/}}, which are not written with Latin letters in the IPA: {{angbr|č}} {{IPA|//}}, {{angbr|ǧ}} {{IPA|/ʁ/}}, {{angbr|ȟ}} {{IPA|/χ/}}, {{angbr|š}} {{IPA|/ʃ/}}, {{angbr|ž}} {{IPA|/ʒ/}}. Aspirates are written with {{angbr|h}}: {{angbr|čh, kh, ph, th,}} and [[Velar fricative|velar frication]] with {{angbr|ȟ}}: {{angbr|kȟ, pȟ, tȟ.}} Ejectives are written with an apostrophe: {{angbr|č', ȟ', k', p', s', š', t'}}.


The spelling used in modern popular texts is often written without [[diacritic]]s. Besides failing to mark stress, this also results in the confusion of numerous consonants: {{IPA|/s/}} and {{IPA|/ʃ/}} are both written {{angbr|s}}, {{IPA|/h/}} and {{IPA|/χ/}} are both written {{angbr|h}}, and the aspirate stops are written like the unaspirates, as {{angbr|p, t, c, k}}.
====Alphabet====


{{col-begin}}{{col-2}}
Standard Lakota Orthography, as used by majority of schools, is in principle phonemic, which means that each character ([[grapheme]]) represents only one distinctive sound ([[phoneme]]), except for the distinction between glottal and velar aspiration which is treated phonetically.
{{col-start}}{{col-2}}
{|class=wikitable
{|class=wikitable
|+Lakota alphabet
|+Lakota alphabet
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|{{IPA|[tʃʰ]}}
|{{IPA|[tʃʰ]}}
|-
|-
|'''Č’&nbsp;č’'''
|'''Č'&nbsp;č''''
|č'ó
|č’ó
|{{IPA|[tʃʼ]}}
|{{IPA|[tʃʼ]}}
|-
|-
Line 257: Line 294:
|{{IPA|[kˣ]}}
|{{IPA|[kˣ]}}
|-
|-
|'''K’&nbsp;k’'''
|'''K'&nbsp;k''''
|k'o
|k’o
|{{IPA|[kʼ]}}
|{{IPA|[kʼ]}}
|-
|-
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|ma
|ma
|{{IPA|[m]}}
|{{IPA|[m]}}
|}{{col-2}}
{|class=wikitable
|+&nbsp;
|-
!Letter
!Name of the letter
!Usual phonetic value ([[International Phonetic Alphabet|IPA]])
|-
|-
|'''N&nbsp;n'''
|'''N&nbsp;n'''
Line 296: Line 326:
|{{IPA|[pˣ]}}
|{{IPA|[pˣ]}}
|-
|-
|'''P’&nbsp;p’'''
|'''P'&nbsp;p''''
|p'o
|p’o
|{{IPA|[pʼ]}}
|{{IPA|[pʼ]}}
|-
|-
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|{{IPA|[tˣ]}}
|{{IPA|[tˣ]}}
|-
|-
|'''T’&nbsp;t’'''
|'''T'&nbsp;t''''
|t'o
|t’o
|{{IPA|[tʼ]}}
|{{IPA|[tʼ]}}
|-
|-
Line 348: Line 378:
|{{IPA|[ʒ]}}
|{{IPA|[ʒ]}}
|-
|-
|'
|'''’'''
|khéze
|khéze
|{{IPA|[ʔ]}}
|{{IPA|[ʔ]}}
|}{{col-end}}
|}{{col-end}}


All digraphs (i.e. characters created by two letters, such as kh, kȟ, k’) are treated as groups of individual letters in alphabetization. Thus for example the word 'čhíŋ' precedes 'čónala' in a dictionary.
All digraphs (i.e. characters created by two letters, such as kh, kȟ, k') are treated as groups of individual letters in alphabetization. Thus for example the word {{lang|lkt|čhíŋ}} precedes {{lang|lkt|čónala}} in a dictionary.


=== Curley alphabet ===
===Phonological processes===
In 1982, Lakota educator Leroy Curley (1935–2012<!--see obituary at https://www.familyfuneralhome.net/obituary/1704220-->) devised a 41-letter circular alphabet.<ref name="Curley">{{cite news |title=Ten studies in the alphabet of the Lakota language |url=https://www.lakotatimes.com/articles/ten-studies-in-the-alphabet-of-the-lakota-language |work=[[Lakota Times]] |date=13 November 2008}}</ref><!--also mentioned in Brewer's June 3rd 2023 NBC News report-->

A common phonological process which occurs in rapid speech is ''vowel contraction'', which generally results from the loss of an intervocalic glide. Vowel contraction results in phonetic long vowels ([[Phoneme|phonemically]] a sequence of two identical vowels), with falling pitch if the first underlying vowel is stressed, and rising pitch if the second underlying vowel is stressed: ''kê:'' (falling tone), "he said that", from ''kéye''; ''hǎ:pi'' (rising tone), "clothing", from ''hayápi''. If one of the vowels is nasalized, the resulting long vowel is also nasalized: ''čhaŋ̌:pi'', "sugar", from ''čhaŋháŋpi''.<ref name="rood96" />

When two vowels of unequal height contract, or when feature contrasts exist between the vowels and the glide, two new phonetic vowels, {{IPA|[æː]}} and {{IPA|[ɔː]}}, result:<ref name="rood96" /> ''iyæ̂:'', "he left for there", from ''iyáye''; ''mitȟa:'', "it's mine", from ''mitȟáwa''.

The plural [[Clitic|enclitic]] ''=pi'' is frequently changed in rapid speech when preceding the enclitics ''=kte'', ''=kiŋ'', ''=kštó'', or ''=na''. If the vowel preceding ''=pi'' is high, ''=pi'' becomes [u]; if the vowel is non-high, ''=pi'' becomes [o] (if the preceding vowel is nasalized, then the resulting vowel is also nasalized): ''hi=pi=kte'', "they will arrive here", [hiukte]; ''yatkáŋ=pi=na'', "they drank it and...", {{IPA|[jatkə̃õna]}}.<ref name="rood96" />

Lakota also exhibits some traces of sound symbolism among fricatives, where the [[point of articulation]] changes to reflect intensity: ''zí'', "it's yellow", ''ží'', "it's tawny", ''ǧí'', "it's brown".<ref>{{cite book|last=Mithun |first=Marianne |year=2007 |title=The Languages of Native North America|location=Cambridge |publisher=Cambridge University Press|page=33}}</ref> (Compare with the similar examples in [[Mandan language#Vocabulary|Mandan]].)


==Grammar==
==Grammar==
Line 369: Line 392:
===Word order===
===Word order===


The basic word order of Lakota is [[subject–object–verb]], although the order can be changed for expressive purposes (placing the object before the subject to bring the object into focus or placing the subject after the verb to emphasize its status as established information). It is [[Adposition#Postpositions|postpositional]], with adpositions occurring after the head nouns: ''mas'óphiye él'', "at the store" (literally 'store at'); ''thípi=kiŋ ókšaŋ'', "around the house" (literally 'house=the around') (Rood and Taylor 1996).
The basic word order of Lakota is [[subject–object–verb]], although the order can be changed for expressive purposes (placing the object before the subject to bring the object into focus or placing the subject after the verb to emphasize its status as established information). It is [[adposition#Postpositions|postpositional]], with adpositions occurring after the head nouns: {{lang|lkt|mas'óphiye él}}, "at the store" (literally 'store at'); {{lang|lkt|2=thípi=kiŋ ókšaŋ}}, "around the house" (literally 'house=the around') (Rood and Taylor 1996).


Rood and Taylor (1996) suggest the following template for basic word order. Items in parenthesis are optional; only the verb is required. It is therefore possible to produce a grammatical sentence that contains only a verb.
Rood and Taylor (1996) suggest the following template for basic word order. Items in parentheses are optional; only the verb is required. It is therefore possible to produce a grammatical sentence that contains only a verb.
<blockquote>(interjection) (conjunction) (adverb(s)) (nominal) (nominal) (nominal) (adverb(s)) verb (enclitic(s)) (conjunction)</blockquote>
<blockquote>(interjection) (conjunction) (adverb(s)) (nominal) (nominal) (nominal) (adverb(s)) verb (enclitic(s)) (conjunction)</blockquote>


===Interjections===
===Interjections===


When [[interjection]]s appear, they begin the sentence. A small number of interjections are used only by one gender, for instance the interjection expressing disbelief is ''ečéš'' for women but ''hóȟ'' for men, for calling attention women say ''máŋ'' while men use ''wáŋ''. Most interjections, however, are used by both genders.<ref name="ReferenceA"/>
When [[interjection]]s are used, they begin the sentence or end it. A small number of interjections are used only by one gender, for instance the interjection expressing disbelief is {{lang|lkt|ečéš}} for women but {{lang|lkt|hóȟ}} for men; for calling attention women say {{lang|lkt|máŋ}} while men use {{lang|lkt|wáŋ}}. Most interjections, however, are used by both genders.


===Conjunctions===
===Conjunctions===


It is common for a sentence to begin with a conjunction. Both ''caŋke'' and ''yuŋkaŋ'' can be translated as ''and''; ''k’eyaš'' is similar to English ''but''. Each of these conjunctions joins clauses. In addition, the conjunction ''na'' joins nouns or phrases.
It is common for a sentence to begin with a conjunction. Both {{lang|lkt|čhaŋké}} and {{lang|lkt|yuŋkȟáŋ}} can be translated as ''and''; {{lang|lkt|k’éyaš}} is similar to English ''but''. Each of these conjunctions joins clauses. In addition, the conjunction {{lang|lkt|na}} joins nouns or phrases.


===Adverbs and postpositions===
===Adverbs, postpositions and derived modifiers===


Lakota uses [[Preposition and postposition|postpositions]], which are similar to English prepositions, but follow their noun complement. [[Adverb]]s or postpositional phrases can describe manner, location, or reason. There are also [[Interrogative word|interrogative]] adverbs, which are used to form questions.
Lakota uses [[preposition and postposition|postpositions]], which are similar to English prepositions, but follow their noun complement. [[Adverb]]s or postpositional phrases can describe manner, location, or reason. There are also [[interrogative word|interrogative]] adverbs, which are used to form questions.


====Synonymity in the postpositions él and ektá====
====Synonymity in the postpositions {{lang|lkt|él}} and {{lang|lkt|ektá}}====


To the non-Lakota speaker, the postpositions él and ektá sound like they can be interchangeable, but although they are full synonyms of each other, they are used in different occasions. Semantically (word meaning), they are used as locational and directional tools. In the English language they can be compared to prepositions like "at", "in", and "on" (when used as locatives) on the one hand, and "at", "in", and "on" (when used as directionals), "to", "into", and "onto", on the other. (Pustet 2013)
To the non-Lakota speaker, the postpositions {{lang|lkt|él}} and {{lang|lkt|ektá}} sound like they can be interchangeable, but although they are full synonyms of each other, they are used in different occasions. Semantically (word meaning), they are used as locational and directional tools. In the English language they can be compared to prepositions like "at", "in", and "on" (when used as locatives) on the one hand, and "at", "in", and "on" (when used as directionals), "to", "into", and "onto", on the other. (Pustet 2013)


A pointer for when to use él and when to use ektá can be determined by the concepts of location (motionless) or motion; and space vs. time. These features can produce four different combinations, also called semantic domains, which can be arranged as follows (Pustet 2013):
A pointer for when to use {{lang|lkt|él}} and when to use {{lang|lkt|ektá}} can be determined by the concepts of location (motionless) or motion; and space vs. time. These features can produce four different combinations, also called semantic domains, which can be arranged as follows (Pustet 2013):


1.- space / rest: "in the house" [thípi ki él] (This sentence is only describing location of an object, no movement indicated)
# space / rest: "in the house" [thípi kiŋ él] (This sentence is only describing location of an object, no movement indicated)
# space / motion: "to the house [thípi kiŋ ektá] (This sentence is referring to movement of a subject, it is directional in nature)
# time / rest: "in the winter" [waníyetu kiŋ él] (This sentence refers to a static moment in time, which happens to be during winter)
# time / motion: "in/towards the winter" [waníyetu kiŋ ektá] (Pustet 2013) (This sentence is delegated to time, but time which is soon to change to another season)


Summed up, when a context describes no motion, {{lang|lkt|él}} is the appropriate postposition; when in motion, {{lang|lkt|ektá}} is more appropriate. They are both used in matters of time and space.
2.- space / motion: "to the house [thípi ki ektá] (This sentence is referring to movement of a subject, it is directional in nature)

3.- time / rest: "in the winter" [waníyetu ki él] (This sentence refers to a static moment in time, which happens to be during winter)

4.- time / motion: "in/towards the winter" [waníyetu ki ektá] (Pustet 2013) (This sentence is delegated to time, but time which is soon to change to another season)

Summed up, when a context describes no motion, él is the appropriate postposition; when in motion, ektá is more appropriate. They are both used in matters of time and space.


===Nouns and pronouns===
===Nouns and pronouns===


As mentioned above, [[Noun phrase|nominals]] are optional in Lakota, but when nouns appear the basic word order is subject–object–verb. Pronouns are not common, but may be used [[Contrast (linguistics)|contrastively]] or emphatically.
As mentioned above, [[noun phrase|nominals]] are optional in Lakota, but when nouns appear the basic word order is subject–object–verb. Pronouns are not common, but may be used [[contrast (linguistics)|contrastively]] or emphatically.


Lakota has four [[Article (grammar)|articles]]: ''waŋ'' is indefinite, similar to English ''a'' or ''an'', and ''kiŋ'' is definite, similar to English ''the''. In addition, ''waŋjí'' is an indefinite article used with hypothetical or [[Irrealis mood|irrealis]] objects, and ''k’uŋ'' is a definite article used with nouns that have been mentioned previously.
Lakota has four [[article (grammar)|articles]]: {{lang|lkt|waŋ}} is indefinite, similar to English ''a'' or ''an'', and {{lang|lkt|kiŋ}} is definite, similar to English ''the''. In addition, {{lang|lkt|waŋží}} is an indefinite article used with hypothetical or [[irrealis mood|irrealis]] objects, and {{lang|lkt|k’uŋ}} is a definite article used with nouns that have been mentioned previously.


===Demonstratives===
===Demonstratives===


There are also nine [[demonstrative]]s, which can function either as pronouns or as [[Determiner (class)|determiners]].
There are also nine [[demonstrative]]s, which can function either as pronouns or as [[determiner (class)|determiners]].


{| border="1" cellpadding="2" class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable"
! rowspan=2 |
|
! colspan=3 | Distance from speaker
! colspan=3 | Distance from speaker
|-
|-
! near the speaker
|
!'''near'''
! near the listener
! away from both speaker and listener
!'''neutral'''
!'''far'''
|-
|-
| '''singular''' || lé || hé || ká
! singular
| {{lang|lkt|lé}} || {{lang|lkt|hé}} || {{lang|lkt|ká}}
|-
|-
! dual
| '''dual''' || lenáos/<br>lenáyos || henáos/<br>henáyos || kanáos/<br>kanáyos
| {{lang|lkt|lenáos}} || {{lang|lkt|henáos}} || {{lang|lkt|kanáos}}
|-
|-
! plural
| '''plural''' || lená || hená || kaná
| {{lang|lkt|lená}} || {{lang|lkt|hená}} || {{lang|lkt|kaná}}
|}
|}

The demonstrative ''hé'' is the most neutral. Once a noun has been located, either by pointing or by description, in space or in the listener’s mind, ''hé'' can then be used. Before that, ''lé'' or ''ká'' is usually used to demonstrate exactly what is meant, although hé may also be used while pointing.


===Verbs===
===Verbs===


Verbs are the only word class that are obligatory in a Lakota sentence. Verbs can be active, naming an action, or [[Stative verb|stative]], describing a property. (Note that in English, such descriptions are usually made with [[adjective]]s.)
Verbs are the only word class that are obligatory in a Lakota sentence. Verbs can be active, naming an action, or [[Stative verb|stative]], describing a property. (In English, such descriptions are usually made with [[adjective]]s.)


Verbs are [[Inflection|inflected]] for first-, second- or third [[Grammatical person|person]], and for singular, [[Dual (grammatical number)|dual]] or plural [[grammatical number]].
Verbs are [[Inflection|inflected]] for first-, second- or third [[Grammatical person|person]], and for singular, [[Dual (grammatical number)|dual]] or plural [[grammatical number]].
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First person arguments may be singular, [[Dual (grammatical number)|dual]], or plural; second or third person arguments may be singular or plural.
First person arguments may be singular, [[Dual (grammatical number)|dual]], or plural; second or third person arguments may be singular or plural.


{| class="wikitable"
'''Subject of active verbs'''
|+ Subject of active verbs
{| border="1" cellpadding="2" class="wikitable"
|
!
|'''singular'''
! singular
|'''dual'''
! dual
|'''plural'''
! plural
|-
|-
| '''first person''' || wa- || uŋ(k)- || uŋ(k)- -pi
! first person
| wa- || uŋ(k)- || uŋ(k)- ... -pi
|-
|-
| '''second person''' || ya- || || ya- -pi
! second person
| ya- || || ya- ... -pi
|-
|-
| '''third person''' || ''[[Markedness|unmarked]]'' || || -pi
! third person
| ''[[Markedness|unmarked]]'' || || -pi
|}
|}


'''Examples:''' ''máni'' "He walks." ''mánipi'' "They walk."
'''Examples:''' ''máni'' "He walks." ''mánipi'' "They walk."


{| class="wikitable"
'''Subject of stative verbs'''
|+ Subject of stative verbs
{| border="1" cellpadding="2" class="wikitable"
|
!
|'''singular'''
! singular
|'''dual'''
! dual
|'''plural'''
! plural
|-
|-
| '''first person''' || ma- || uŋ(k)- || uŋ(k)- -pi
! first person
| ma- || uŋ(k)- || uŋ(k)- ... -pi
|-
|-
| '''second person''' || ni- || || ni- -pi
! second person
| ni- || || ni- ... -pi
|-
|-
| '''third person''' || ''unmarked'' || || -pi
! third person
| ''unmarked'' || || -pi
|}
|}


{| class="wikitable"
'''Object of transitive verbs'''
|+ Object of transitive verbs
{| border="1" cellpadding="2" class="wikitable"
!
|
|'''singular'''
! singular
|'''dual'''
! dual
|'''plural'''
! plural
|-
|-
| '''first person''' || ma- || || uŋ(k)- -pi
! first person
| ma- || || uŋ(k)- ... -pi
|-
|-
| '''second person''' || ni- || || ni- -pi
! second person
| ni- || || ni- ... -pi
|-
|-
| '''third person''' || ''unmarked'' || || -wicha-
! third person
| ''unmarked'' || || -wicha-
|}
|}


'''Example:''' ''waŋwíčhayaŋke'' "He looked at them" from ''waŋyáŋkA'' "to look at something/somebody".
'''Example:''' ''waŋwíčhayaŋke'' "He looked at them" from ''waŋyáŋkA'' "to look at something/somebody".


'''Subject and object pronouns in one verb'''<ref name="ReferenceA"/><br>
'''Subject and object pronouns in one verb'''<br/>
If both the subject and object need to be marked, two affixes occur on the verb. Below is a table illustrating this. Subject affixes are marked in ''italics'' and object affixes are marked in <u>underline</u>. Some affixes encompass both subject and object (such as ''čhi''- ...). The symbol '''∅''' indicates a lack of marking for a particular subject/object (as in the case of 3rd Person Singular forms). Cells with three forms indicate Class I, Class II, and Class III verb forms in this order.
If both the subject and object need to be marked, two affixes occur on the verb. Below is a table illustrating this. Subject affixes are marked in ''italics'' and object affixes are marked in <u>underline</u>. Some affixes encompass both subject and object (such as ''čhi''- ...). The symbol '''∅''' indicates a lack of marking for a particular subject/object (as in the case of 3rd Person Singular forms). Cells with three forms indicate Class I, Class II, and Class III verb forms in this order.

{| border="1" cellpadding="2" class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable"
|
!
|'''<u>me</u>'''
! me
|'''<u>you (sg.)</u>'''
! you (sg.)
|'''<u>him/her/it; them (inanimate)</u>'''
! him/her/it; them (inanimate)
|'''<u>us</u>'''
! us
|'''<u>you (pl.)</u>'''
! you (pl.)
|'''<u>them (animate)</u>'''
! them (animate)
|-
|-
! I
| '''''I''''' || || ''čhi''-<sup>1</sup> ... || ''wa''<u>∅</u>- ...<br>''bl''<u>∅</u>- ...<br>''m''<u>∅</u>- ... || || ''čhi''- ... -<u>pi</u> || <u>wiĉha</u>''wa''- ...<br><u>wiĉha</u>''bl''- ...<br><u>wiĉha</u>''m''- ...
| || ''čhi''-<sup>1</sup> ... || ''wa''<u>∅</u>- ...<br>''bl''<u>∅</u>- ...<br>''m''<u>∅</u>- ... || || ''čhi''- ... -<u>pi</u> || <u>wičha</u>''wa''- ...<br><u>wičha</u>''bl''- ...<br><u>wičha</u>''m''- ...
|-
|-
! you (sg.)
| '''''you (sg.)''''' || <u>ma</u>''ya''- ...<br><u>ma</u>''yal''-<sup>2</sup> ...<br><u>ma</u>''yan''- ... || || ''ya''<u>∅</u>- ...<br>''l''<u>∅</u>- ...<br>''n''<u>∅</u>- ... || <u>uŋ</u>''ya''- ... -<u>pi</u><br><u>uŋ</u>''l''- ... -<u>pi</u><br><u>uŋ</u>''n''- ... -<u>pi</u> || || <u>wiĉha</u>''ya''- ...<br><u>wiĉha</u>''l''- ...<br><u>wiĉha</u>''n''- ...
| <u>ma</u>''ya''- ...<br><u>ma</u>''yal''-<sup>2</sup> ...<br><u>ma</u>''yan''- ... || || ''ya''<u>∅</u>- ...<br>''l''<u>∅</u>- ...<br>''n''<u>∅</u>- ... || <u>uŋ</u>''ya''- ... -<u>pi</u><br><u>uŋ</u>''l''- ... -<u>pi</u><br><u>uŋ</u>''n''- ... -<u>pi</u> || || <u>wičha</u>''ya''- ...<br><u>wičha</u>''l''- ...<br><u>wičha</u>''n''- ...
|-
|-
! he/she/it
| '''''he/she/it''''' || <u>ma</u>''∅''- ... || <u>ni</u>''∅''- ... || <u>∅</u>''∅''- ... || <u>uŋ(k)</u>''∅''- ... -<u>pi</u> || <u>ni</u>''∅''- ... -<u>pi</u> || <u>wičha</u>''∅''- ...
| <u>ma</u>''∅''- ... || <u>ni</u>''∅''- ... || <u>∅</u>''∅''- ... || <u>uŋ(k)</u>''∅''- ... -<u>pi</u> || <u>ni</u>''∅''- ... -<u>pi</u> || <u>wičha</u>''∅''- ...
|-
|-
! we
| '''''we''''' || || ''uŋ''<u>ni</u>-<sup>3</sup> ... -''pi'' || ''uŋ(k)''<u>∅</u>- ... -''pi'' || || ''uŋ''<u>ni</u>- ... -''<u>pi</u>'' || <u>wičha</u>''uŋ(k)''-<sup>4</sup> ... -''pi''
| || ''uŋ''<u>ni</u>-<sup>3</sup> ... -''pi'' || ''uŋ(k)''<u>∅</u>- ... -''pi'' || || ''uŋ''<u>ni</u>- ... -''<u>pi</u>'' || <u>wičha</u>''uŋ(k)''-<sup>4</sup> ... -''pi''
|-
|-
! you (pl.)
| '''''you (pl.)''''' || <u>ma</u>''ya''- ... -''pi''<br> <u>ma</u>''yal''- ... -''pi''<br> <u>ma</u>''yan''- ... -''pi'' || || ''ya''<u>∅</u>- ... -''pi''<br> ''l''<u>∅</u>- ... -''pi''<br> ''n''<u>∅</u>- ... -''pi'' || <u>uŋ</u>''ya''- ... -''<u>pi</u>''<sup>5</sup><br> <u>uŋ</u>''l''- ... -''<u>pi</u>''<br> <u>uŋ</u>''n''- ... -''<u>pi</u>'' || || <u>wičha</u>''ya''- ... -''pi''<br> <u>wičha</u>''l''- ... -''pi''<br> <u>wičha</u>''n''- ... -''pi''
| <u>ma</u>''ya''- ... -''pi''<br> <u>ma</u>''yal''- ... -''pi''<br> <u>ma</u>''yan''- ... -''pi'' || || ''ya''<u>∅</u>- ... -''pi''<br> ''l''<u>∅</u>- ... -''pi''<br> ''n''<u>∅</u>- ... -''pi'' || <u>uŋ</u>''ya''- ... -''<u>pi</u>''<sup>5</sup><br> <u>uŋ</u>''l''- ... -''<u>pi</u>''<br> <u>uŋ</u>''n''- ... -''<u>pi</u>'' || || <u>wičha</u>''ya''- ... -''pi''<br> <u>wičha</u>''l''- ... -''pi''<br> <u>wičha</u>''n''- ... -''pi''
|-
|-
! they
| '''''they''''' || <u>ma</u>- ... -''pi'' || <u>ni</u>- ... -''pi'' || ... -<u>∅</u>''pi'' || <u>uŋ</u>- ... -''<u>pi</u>'' || <u>ni</u>- ... -''pi'' || <u>wičha</u>- ... -''pi''
| <u>ma</u>- ... -''pi'' || <u>ni</u>- ... -''pi'' || ... -<u>∅</u>''pi'' || <u>uŋ</u>- ... -''<u>pi</u>'' || <u>ni</u>- ... -''pi'' || <u>wičha</u>- ... -''pi''
|}
|}


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Some enclitics indicate the aspect, mood, or number of the verb they follow. There are also various [[interrogative]] enclitics, which in addition to marking an utterance as a question show finer distinctions of meaning. For example, while ''he'' is the usual question-marking enclitic, ''huŋwó'' is used for [[rhetorical question]]s or in formal [[Public speaking|oratory]], and the [[dubitative mood|dubitative]] ''wa'' functions somewhat like a [[tag question]] in English (Rood and Taylor 1996; Buchel 1983). (See also the section below on men and women's speech.)
Some enclitics indicate the aspect, mood, or number of the verb they follow. There are also various [[interrogative]] enclitics, which in addition to marking an utterance as a question show finer distinctions of meaning. For example, while ''he'' is the usual question-marking enclitic, ''huŋwó'' is used for [[rhetorical question]]s or in formal [[Public speaking|oratory]], and the [[dubitative mood|dubitative]] ''wa'' functions somewhat like a [[tag question]] in English (Rood and Taylor 1996; Buchel 1983). (See also the section below on men and women's speech.)


=====Men's and women's speech=====
====Men's and women's speech====

A small number of enclitics (approximately eight) differ in form based on the gender of the speaker. ''Yeló'' (men) ''ye'' (women) mark mild assertions. ''Kštó'' (women only according to most sources) marks strong assertion. ''Yo'' (men) and ''ye'' (women) mark neutral commands, ''yetȟó'' (men) and ''nitȟó'' (women) mark familiar, and ''ye'' (both men and women) and ''na'' mark requests. ''He'' is used by both genders to mark direct questions, but men also use ''hųwó'' in more formal situations. ''So'' (men) and ''se'' (women) mark [[dubitative mood|dubitative]] questions (where the person being asked is not assumed to know the answer).
A small number of enclitics (approximately eight) differ in form based on the gender of the speaker. ''Yeló'' (men) ''ye'' (women) mark mild assertions. ''Kštó'' (women only according to most sources) marks strong assertion. ''Yo'' (men) and ''ye'' (women) mark neutral commands, ''yetȟó'' (men) and ''nitȟó'' (women) mark familiar, and ''ye'' (both men and women) and ''na'' mark requests. ''He'' is used by both genders to mark direct questions, but men also use ''hųwó'' in more formal situations. ''So'' (men) and ''se'' (women) mark [[dubitative mood|dubitative]] questions (where the person being asked is not assumed to know the answer).


While many [[First language|native speakers]] and [[Linguistics|linguists]] agree that certain enclitics are associated with particular [[gender]]s, such usage may not be exclusive. That is, individual men sometimes use enclitics associated with women, and vice versa (Trechter 1999).
While many [[First language|native speakers]] and [[Linguistics|linguists]] agree that certain enclitics are associated with particular [[gender]]s, such usage may not be exclusive. That is, individual men sometimes use enclitics associated with women, and vice versa (Trechter 1999).


{| class="wikitable"
'''Examples of enclitic usage'''
|+ Examples of enclitic usage
{| border="1" cellpadding="2" class="wikitable"
|'''Enclitic'''
! Enclitic
|'''Meaning'''
! Meaning
|'''Example'''<ref>{{cite book|last=Deloria |first=Ella |year=1932 |title=Dakota Texts|location=New York|publisher=G.E. Stechert}}</ref>
! Example<ref>{{cite book|last=Deloria |first=Ella |year=1932 |title=Dakota Texts|location=New York|publisher=G.E. Stechert}}</ref>
|'''Translation'''
! Translation
|-
|-
|''hAŋ'' || continuous || yá-he || "was going"
|''hAŋ'' || continuous || yá-he || "was going"
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|''la'' || diminutive || záptaŋla || "only five"
|''la'' || diminutive || záptaŋla || "only five"
|-
|-
|''ke'' || attenuative || wašteke || "somewhat good"
|''kA'' || attenuative || wašteke || "somewhat good"
|-
|-
|''ktA'' || irrealis || uŋyíŋ kte || "you and I will go" (future)
|''ktA'' || irrealis || uŋyíŋ kte || "you and I will go" (future)
Line 566: Line 603:
|''huŋwó'' || interrogative (masc. formal) || Tókhiya lá huŋwó? || "Where are you going?"
|''huŋwó'' || interrogative (masc. formal) || Tókhiya lá huŋwó? || "Where are you going?"
|-
|-
|''huŋwé'' || interrogative (fem. formal, obsolete) || Tákula huŋwé? || "What is it?"
|''huŋwé'' || interrogative (fem. formal, obsolete) || Hé tákula huŋwé? || "What is this little thing?"
|-
|-
|''waŋ'' || dubative question || séča waŋ || "can it be as it seems?"
|''waŋ'' || dubitative question || séča waŋ || "can it be as it seems?"
|-
|-
|''škhé'' || evidential || yá-ha škhé || "he was going, I understand"
|''škhé'' || evidential || yá-ha škhé || "he was going, I understand"
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===Ablaut===
===Ablaut===
*all examples are taken from the ''New Lakota Dictionary''.
*All examples are taken from the ''New Lakota Dictionary''.


The term "ablaut" refers to the tendency of some words to change their final vowel in certain situations. Compare these sentences.
The term "[[ablaut]]" refers to the tendency of some words to change their final vowel in certain situations. Compare these sentences.


''Šúŋka kiŋ sápa čha waŋbláke.'' <br />
* ''Šúŋka kiŋ sápa čha waŋbláke.''
''Šúŋka kiŋ sápe.'' <br />
* ''Šúŋka kiŋ sápe.''
''Šúŋka kiŋ sápiŋ na tȟáŋka.''
* ''Šúŋka kiŋ sápiŋ na tȟáŋka.''


The last vowel in the word "''SápA''" changed each time. This vowel change is called "ablaut". Words which undergo this change are referred to as A-words, since, in dictionary citations, they are written ending in either -A or -Aŋ. These words are never written with a final capital letter in actual texts. Derivatives of these words generally take the ablaut as well, however there are exceptions.
The last vowel in the word "''SápA''" changed each time. This vowel change is called "ablaut". Words which undergo this change are referred to as A-words, since, in dictionary citations, they are written ending in either -A or -Aŋ. These words are never written with a final capital letter in actual texts. Derivatives of these words generally take the ablaut as well, however there are exceptions.
Line 588: Line 625:
There are three forms for ablauted words: ''-a/-aŋ'', ''-e'', ''-iŋ''. These are referred to as a/aŋ-ablaut, e-ablaut, and iŋ-ablaut respectively. Some words are ablauted by some and not others, like "gray" ''hóta'' or ''hótA''. Ablaut always depends on what word follows the ablauted word.
There are three forms for ablauted words: ''-a/-aŋ'', ''-e'', ''-iŋ''. These are referred to as a/aŋ-ablaut, e-ablaut, and iŋ-ablaut respectively. Some words are ablauted by some and not others, like "gray" ''hóta'' or ''hótA''. Ablaut always depends on what word follows the ablauted word.


====A/-Ablaut====
====A/-ablaut====


This is the basic form of the word, and is used everywhere in which the other forms are not utilized.
This is the basic form of the word, and is used everywhere in which the other forms are not utilized.


====E-Ablaut====
====E-ablaut====


There are two cases in which e-ablaut is used.
There are two cases in which e-ablaut is used.
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=====1. Last word in sentence=====
=====1. Last word in sentence=====
;Examples
;Examples

:''Héčhiya yé'' He went there. (e-ablaut of the verb ''yÁ'')
:''Héčhiya yé'' He went there. (e-ablaut of the verb ''yÁ'')
:''Yúte'' She ate it. (e-ablaut of the verb ''yútA'')
:''Yúte'' She ate it. (e-ablaut of the verb ''yútA'')
:''Thípi kiŋ pahá akáŋl hé.'' The house stands on a cliff. (e-ablaut of the verb hÁŋ)
:''Thípi kiŋ pahá akáŋl hé.'' The house stands on a cliff. (e-ablaut of the verb ''hÁŋ'')


=====2. Followed by a word which triggers e-ablaut=====
=====2. Followed by a word which triggers e-ablaut=====
There are three classes of words which trigger e-ablaut
There are three classes of words which trigger e-ablaut


a) various enclitics, such as ''ȟča, ȟčiŋ, iŋčhéye, kačháš, kiló, kštó, któ, lakȟa, -la, láȟ, láȟčaka, ló, séčA, sékse, s’eléčheča, so, s’a, s’e, šaŋ, šni, uŋštó''<br />
# various enclitics, such as ''ȟča, ȟčiŋ, iŋčhéye, kačháš, kiló, kštó, któk, lakȟa, -la, láȟ, láȟčaka, ló, séčA, sékse, s’eléčheča, so, s’a, s’e, šaŋ, šni, uŋštó''
b) some conjunctions and articles, such as ''kiŋ, kiŋháŋ, k’éaš, k’uŋ, eháŋtaŋš''<br />
# some conjunctions and articles, such as ''kiŋ, kiŋháŋ, k’éaš, k’uŋ, eháŋtaŋš''
c) some auxiliary verbs, such as ''kapíŋ, kiníča (kiníl), lakA (la), kúŋzA, phiča, ši, wačhíŋ, -yA, -khiyA''<br />
# some auxiliary verbs, such as ''kapíŋ, kiníča (kiníl), lakA (la), kúŋzA, phiča, ši, wačhíŋ, -yA, -khiyA''


;Examples
;Examples
Line 617: Line 653:
:''Škáte s’a.'' He plays often. (enclitic)
:''Škáte s’a.'' He plays often. (enclitic)
:''Škáte ló.'' He plays. (enclitic (marking assertion))
:''Škáte ló.'' He plays. (enclitic (marking assertion))
:''Okȟáte eháŋtaŋš...'' If it is hot... (conjunctive)
:''Okȟáte háŋtaŋ...'' If it is hot... (conjunctive)
:''Sápe kiŋ'' The black one (definite article)
:''Sápe kiŋ'' The black one (definite article)
:''Glé kúŋze.'' He pretended to go home. (auxiliary verb)
:''Glé kúŋze.'' He pretended to go home. (auxiliary verb)
:''Yatké-phiča.'' It is drinkable. (auxiliary verb)
:''Yatké-phiča.'' It is drinkable. (auxiliary verb)


====Iŋ-Ablaut====
====Iŋ-ablaut====


The iŋ-ablaut (pronounced ''i'' by some) occurs only before the following words:
The ''''-ablaut (pronounced ''i'' by some) occurs only before the following words:


''ktA'' (irrealis enclitic)<br />
: ''ktA'' (irrealis enclitic)
''yetȟó'' (familiar command enclitic)<br />
: ''yetȟó'' (familiar command enclitic)
''na, naháŋ'' (and)<br />
: ''na, naháŋ'' (and)
''naíŋš'' (or, and or)<br />
: ''naíŋš'' (or, and or)
''yé'' (polite request or entreaty enclitic)
: ''yé'' (polite request or entreaty enclitic)


;Examples
;Examples
Line 641: Line 677:
==Phrases==
==Phrases==


"Háu kȟolá", literally "Hello, friend", is the most common greeting, and was transformed into the generic motion picture American Indian "[[How (greeting)|How]]!", just as the traditional feathered headdress of the Teton was "given" to all movie Indians. As "háu" is the only word in Lakota which contains a [[diphthong]], /au/, it may be a loanword from a non-Siouan language.<ref name="rood96" />
"''Háu kȟolá''", literally "Hello, friend", is the most common greeting, and was transformed into the generic motion picture American Indian "[[How (greeting)|How]]!", just as the traditional feathered headdress of the Teton was "given" to all movie Indians. As ''háu'' is the only word in Lakota which contains a [[diphthong]], {{IPA|/au/}}, it may be a loanword from a non-Siouan language.<ref name="rood96" />


== Language revitalization efforts ==
"Háu" is spoken only by men; women use the greeting "Háŋ" or "Háŋ kȟolá".
[[File:Kimberly_speaking_Lakota.webm|thumb|Lakota prayer song recorded in 2013]]
Assimilating Indigenous peoples into the expanding American society of the late 19th and early 20th centuries depended on suppression or full eradication of each tribe's unique language as the central aspect of its culture. [[Indian residential schools]] in [[American Indian residential schools|the US and Canada]] that separated Indigenous children from their parents and relatives enforced this assimilation process with beatings and other forms of violence for speaking tribal languages(Powers).{{full citation needed|date=December 2021}} The Lakota language survived this suppression. "Lakota persisted through the recognized natural immersion afforded by daily conversation in the home, the community at reservation-wide events, even in texts written in the form of letters to family and friends. people demonstrated their cultural resilience through the positive application of spoken and written Lakota." (Powers){{full citation needed|date=December 2021}}


Even so, employment opportunities were based on speaking English; a Lakota who was bilingual or spoke only English was more likely to be hired.<ref name="Andrews"/>
Other than using the word "friend", one often uses the word "cousin" or "cross-cousin" since everyone in the tribe was as family to each other. These words are very important to the speaker's tone of proper respect. The terms are as follow:<ref name="ReferenceA"/>


In 1967, the [[Red Cloud Indian School]] at [[Pine Ridge Indian Reservation|Pine Ridge]] began offering Lakota language classes. This was over two decades before the [[Native American Languages Act of 1990]].<ref name=TimelineRedCloud>{{cite web|url=https://www.redcloudschool.org/document.doc?id=83|title=Celebrating 125 Years|work=Red Cloud Country|volume=4|issue=3|date=Spring 2013|accessdate=2021-12-17}} Note: Prior to 1969, the school was known as Holy Rosary.</ref>
"Tȟaŋháŋši" N - my male cross-cousin (man speaking, term of address)<br>
"Tȟaŋháŋšitku" N - his male cross-cousin<br>
"TȟaŋháŋšiyA" V-CAUSATIVE - to have someone for a male cross-cousin


In the mid-1970s the Rosebud Reservation established their Lakota Language and Culture department at the [[Sinte Gleska University]] under the chairmanship of Ben Black Bear, Jr., who employed textbooks and orthography developed by the Colorado University Lakota Project (CULP). A few years later Black Bear was replaced as a chair of the department by [[Albert White Hat]], who discontinued the use of the Colorado University textbooks. In 1992 White Hat published a textbook with his own orthography, for use at all levels of language learning on Rosebud. Sinte Gleska University now uses the orthography developed by Albert White Hat.<ref name=Hirschfelder/>
"Haŋkáši" N - my female cross-cousin (man speaking, term of address)<br>
"Haŋkášitku" N - his female cross-cousin<br>
"HaŋkášiyA" V-CAUSATIVE - to have someone for a female cross-cousin


In 2002 Sinte Gleska University rejected the Lakota Language Consortium invitation to support their organization. Rosebud Cultural Studies teacher Randy Emery spoke to the ''Lakota Journal'', stating, "The Lakota Language Consortium has created the misleading impression that Sinte Gleska University is one of the schools that supports their organization," and that the LLC had circulated a document to this effect with other misleading information about the state of the language, "The (LLC) documentation strongly implies that there are no fluent speakers younger than the elder age group and the presentation implies that the Lakota cannot deal with the problem themselves; therefore outside help must be brought in to lead the program. This appears to us as a sugar coated attack on sovereignty".<ref name=LakotaJournal2002>{{Cite news |last = Thunder Hawk |first = Cal |title = Sinte Gleska University to reject Lakota Language Consortium membership |work = Lakota Journal - Around Lakota Country |access-date = 2021-12-15 |date = Aug 30, 2002 |url = https://calthunderhawk.tripod.com/images/final.gif |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20211215195759/https://calthunderhawk.tripod.com/images/final.gif |archive-date = 2021-12-15 |quote = Emery said, based on their review of "Lakota Language Revitalization: General Overview," a document published by the LLC and widely circulated in Lakota country by LLC this spring, Lakota Studies will not recommend SGU participation in the consortium. He continued, "The presentation suggests that a goal for the program is standardization of the language. We feel that this approach will cause problems because the language is utilized diversely. If standardization is determined to be the approach of the organization, then the question is whose version will be adopted? This will cause dissent and politics to become a factor in the process." }}</ref>
"(S)čépȟaŋši" N - my female cross-cousin (woman speaking, term of address)<br>
"(S)čépȟaŋšitku" N - her female cross-cousin<br>
"(S)čépȟaŋšiyA" V-CAUSATIVE - to have someone for a female cross-cousin


In 2008, the Red Cloud School at Pine Ridge launched their Lakota language curriculum for K–12 students.<ref name=TimelineRedCloud/> In November 2012, the incoming president of the Oglala Sioux Tribe, Bryan Brewer, announced that he intended "to lead a Lakota Language Revitalization Initiative that will focus on the creation and operation of Lakota language immersion schools and identifying all fluent Lakota speakers."<ref>{{Cite news | last = Cook | first = Andrea| title = Brewer pledges to preserve Lakota language| access-date = 2012-11-20| date = 2012-11-16| url = http://rapidcityjournal.com/news/brewer-pledges-to-preserve-lakota-language/article_ae488230-138c-50e6-ab55-55976752169d.html}}</ref> A Lakota language immersion daycare center is scheduled to open at [[Pine Ridge Indian Reservation|Pine Ridge]].<ref>{{Cite news |last = Aaron Moselle |title = Chestnut Hill native looks to revitalize "eroded" American Indian language |work = NewsWorks, WHYY |access-date = 2012-11-29 |date = November 2012 |url = http://www.newsworks.org/index.php/local/item/47231 |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20130518165344/http://www.newsworks.org/index.php/local/item/47231 |archive-date = 2013-05-18}}</ref> Also in 2012, Lakota [[Language immersion|immersion classes]] were provided for children in an experimental program at [[Sitting Bull College]] on the [[Standing Rock Reservation]], where children speak only Lakota for their first year.<ref>{{Cite news| last = Donovan| first = Lauren| title = Learning Lakota, one word at a time
"šič'éši" N - my male cross-cousin (woman speaking, term of address)<br>
| work = Bismarck Tribune| location = Bismarck, ND| access-date = 2012-11-20| date = 2012-11-11| url = http://bismarcktribune.com/news/state-and-regional/learning-lakota-one-word-at-a-time/article_0352569a-2a97-11e2-9c5c-001a4bcf887a.html}}</ref> Tom Red Bird is a Lakota teacher at the program who grew up on the Cheyenne River Reservation. He believes in the importance of teaching the language to younger generations as this would close the gap in the ages of speakers.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=DONOVAN |first1=L |title=Tribal College Program Teaches Lakota Language to Youngsters |journal=Community College Week |date=2012 |volume=25 |issue=9 |page=10}}</ref> In 2014, it is estimated that about five percent of children age four to six on [[Pine Ridge Indian Reservation]] speak Lakota.<ref>{{Cite news| last = Doering| first = Christopher| title = Indians press for funds to teach Native languages| work = Argus Leader| access-date = 2014-06-28| date = 2014-06-19
"šič'éšitku" N - her male cross-cousin<br>
| url = http://www.argusleader.com/story/news/2014/06/19/indians-press-funds-teach-native-languages/10833145/
"šič'éšiyA" V-CAUSATIVE - to have someone for a male cross-cousin
}}</ref> Language Revitalization efforts continued to be strengthened by the establishment of several independent, grassroots Lakota language immersion schools and camps, such as those at the [[Dakota Access Pipeline protests]] camps at [[Standing Rock]] in 2016.<ref name=StandingRockSchool>{{Cite news| last = Ecoffey| first = Brandon | title = School Opens In Protector Camp| access-date = 2021-12-10| date = 2016-09-01| url = https://www.lakotatimes.com/articles/school-opens-in-protector-camp/}}</ref>


On May 3, 2022, the [[Standing Rock Sioux]] Tribal Council passed Resolution Number 150-22, which, along with banishing the LLC, contains provisions to protect the Nation's [[intellectual property rights]] and [[data sovereignty]].<ref name=NBC-LLCBanished/><ref name=Res150-22/>
"Hakátaku" N - her brothers and male cross cousins, his sisters and female cross-cousins (i.e. relative requiring respect)<br>
"HakátayA" V-CAUSATIVE - to have someone for a sibling or cross-cousin of the opposite sex

==Learning Lakota: language revitalization efforts ==

Assimilating indigenous tribes into the expanding American society of the late 19th and early 20th centuries depended on suppression or full eradication of each tribe's unique language as the central aspect of its culture. Government boarding schools that separated tribal children from their parents and relatives enforced this assimilation process by corporal punishment for speaking tribal languages (Powers). The Lakota language survived this suppression. "Lakota persisted through the recognized natural immersion afforded by daily conversation in the home, the community at reservation-wide events, even in texts written in the form of letters to family and friends. people demonstrated their cultural resilience through the positive application of spoken and written Lakota." (Powers)

Even so, employment opportunities were based on speaking English; a Lakota who was bilingual or spoke only English was more likely to be hired. (Powers)<ref name="Andrews" />

Schools on the five Lakota reservation started offering Lakota language classes beginning in the early 1970s, but Lakota language instruction suffered very low quality primarily due to lack of linguistic and methodological background of the teachers. Positions of Lakota language teachers were filled with native Lakota speakers without teaching accreditation under the assumption that a native speaker is logically an effective teacher of the language. But for several decades Lakota instruction did not result in creating proficiency among graduates of reservation schools. Students and observers reported repeatedly that Lakota classes from elementary level all the way to college commonly involved mere route memorization of isolated vocabulary items (usually the terms for colors, number and animals).

In the mid 70s the situation with Lakota language instruction improved on the Rosebud Reservation where the Lakota Language and Culture department was established at the Sinte Glešká University under the chairmanship of Ben Black Bear, Jr., who promoted standardization of orthography and curricula. He employed college level textbooks and orthography developed by the Colorado University Lakota Project (CULP). A few years later Black Bear was replaced as a chair of the department by Albert White Hat who discontinued the use of the consistent phonemic orthography and the Colorado University textbooks. In 1992 White Hat published an elementary level textbook and promoted it as the only teaching material for schools of all levels in Rosebud. White Hat established his own orthography, one that is very diacritic heavy and impractical. This had a detrimental impact on the quality of instruction in Rosebud and resulted in almost complete disintegration of Lakota language teaching infrastructure in Rosebud, because school boards and administrators gradually lost trust in the effectiveness of Lakota language teachers and classes. By 2015, only one Rosebud school offered Lakota language classes and there were only 2 Lakota language teachers.

Lakota language classes continued to be offered between 1970’s and 2000’s on other Lakota reservations (Pine Ridge, Cheyenne River and Standing Rock), but the three decades did not result in developing any proficiency among students. The situation started improving gradually in early 2000’s when teacher training started to be offered to Lakota language teachers and especially after 2006 when the Lakota Summer Institute was established by the Lakota Language Consortium and the Sitting Bull College on Standing Rock. The institute offers high quality training for Lakota language teachers, educating them in Lakota linguistics and language teaching methodology. Since 2008 the institute also started offering classes for Lakota language learners.

By 2015, there has been a major improvement of Lakota language proficiency levels among students of reservation schools. This was due to teacher training available through the Lakota Summer Institute and to the adoption of consistent phonemic orthography introduced in the New Lakota Dictionary (2008) and the Lakota Grammar Handbook (2016). This orthography and the effective teaching methods enabled teachers and students for the first time to teach and learn correct pronunciation. It has been reported repeatedly that students are increasingly able to have Lakota conversations with elders.
Revitalization efforts were further strengthened by the establishment of several Lakota language immersion schools (such as the Language Nest in Standing Rock and the immersion school in Oglala, Pine Ridge).

One of the most influential and consistent figures of the Lakota Language Revitalization has been Ben Black Bear, Jr., who established the Lakota Language Department at the Siŋté Glešká University in 1970's. Since 2009 he has been teaching Lakota at the Lakota Summer Institute at Sitting Bull College in Standing Rock. He has been a long term board member of the Lakota Language Consortium and he co-authored the Lakota Audio Series and the Lakota Grammar Handbook, which is the most accurate grammar of the language and probably the most detailed grammar ever written for a Native American language.<ref>''Lakota Grammar Handbook'' (2016)</ref>


In 2004 five Lakota tribes (Pine Ridge, Standing Rock, Rosebud, Cheyenne River and Lower Brule) united with second-language education professionals and academic linguists to form the Lakota Language Consortium,<ref name="lakhota.org" /> to produce and implement a comprehensive educational effort to standardize and professionalize Lakota language teaching in tribal and neighboring public and parochial schools. This intertribal movement has resulted in sequenced textbooks, audio materials, reference books and professional teacher trainings that create a new Lakota-centered career path. In November 2012, the incoming president of the Oglala Sioux Tribe, Bryan Brewer, announced that he intended "to lead a Lakota Language Revitalization Initiative that will focus on the creation and operation of Lakota language immersion schools and identifying all fluent Lakota speakers."<ref>{{Cite news
| last = Cook
| first = Andrea
| title = Brewer pledges to preserve Lakota language
| accessdate = 2012-11-20
| date = 2012-11-16
| url = http://rapidcityjournal.com/news/brewer-pledges-to-preserve-lakota-language/article_ae488230-138c-50e6-ab55-55976752169d.html
}}</ref> A Lakota language immersion daycare center is scheduled to open at [[Pine Ridge Indian Reservation|Pine Ridge]].<ref>{{Cite news
| last = Aaron Moselle
| title = Chestnut Hill native looks to revitalize "eroded" American Indian language
| work = NewsWorks, WHYY
| accessdate = 2012-11-29
| date = November 2012
| url = http://www.newsworks.org/index.php/local/item/47231
}}</ref>

{{As of|2012}}, Lakota [[Language immersion|immersion classes]] are provided for children in an experimental program at [[Sitting Bull College]] on the [[Standing Rock Reservation]], where children speak only Lakota for their first year (Powers).<ref>{{Cite news
| last = Donovan
| first = Lauren
| title = Learning Lakota, one word at a time
| work = Bismarck Tribune
| location = Bismarck, ND
| accessdate = 2012-11-20
| date = 2012-11-11
| url = http://bismarcktribune.com/news/state-and-regional/learning-lakota-one-word-at-a-time/article_0352569a-2a97-11e2-9c5c-001a4bcf887a.html
}}</ref>
{{As of|2014}}, it is estimated that about five percent of children age four to six on [[Pine Ridge Indian Reservation]] speak Lakota.<ref>{{Cite news
| last = Doering
| first = Christopher
| title = Indians press for funds to teach Native languages
| work = Argus Leader
| accessdate = 2014-06-28
| date = 2014-06-19
| url = http://www.argusleader.com/story/news/2014/06/19/indians-press-funds-teach-native-languages/10833145/
}}</ref>


{{blockquote|It reclaimed copyrights over all language materials created by the consortium and called for their immediate return, to be placed in the care of "the first-language speakers and knowledge-keepers in our communities."<ref name=NBC-LLCBanished/><ref name=Res150-22/>}}
Lakota speakers can upload photos with Lakota language audio descriptions at the ''LiveAndTell'' website.<ref>{{Cite news
| last = Glader
| first = Paul
| title = LiveAndTell, A Crowdsourced Quest To Save Native American Languages | work = Fast Company
| accessdate = 2012-11-20
| date = 2011-07-04
| url = http://www.fastcompany.com/1764575/liveandtell-crowdsourced-quest-save-native-american-languages
}}</ref><br />


=== Lakota Language Education Program (LLEAP) ===
=== Lakota Language Education Program (LLEAP) ===
In 2011, Sitting Bull College (Fort Yates, North Dakota, Standing Rock) and the University of South Dakota began degree programs to create effective Lakota language teachers. By earning a Bachelor of Arts in education at the University of South Dakota or a Bachelor of Science in education at Sitting Bull College, students can major in "Lakota Language Teaching and Learning" as part of the Lakota Language Education Action Program, or LLEAP.


LLEAP is a four-year program designed to create at least 30 new Lakota language teachers by 2014, and was funded by $2.4 million in grants from the U.S. Department of Education. At the end of the initial phase, SBC and USD will permanently offer the Lakota Language Teaching and Learning degree as part of their regular undergraduate Education curriculum. The current LLEAP students' tuition and expenses are covered by the grant from the U.S. Department of Education. LLEAP is the first program of its kind, offering courses to create effective teachers in order to save a Native American language from going extinct, and potentially educate the 120,000 prospective Lakota speakers in the 21st century.<ref>{{cite journal | last1 = Campbell | first1 = Kimberlee | year = 2011 | title = Sitting Bull Offers New Lakota Curriculum | journal = Tribal College Journal | volume = 22 | issue = 3| pages = 69–70 }}</ref>
In 2011, Sitting Bull College (Fort Yates, North Dakota, Standing Rock) and the University of South Dakota began degree programs to create effective Lakota language teachers. By earning a Bachelor of Arts in Education at the University of South Dakota or a Bachelor of Science in Education at Sitting Bull College, students can major in "Lakota Language Teaching and Learning" as part of the Lakota Language Education Action Program, or LLEAP.

LLEAP is a four-year program designed to create at least 30 new Lakota language teachers by 2014, and was funded by $2.4 million in grants from the U.S. Department of Education. At the end of the initial phase, SBC and USD will permanently offer the Lakota Language Teaching and Learning degree as part of their regular undergraduate Education curriculum. The current LLEAP students' tuition and expenses are covered by the grant from the U.S. Department of Education. LLEAP is the first program of its kind, offering courses to create effective teachers in order to save a Native American language from going extinct, and potentially educate the 120,000 prospective Lakota speakers in the 21st century.<ref>{{cite journal | last1 = Campbell | first1 = Kimberlee | year = 2011 | title = Sitting Bull Offers New Lakota Curriculum | url = | journal = Tribal College Journal | volume = 22 | issue = 3| pages = 69–70 }}</ref>


===Government support===
===Government support===
In 1990, Senator [[Daniel Inouye]] (D-HI) sponsored the Native American Languages Act in order to preserve, protect, and promote the rights and freedoms of Native people in America to practice, develop and conduct business in their native language. This Act reversed over 200 years of American policy that would have otherwise eliminated the indigenous languages of the United States. This legislation gave support to tribal efforts to fund language education programs.<ref>{{cite web|last=Barringer|first=Felicity|title=Faded but Vibrant, Indian Languages Struggle to Keep Their Voices Alive|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1991/01/08/us/faded-but-vibrant-indian-languages-struggle-to-keep-their-voices-alive.html|work=New York Times|publisher=New York Times|accessdate=2013-10-25}}</ref>
In 1990, Senator [[Daniel Inouye]] (D-HI) sponsored the [[Native American Languages Act of 1990|Native American Languages Act]] in order to preserve, protect, and promote the rights and freedoms of Native people in America to practice, develop and conduct business in their native language. This law, which took effect on October 30, 1990, reversed over 200 years of American policy that would have otherwise eliminated the indigenous languages of the United States. This legislation gave support to tribal efforts to fund language education programs.<ref>{{cite news|last=Barringer|first=Felicity|title=Faded but Vibrant, Indian Languages Struggle to Keep Their Voices Alive|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1991/01/08/us/faded-but-vibrant-indian-languages-struggle-to-keep-their-voices-alive.html|work=[[The New York Times]]|date=8 January 1991 |access-date=2013-10-25}}</ref>


=== Self-study ===
==Self-study external links==
Some resources exist for self-study of Lakota by a person with no or limited access to native speakers. Here is a collection of selected resources currently available:
Some resources exist for self-study of Lakota by a person with no or limited access to native speakers. Here is a collection of selected resources currently available:

Additional print and electronic materials have been created by the immersion program on Pine Ridge.{{Example needed |s|date=April 2019}}


<!--Do not add commercial links to Wikipedia-->
<!--Do not add commercial links to Wikipedia-->
*''Lakota Grammar Handbook'' by Lakota Language Consortium, 2016. ({{ISBN|978-1-941461-11-2}})
*''Lakota Vocab Builder'' (a smartphone app)
*''Lakhótiya Wóglaka Po! - Speak Lakota!'' : Level 1, 2, 3, 4 & 5 Textbooks and Audio CDs by Lakota Language Consortium. (elementary/secondary school level)
*''New Lakota Dictionary''. ({{ISBN|0-9761082-9-1}})
*''New Lakota Dictionary-Online''. Free registration for learners' forum; word search and translation page; practice lessons.
*''Lakota: A Language Course for Beginners'' by Oglala Lakota College ({{ISBN|0-88432-609-8}}) (with companion 15 CDs/Tapes) (high school/college level)
*''Lakota: A Language Course for Beginners'' by Oglala Lakota College ({{ISBN|0-88432-609-8}}) (with companion 15 CDs/Tapes) (high school/college level)
*''Reading and Writing the Lakota Language'' by Albert White Hat Sr. ({{ISBN|0-87480-572-4}}) (with companion 2 tapes) (high school/college level)
*''Reading and Writing the Lakota Language'' by Albert White Hat Sr. ({{ISBN|0-87480-572-4}}) (with companion 2 tapes) (high school/college level)
Line 753: Line 720:
*''English-Lakota Dictionary'' by Bruce Ingham, RoutledgeCurzon, {{ISBN|0-7007-1378-6}}
*''English-Lakota Dictionary'' by Bruce Ingham, RoutledgeCurzon, {{ISBN|0-7007-1378-6}}
*''A Grammar of Lakota'' by Eugene Buechel, S.J. ({{OCLC|4609002}}; professional level)
*''A Grammar of Lakota'' by Eugene Buechel, S.J. ({{OCLC|4609002}}; professional level)
*The article by Rood & Taylor, in <ref name="rood96" /> (professional level)
*The article by Rood & Taylor, in<ref name="rood96" /> (professional level)
*''Dakota Texts'' by Ella Deloria (a bilingual, interlinear collection of folktales and folk narratives, plus commentaries). (University of Nebraska Press, {{ISBN|0-8032-6660-X}}; professional level) (Note: the University of South Dakota edition is monolingual, with only the English renditions.)
*''Dakota Texts'' by Ella Deloria (a bilingual, interlinear collection of folktales and folk narratives, plus commentaries). (University of Nebraska Press, {{ISBN|0-8032-6660-X}}; professional level) (Note: the University of South Dakota edition is monolingual, with only the English renditions.)
* A "Lakota Toddler" app designed for children ages 2–9 is available for the [[iPhone]].<ref>{{Cite web
* A "Lakota Toddler" app designed for children ages 2–9 is available for the [[iPhone]].<ref>{{Cite web
| title = App Shopper: Lakota Toddler (Education)
| title = App Shopper: Lakota Toddler (Education)
| accessdate = 2012-09-12
| access-date = 2012-09-12
| url = http://appshopper.com/education/lakota-toddler
| url = http://appshopper.com/education/lakota-toddler
}}</ref>
}}</ref>
Line 763: Line 730:


==Lakota influences in English==
==Lakota influences in English==
{{further|American Indian English}}
Just as people from different regions of countries have accents, Lakota Native Americans who speak English have some distinct speech patterns. These patterns are displayed in their grammatical sequences and can be heard through some phonological differences. These unique characteristics are also observed in Lakota youth, even those who only learned English.<ref>{{cite web|last=Flanigan|first=Olson|title=Language Variation Among Native Americans: Observations of Lakota English|url=http://eng.sagepub.com/content/20/2/181.extract|work=Journal of English Linguistics|accessdate=2013-10-25}}</ref>
Just as people from different regions of countries have accents, Lakota who speak English have some distinct speech patterns. These patterns are displayed in their grammatical sequences and can be heard through some phonological differences. These unique characteristics are also observed in Lakota youth, even those who only learned English.<ref>{{cite web|last=Flanigan|first=Olson|title=Language Variation Among Native Americans: Observations of Lakota English|url=http://eng.sagepub.com/content/20/2/181.extract|work=Journal of English Linguistics|access-date=2013-10-25}}</ref>


==Notes==
==Notes==
Line 769: Line 737:


==References==
==References==
{{Refbegin|30em}}
* Ullrich, Jan, with Black Bear, Ben, Jr. (2016). ''Lakota Grammar Handbook''. Lakota Language Consortium. {{ISBN|978-1-941461-11-2}}.
* Ullrich, Jan. (2008). ''New Lakota Dictionary''. Lakota Language Consortium. {{ISBN|0-9761082-9-1}}.
*Palmer, Jessica Dawn. ''The Dakota Peoples: A History of Dakota, Lakota, and Nakota through 1863.''Jefferson, NC: McFarland, 2008. {{ISBN|978-0-7864-3177-9}}.
*Palmer, Jessica Dawn. ''The Dakota Peoples: A History of Dakota, Lakota, and Nakota through 1863.''Jefferson, NC: McFarland, 2008. {{ISBN|978-0-7864-3177-9}}.
*Rood, David S. and Allan R. Taylor. (1996). ''Sketch of Lakhota, a Siouan Language''. ''[[Handbook of North American Indians]]'', Vol. 17 (Languages), pp.&nbsp;440–482. Washington DC: Smithsonian Institution. [http://lakxotaiyapi.freecyberzone.com/sk0.htm Online version].
*Rood, David S. and Allan R. Taylor. (1996). ''Sketch of Lakhota, a Siouan Language''. ''[[Handbook of North American Indians]]'', Vol. 17 (Languages), pp.&nbsp;440–482. Washington DC: Smithsonian Institution. [https://web.archive.org/web/20061101171656/http://lakxotaiyapi.freecyberzone.com/sk0.htm Online version].
* {{cite journal | last1 = Pustet | first1 = Regina | year = 2013 | title = Prototype Effects in Discourse and the Synonymy Issue: Two Lakota Postpositions | url = | journal = Cognitive Linguistics | volume = 14 | issue = 4| pages = 349–78 | doi = 10.1515/cogl.2003.014 }}
* {{cite journal | last1 = Pustet | first1 = Regina | year = 2013 | title = Prototype Effects in Discourse and the Synonymy Issue: Two Lakota Postpositions | url = https://epub.ub.uni-muenchen.de/17682/| journal = Cognitive Linguistics | volume = 14 | issue = 4| pages = 349–78 | doi = 10.1515/cogl.2003.014 }}
*{{cite journal | last1 = Powers | first1 = William K | year = 2009 | title = Saving Lakota: Commentary on Language Revitalization | url = | journal = American Indian Culture & Research Journal | volume = 33 | issue = 4| pages = 139–49 | doi=10.17953/aicr.33.4.2832x77334756478}}
*{{cite journal | last1 = Powers | first1 = William K | year = 2009 | title = Saving Lakota: Commentary on Language Revitalization | journal = American Indian Culture & Research Journal | volume = 33 | issue = 4| pages = 139–49 | doi=10.17953/aicr.33.4.2832x77334756478| url = https://escholarship.org/uc/item/80d7w03n }}
* Henne, Richard B. "Verbal Artistry: A Case for Education." ''ANTHROPOLOGY & EDUCATION QUARTERLY'' no. 4 (2009): 331-349.
* Henne, Richard B. "Verbal Artistry: A Case for Education." ''ANTHROPOLOGY & EDUCATION QUARTERLY'' no. 4 (2009): 331–349.
*{{cite journal | last1 = Sneve | first1 = Paul | year = 2013 | title = Anamnesis in the Lakota Language and Lakota Concepts of Time and Matter | url = | journal = Anglican Theological Review | volume = 95 | issue = 3| pages = 487–493 }}
*{{cite journal | last1 = Sneve | first1 = Paul | year = 2013 | title = Anamnesis in the Lakota Language and Lakota Concepts of Time and Matter | journal = Anglican Theological Review | volume = 95 | issue = 3| pages = 487–493 }}
* {{cite journal | last1 = McGinnis | first1 = Anthony R | year = 2012 | title = When Courage Was Not Enough: Plains Indians at War with the United States Army | url = | journal = Journal of Military History | volume = 76 | issue = 2| pages = 455–473 }}
* {{cite journal | last1 = McGinnis | first1 = Anthony R | year = 2012 | title = When Courage Was Not Enough: Plains Indians at War with the United States Army | journal = Journal of Military History | volume = 76 | issue = 2| pages = 455–473 }}
*{{cite journal | last1 = Andrews | first1 = Thomas G | year = 2002 | title = TURNING THE TABLES ON ASSIMILATION: OGLALA LAKOTAS AND THE PINE RIDGE DAY SCHOOLS, 1889-1920s | url = | journal = Western Historical Quarterly | volume = 33 | issue = 4| page = 407 | doi=10.2307/4144766}}
*{{cite journal | last1 = Andrews | first1 = Thomas G | year = 2002 | title = Turning the Tables on Assimilation: Oglala Lakotas and the Pine Ridge Day Schools, 1889-1920s | journal = Western Historical Quarterly | volume = 33 | issue = 4| pages = 407–430 | doi=10.2307/4144766| jstor = 4144766 }}
*{{cite journal | last1 = Pass | first1 = Susan | year = 2009 | title = Teaching Respect for Diversity: The Oglala Lakota | url = | journal = Social Studies | volume = 100 | issue = 5| pages = 212–217 | doi=10.1080/00377990903221996}}
*{{cite journal | last1 = Pass | first1 = Susan | year = 2009 | title = Teaching Respect for Diversity: The Oglala Lakota | journal = Social Studies | volume = 100 | issue = 5| pages = 212–217 | doi=10.1080/00377990903221996| s2cid = 144704897 }}
*{{cite journal | last1 = Campbell | first1 = Kimberlee | year = 2011 | title = Sitting Bull Offers New Lakota Curriculum | url = | journal = Tribal College Journal | volume = 22 | issue = 3| pages = 69–70 }}
*{{cite journal | last1 = Campbell | first1 = Kimberlee | year = 2011 | title = Sitting Bull Offers New Lakota Curriculum | journal = Tribal College Journal | volume = 22 | issue = 3| pages = 69–70 }}
{{Refend}}


==Further reading==
==Further reading==
*Buechel, Eugene. (1983). ''A Dictionary of Teton Sioux''. Pine Ridge, SD: Red Cloud Indian School.
* {{cite book |last=Buechel |first=Eugene |year=1983 |title=A Dictionary of Teton Sioux |location=Pine Ridge, SD |publisher=Red Cloud Indian School}}
* DeMallie, Raymond J. (2001). "Sioux until 1850". In R. J. DeMallie (Ed.), ''[[Handbook of North American Indians]]: Plains'' (Vol. 13, Part 2, pp.&nbsp;718–760). W. C. Sturtevant (Gen. Ed.). Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution. {{ISBN|0-16-050400-7}}.
* DeMallie, Raymond J. (2001). "Sioux until 1850". In R. J. DeMallie (Ed.), ''[[Handbook of North American Indians]]: Plains'' (Vol. 13, Part 2, pp.&nbsp;718–760). W. C. Sturtevant (Gen. Ed.). Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution. {{ISBN|0-16-050400-7}}.
* de Reuse, Willem J. (1987). "One hundred years of Lakota linguistics (1887-1987)". ''Kansas Working Papers in Linguistics'', ''12'', 13-42. [https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/dspace/handle/1808/509 Online version].
* {{cite journal |last=de Reuse |first=Willem J. |year=1987 |title=One hundred years of Lakota linguistics (1887-1987) |journal=Kansas Working Papers in Linguistics |volume=12 |pages=13–42 |hdl=1808/509 |hdl-access=free |doi=10.17161/KWPL.1808.509 |doi-access=free}}
* de Reuse, Willem J. (1990). "A supplementary bibliography of Lakota languages and linguistics (1887-1990)". ''Kansas Working Papers in Linguistics'', ''15'' (2), 146-165. (Studies in Native American languages 6). [https://kuscholarworks.ku.edu/dspace/handle/1808/441 Online version].
* {{cite journal |last=de Reuse |first=Willem J. |year=1990 |title=A supplementary bibliography of Lakota languages and linguistics (1887-1990) |journal=Kansas Working Papers in Linguistics |volume=15 |issue=2 |pages=146–165 |hdl=1808/441 |hdl-access=free |doi=10.17161/KWPL.1808.441 |doi-access=free}}
* Parks, Douglas R.; & Rankin, Robert L. (2001). "The Siouan languages". In ''Handbook of North American Indians: Plains'' (Vol. 13, Part 1, pp.&nbsp;94–114). Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution.
* Parks, Douglas R.; & Rankin, Robert L. (2001). "The Siouan languages". In ''Handbook of North American Indians: Plains'' (Vol. 13, Part 1, pp.&nbsp;94–114). Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution.
*Trechter, Sarah. (1999). "Contextualizing the Exotic Few: Gender Dichotomies in Lakhota". In M. Bucholtz, A.C. Liang, and L. Sutton (Eds) ''Reinventing Identities'' (pp.&nbsp;101–122). New York: Oxford University Press. {{ISBN|0-19-512629-7}}
* {{cite book |last=Trechter |first=Sarah |year=1999 |chapter=Contextualizing the Exotic Few: Gender Dichotomies in Lakhota |editor-first1=M. |editor-last1=Bucholtz |editor-first2=A. C. |editor-last2=Liang |editor-first3=L. |editor-last3=Sutton |title=Reinventing Identities |pages=101–122 |location=New York |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=0-19-512629-7}}


==External links==
==External links==
{{Incubator|code= lkt}}
<!-- Please keep in alphabetic order. See [[Help:Page_name#Alphabetic_order]] -->
<!-- Please keep in alphabetic order. See [[Help:Page_name#Alphabetic_order]] -->
{{incubator|lkt}}
*[http://www.lakhota.org Lakota Language Consortium]
*[https://lakotalanguagereclamationproject.com/ Lakota Language Reclamation Project] - "Open sourcing the People's language for all Lakota and Dakota people and our allies"
*[http://lakotadictionary.org Lakȟól'iya Owaákhiye Othí language forum]
*[http://www.lakotadictionary.org/nldo.php New Lakota Dictionary online]
* [http://www.lakotalanguageproject.org/resources.html Red Cloud Indian School Lakota Language Project]
*[http://www.omniglot.com/writing/sioux.htm Omniglot]
*[http://www.sicc.sk.ca/lakota.html Our Languages: Lakota] (Saskatchewan Indian Cultural Centre)
*[http://justus.anglican.org/resources/bcp/Lakota/index.html Niobrara Wocekiye Wowapi: The Niobrara Prayer Book (1991)] Episcopal Church prayers in Lakota
*[http://justus.anglican.org/resources/bcp/Lakota/index.html Niobrara Wocekiye Wowapi: The Niobrara Prayer Book (1991)] Episcopal Church prayers in Lakota
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20131117155348/http://www.sicc.sk.ca/lakota.html Our Languages: Lakota] (Saskatchewan Indian Cultural Centre)
*[https://www.ucalgary.ca/lingcpl/volume_25/Telfer_edited.pdf Palatalization in Lakhota]
*[http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Appendix:Swadesh_lists_for_Siouan_languages Swadesh vocabulary lists for Lakota and other Siouan languages] (from Wiktionary)
*[http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Appendix:Swadesh_lists_for_Siouan_languages Swadesh vocabulary lists for Lakota and other Siouan languages] (from Wiktionary)
*[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KjeFW1kyl0o&t=347s Systemic racism in linguistics] - comparison of different Lakota translations and orthographies
*[http://www.liveandtell.com/user/28 Tusweca Tiospaye], language learning
*ELAR archive of [http://elar.soas.ac.uk/deposit/0263 Lakota Language: Translation of Songs and Speeches]


{{Siouan languages}}
{{Siouan languages}}
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[[Category:Indigenous languages of the North American Plains]]
[[Category:First Nations languages in Canada]]
[[Category:First Nations languages in Canada]]
[[Category:Languages of the United States]]
[[Category:Indigenous languages of Minnesota]]
[[Category:Indigenous languages of Montana]]
[[Category:Subject–object–verb languages]]
[[Category:Subject–object–verb languages]]
[[Category:Native American language revitalization]]
[[Category:Native American language revitalization]]
[[Category:Western Siouan languages]]
[[Category:Western Siouan languages]]
[[Category:Articles containing video clips]]

Latest revision as of 03:14, 16 September 2024

Lakota
Lakȟótiyapi
Pronunciation[laˈkˣɔtɪjapɪ]
Native toUnited States, with some speakers in Canada
RegionPrimarily North Dakota and South Dakota, but also northern Nebraska, southern Minnesota, and northern Montana
EthnicityTeton Sioux
Native speakers
(2,100, 29% of ethnic population cited 1997–2016)[1]
Siouan
Language codes
ISO 639-3lkt
Glottologlako1247
ELPLakota
Map of core pre-contact Lakota territory
Lakota 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.
Lakota
"ally / friend"
PeopleLakȟóta Oyáte
LanguageLakȟótiyapi
CountryLakȟóta Makóce, Očhéthi Šakówiŋ

Lakota (Lakȟótiyapi [laˈkˣɔtɪjapɪ]), also referred to as Lakhota, Teton or Teton Sioux, is a Siouan language spoken by the Lakota people of the Sioux tribes. Lakota is mutually intelligible with the two dialects of the Dakota language, especially Western Dakota, and is one of the three major varieties of the Sioux language.

Speakers of the Lakota language make up one of the largest Native American language speech communities in the United States, with approximately 2,000 speakers, who live mostly in the northern plains states of North Dakota and South Dakota.[1] Many communities have immersion programs for both children and adults.

Like many indigenous languages, the Lakota language did not have a written form traditionally. However, efforts to develop a written form of Lakota began, primarily through the work of Christian missionaries and linguists, in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The orthography has since evolved to reflect contemporary needs and usage.

One significant figure in the development of a written form of Lakota was Ella Cara Deloria, also called Aŋpétu Wašté Wiŋ (Beautiful Day Woman), a Yankton Dakota ethnologist, linguist, and novelist who worked extensively with the Dakota and Lakota peoples, documenting their languages and cultures. She collaborated with linguists such as Franz Boas and Edward Sapir to create written materials for Lakota, including dictionaries and grammars.[2]

Another key figure was Albert White Hat Sr., who taught at and later became the chair of the Lakota language program at his alma mater, Sinte Gleska University at Mission, South Dakota, one of the first tribal-based universities in the US.[3] His work focused on the Sicangu dialect using an orthography developed by Lakota in 1982 and which today is slowly supplanting older systems provided by linguists and missionaries.

History and origin

[edit]

The Lakota people's creation stories say that language originated from the creation of the tribe.[4][5] Other creation stories say language was invented by Iktomi.[6]

A wholly Lakota newspaper named the Anpao Kin ("Daybreak") circulated from 1878 by the Protestant Episcopal Church in Niobrara Mission, Nebraska until its move to Mission, South Dakota in 1908 continuing until its closure in 1937. The print alongside its Dakota counterpart Iapi Oaye ("The Word Carrier") played an important role in documenting the enlistment and affairs including obituaries of Native Sioux soldiers into the army as America became involved in World War I.[7]

Phonology

[edit]

Vowels

[edit]

Lakota has five oral vowels, /i e a o u/, and three nasal vowels, ã ũ/ (phonetically [ɪ̃ ə̃ ʊ̃]). Lakota /e/ and /o/ are said to be more open than the corresponding cardinal vowels, perhaps closer to [ɛ] and [ɔ]. Orthographically, the nasal vowels are written with a following ⟨ƞ⟩, ⟨ŋ⟩, or ⟨n⟩; historically, these were written with ogoneks underneath, ⟨į ą ų⟩.[8] No syllables end with consonantal /n/.

Front Central Back
Close/High oral i ⟨i⟩ u ⟨u⟩
nasal ĩ ⟨iŋ⟩ ũ ⟨uŋ⟩
Mid e ⟨e⟩ o ⟨o⟩
Open/Low oral a ⟨a⟩
nasal ã ⟨aŋ⟩

A neutral vowel (schwa) is automatically inserted between certain consonants, e.g. into the pairs ⟨gl⟩, ⟨bl⟩ and ⟨gm⟩. So the clan name written phonemically as ⟨Oglala⟩ has become the place name Ogallala.

Consonants

[edit]
Bilabial Dental Alveolar Postalveolar Velar Uvular[9][10] Glottal
Nasals m ⟨m⟩ n ⟨n⟩ ŋ ⟨ň⟩
Plosives
and affricates
voiceless p ⟨p⟩ t ⟨t⟩ ⟨č⟩ k ⟨k⟩ ʔ ⟨ʼ⟩
voiced b ⟨b⟩ ɡ ⟨g⟩
aspirated ⟨ph⟩ /
⟨pȟ⟩
⟨th⟩ /
⟨tȟ⟩
tʃʰ ⟨čh⟩ ⟨kh⟩ /
⟨kȟ⟩
ejective ⟨pʼ⟩ ⟨tʼ⟩ tʃʼ ⟨čʼ⟩ ⟨kʼ⟩
Fricative voiceless s ⟨s⟩ ʃ ⟨š⟩ χ ⟨ȟ⟩ h ⟨h⟩
voiced z ⟨z⟩ ʒ ⟨ž⟩ ʁ ⟨ǧ⟩
ejective ⟨sʼ⟩ ʃʼ ⟨šʼ⟩ χʼ ⟨ȟʼ⟩
Approximant w ⟨w⟩ l ⟨l⟩ j ⟨y⟩

The voiced uvular fricative /ʁ/ becomes a uvular trill ([ʀ]) before /i/[9][10] and in fast speech it is often realized as a voiced velar fricative [ɣ]. The voiceless aspirated plosives have two allophonic variants each: those with a delay in voicing ([pʰ kʰ]), and those with velar friction ([pˣ kˣ]), which occur before /a/, /ã/, /o/, /ĩ/, and /ũ/ (thus, lakhóta, /laˈkʰota/ is phonetically [laˈkˣota]). For some speakers, there is a phonemic distinction between the two, and both occur before /e/. No such variation occurs for the affricate /tʃʰ/. Some orthographies mark this distinction; others do not. The uvular fricatives /χ/ and /ʁ/ are commonly spelled ⟨ȟ⟩ and ⟨ǧ⟩.

All monomorphemic words have one vowel which carries primary stress and has a higher tone than all other vowels in the word. This is generally the vowel of the second syllable of the word, but often the first syllable can be stressed, and occasionally other syllables as well. Stress is generally indicated with an acute accent: ⟨á⟩, etc. Compound words will have stressed vowels in each component; proper spelling will write compounds with a hyphen. Thus máza-ská, literally "metal-white", i.e. "silver; money" has two stressed vowels, the first a in each component. If it were written without the hyphen, as mazaska, it would imply a single main stress.

Phonological processes

[edit]

A common phonological process which occurs in rapid speech is vowel contraction, which generally results from the loss of an intervocalic glide. Vowel contraction results in phonetic long vowels (phonemically a sequence of two identical vowels), with falling pitch if the first underlying vowel is stressed, and rising pitch if the second underlying vowel is stressed: kê: (falling tone), "he said that", from kéye; hǎ:pi (rising tone), "clothing", from hayápi. If one of the vowels is nasalized, the resulting long vowel is also nasalized: čhaŋ̌:pi, "sugar", from čhaŋháŋpi.[9]

When two vowels of unequal height contract, or when feature contrasts exist between the vowels and the glide, two new phonetic vowels, [æː] and [ɔː], result:[9] iyæ̂:, "he left for there", from iyáye; mitȟa:, "it's mine", from mitȟáwa.

The plural enclitic =pi is frequently changed in rapid speech when preceding the enclitics =kte, =kiŋ, =kštó, or =na. If the vowel preceding =pi is high/open, =pi becomes [u]; if the vowel is non-high (mid or closed), =pi becomes [o] (if the preceding vowel is nasalized, then the resulting vowel is also nasalized): hi=pi=kte, "they will arrive here", [hiukte]; yatkáŋ=pi=na, "they drank it and...", [jatkə̃õna].[9]

Lakota also exhibits some traces of sound symbolism among fricatives, where the point of articulation changes to reflect intensity: , "it's yellow", ží, "it's tawny", ǧí, "it's brown".[11] (Compare with the similar examples in Mandan.)

Orthographies, standardization, and teaching materials

[edit]

Several orthographies as well as ad hoc spelling are used to write the Lakota language, with varying perspectives on whether standardization should be implemented.[12][13][14] In 2002, Rosebud Cultural Studies teacher Randy Emery argued that standardization of the language could cause problems "because the language is utilized diversely. If standardization is determined to be the approach... then the question is whose version will be adopted? This will cause dissent and politics to become a factor in the process."[15]

Also in 2002, Sinte Gleska University rejected a partnership with the European-owned Lakota Language Consortium.[15] Sinte Gleska uses the orthography developed by Albert White Hat,[16] which on December 13, 2012, was formally adopted by the Rosebud Sioux Tribe per Tribal Resolution No. 2012–343. This resolution also banned the Lakota Language Consortium and its "Czech orthography" from the reservation and its educational system.[17] This ban was a response to a series of protests by community members and grassroots language preservation workers, at Rosebud and other Lakota communities, against the Lakota Language Consortium (LLC).[15][18] Despite its name, the LLC is an organization formed by two Europeans.[18] Concerns arose due to the LLC's promotion of their New Lakota Dictionary, websites and other Internet projects aimed at revising and standardizing their new spelling of the Lakota language. "Lakota first language speakers and Lakota language teachers criticize the "Czech orthography" for being overloaded with markings and – foremost – for the way it is being brought into Lakota schools"; it has been criticized as "neocolonial domination."[18] Sonja John writes that "The new orthography the Czech linguist advocates resembles the Czech orthography – making it easier for Czech people to read. The Europeans predominantly use the internet to give the impression that this "Czech orthography" is a Lakota product and the standard for writing Lakota."[19] "The Rosebud Sioux Tribe was the first of the Lakota tribes to take legal action against the self-authorizing practices the LLC committed by utilizing names of Lakota language experts without their consent to obtain funding for their projects."[20] Rosebud Resolution No. 2008–295 goes further and compares these actions to what was done to children taken from their families by the residential schools.[20]

In 2006 some of the Lakota language teachers at Standing Rock chose to collaborate with Sitting Bull College, and the Lakota Language Consortium (LLC), with the aim of expanding their language curriculum. Teachers at Standing Rock use several different orthographies.[21] Language activists at Standing Rock also refer to it as simply the "SLO" or even "Suggested Lakota Orthography."[21] Tasha Hauff writes,

Choosing a writing system, or orthography, is often a serious point of contention in Indigenous communities engaging in revitalization work (Hinton, 2014). While writing a traditionally oral language can itself be considered a colonial act, standardizing a writing system is fraught with political as well as pedagogical complications. Because teachers at Standing Rock were in need of language-teaching materials, and the LLC was one of the few organizations developing such resources, Standing Rock adopted the new orthography, but not without resistance from members of the community. ... The new writing system at Standing Rock was often criticized or even rejected within the community. Some fluent speakers at Standing Rock have not accepted the new writing system. There are some who continue to work in language education and who use the LLC materials but do not write in the orthography. These are usually Elders who remain in the habit of writing the way they learned. A few people at Standing Rock, however, have been offended by the notion of a standard way of writing Lakota/Dakota, especially one that seems unlike any of the systems used by Elders. Community members have been particularly wary of the SLO ["Standard Lakota Orthography"], which appears to be developed by outsiders who are not fluent speakers and would require considerable study for a fluent speaker to use.[21]

In 2013 Lakota teachers at Red Cloud Indian School on Pine Ridge Indian Reservation discussed their use of orthography for their K–12 students as well as adult learners. The orthography used at Red Cloud "is meant to be more phonetic than other orthographies... That means there are usually more 'H's than other versions. While many orthographies use tipi... Red Cloud spells it thípi." He continues, "the orthography also makes heavy use of diacritical marks... that is not popular among some educators and academics". Delphine Red Shirt, an Oglala Lakota tribal member and a lecturer on languages at Stanford University, disagrees and prefers a Lakota orthography without diacritical marks. "I'm very against any orthography that requires a special keyboard to communicate," she said. First language speaker and veteran language teacher at Red Cloud, the late Philomine Lakota, had similar concerns with the orthography, and argues against changing the spelling forms she learned from her father. However, she did consider that, a shared curriculum could "create consistency across the region and encourage the long-term viability of the language. However, Philomine is also cognizant that it will take more than a school curriculum to preserve the language."[22] She added, "In order for a language to survive, it can't simply be taught from the top. A language is a living thing and students need to breathe life into it daily; talking with friends, family and elders in Lakota".[22]

In 2018, at the Cheyenne River Indian Reservation, Lakota speaker Manny Iron Hawk and his wife Renee Iron Hawk discussed opening an immersion school and the difficulties around choosing an orthography to write Lakota; Mr. Iron Hawk voiced support for the LLC (SLO) Orthography, saying it was accessible to second language learners, but know not all agreed with him.[23] Others in the community voiced a preference for the tribe creating their own orthography. While Mr. Iron Hawk supports this approach, Renee Iron Hawk also expressed a sense of urgency, saying "We should just use what we have, and then fix and replace it, but we need to start speaking it now". The Iron Hawks both agreed that too much time has been spent arguing over which orthography to use or not use, and not enough time is spent teaching and speaking the language.[23]

On May 3, 2022, the Tribal Council of the Standing Rock Sioux, in a near-unanimous vote, banished the Lakota Language Consortium (and specifically, LLC linguist Jan Ullrich and co-founder Wilhelm Meya) from ever again setting foot on the reservation. The council's decision was based on the LLC's history with not only the Standing Rock community, but also with at least three other communities that also voiced concerns about Meya and the LLC, "saying he broke agreements over how to use recordings, language materials and historical records, or used them without permission."[24][25]

LLC alphabet

[edit]

The "Standard Lakota Orthography" as the LLC calls it, is in principle phonemic, which means that each character (grapheme) represents one distinctive sound (phoneme), except for the distinction between glottal and velar aspiration, which is treated phonetically.

Lakota vowels are ⟨a, e, i, o, u⟩ nasal vowels are aŋ, iŋ, uŋ. Pitch accent is marked with an acute accent: ⟨á, é, í, ó, ú, áŋ, íŋ, úŋ⟩ on stressed vowels (which receive a higher tone than non-stressed ones)[26]

The following consonants approximate their IPA values: ⟨b, g, h, k, l, m, n, ŋ, p, s, t, w, z⟩. ⟨Y⟩ has its English value of /j/. An apostrophe, ⟨'⟩, is used for the glottal stop.

A caron is used for sounds, other than /ŋ/, which are not written with Latin letters in the IPA: ⟨č⟩ /tʃ/, ⟨ǧ⟩ /ʁ/, ⟨ȟ⟩ /χ/, ⟨š⟩ /ʃ/, ⟨ž⟩ /ʒ/. Aspirates are written with ⟨h⟩: ⟨čh, kh, ph, th,⟩ and velar frication with ⟨ȟ⟩: ⟨kȟ, pȟ, tȟ.⟩ Ejectives are written with an apostrophe: ⟨č', ȟ', k', p', s', š', t'⟩.

The spelling used in modern popular texts is often written without diacritics. Besides failing to mark stress, this also results in the confusion of numerous consonants: /s/ and /ʃ/ are both written ⟨s⟩, /h/ and /χ/ are both written ⟨h⟩, and the aspirate stops are written like the unaspirates, as ⟨p, t, c, k⟩.

All digraphs (i.e. characters created by two letters, such as kh, kȟ, k') are treated as groups of individual letters in alphabetization. Thus for example the word čhíŋ precedes čónala in a dictionary.

Curley alphabet

[edit]

In 1982, Lakota educator Leroy Curley (1935–2012) devised a 41-letter circular alphabet.[27]

Grammar

[edit]

Word order

[edit]

The basic word order of Lakota is subject–object–verb, although the order can be changed for expressive purposes (placing the object before the subject to bring the object into focus or placing the subject after the verb to emphasize its status as established information). It is postpositional, with adpositions occurring after the head nouns: mas'óphiye él, "at the store" (literally 'store at'); thípi=kiŋ ókšaŋ, "around the house" (literally 'house=the around') (Rood and Taylor 1996).

Rood and Taylor (1996) suggest the following template for basic word order. Items in parentheses are optional; only the verb is required. It is therefore possible to produce a grammatical sentence that contains only a verb.

(interjection) (conjunction) (adverb(s)) (nominal) (nominal) (nominal) (adverb(s)) verb (enclitic(s)) (conjunction)

Interjections

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When interjections are used, they begin the sentence or end it. A small number of interjections are used only by one gender, for instance the interjection expressing disbelief is ečéš for women but hóȟ for men; for calling attention women say máŋ while men use wáŋ. Most interjections, however, are used by both genders.

Conjunctions

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It is common for a sentence to begin with a conjunction. Both čhaŋké and yuŋkȟáŋ can be translated as and; k’éyaš is similar to English but. Each of these conjunctions joins clauses. In addition, the conjunction na joins nouns or phrases.

Adverbs, postpositions and derived modifiers

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Lakota uses postpositions, which are similar to English prepositions, but follow their noun complement. Adverbs or postpositional phrases can describe manner, location, or reason. There are also interrogative adverbs, which are used to form questions.

Synonymity in the postpositions él and ektá

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To the non-Lakota speaker, the postpositions él and ektá sound like they can be interchangeable, but although they are full synonyms of each other, they are used in different occasions. Semantically (word meaning), they are used as locational and directional tools. In the English language they can be compared to prepositions like "at", "in", and "on" (when used as locatives) on the one hand, and "at", "in", and "on" (when used as directionals), "to", "into", and "onto", on the other. (Pustet 2013)

A pointer for when to use él and when to use ektá can be determined by the concepts of location (motionless) or motion; and space vs. time. These features can produce four different combinations, also called semantic domains, which can be arranged as follows (Pustet 2013):

  1. space / rest: "in the house" [thípi kiŋ él] (This sentence is only describing location of an object, no movement indicated)
  2. space / motion: "to the house [thípi kiŋ ektá] (This sentence is referring to movement of a subject, it is directional in nature)
  3. time / rest: "in the winter" [waníyetu kiŋ él] (This sentence refers to a static moment in time, which happens to be during winter)
  4. time / motion: "in/towards the winter" [waníyetu kiŋ ektá] (Pustet 2013) (This sentence is delegated to time, but time which is soon to change to another season)

Summed up, when a context describes no motion, él is the appropriate postposition; when in motion, ektá is more appropriate. They are both used in matters of time and space.

Nouns and pronouns

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As mentioned above, nominals are optional in Lakota, but when nouns appear the basic word order is subject–object–verb. Pronouns are not common, but may be used contrastively or emphatically.

Lakota has four articles: waŋ is indefinite, similar to English a or an, and kiŋ is definite, similar to English the. In addition, waŋží is an indefinite article used with hypothetical or irrealis objects, and k’uŋ is a definite article used with nouns that have been mentioned previously.

Demonstratives

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There are also nine demonstratives, which can function either as pronouns or as determiners.

Distance from speaker
near the speaker near the listener away from both speaker and listener
singular
dual lenáos henáos kanáos
plural lená hená kaná

Verbs

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Verbs are the only word class that are obligatory in a Lakota sentence. Verbs can be active, naming an action, or stative, describing a property. (In English, such descriptions are usually made with adjectives.)

Verbs are inflected for first-, second- or third person, and for singular, dual or plural grammatical number.

Morphology

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Verb inflection

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There are two paradigms for verb inflection. One set of morphemes indicates the person and number of the subject of active verbs. The other set of morphemes agrees with the object of transitive action verbs or the subject of stative verbs.[9]

Most of the morphemes in each paradigm are prefixes, but plural subjects are marked with a suffix and third-person plural objects with an infix.

First person arguments may be singular, dual, or plural; second or third person arguments may be singular or plural.

Subject of active verbs
singular dual plural
first person wa- uŋ(k)- uŋ(k)- ... -pi
second person ya- ya- ... -pi
third person unmarked -pi

Examples: máni "He walks." mánipi "They walk."

Subject of stative verbs
singular dual plural
first person ma- uŋ(k)- uŋ(k)- ... -pi
second person ni- ni- ... -pi
third person unmarked -pi
Object of transitive verbs
singular dual plural
first person ma- uŋ(k)- ... -pi
second person ni- ni- ... -pi
third person unmarked -wicha-

Example: waŋwíčhayaŋke "He looked at them" from waŋyáŋkA "to look at something/somebody".

Subject and object pronouns in one verb
If both the subject and object need to be marked, two affixes occur on the verb. Below is a table illustrating this. Subject affixes are marked in italics and object affixes are marked in underline. Some affixes encompass both subject and object (such as čhi- ...). The symbol indicates a lack of marking for a particular subject/object (as in the case of 3rd Person Singular forms). Cells with three forms indicate Class I, Class II, and Class III verb forms in this order.

me you (sg.) him/her/it; them (inanimate) us you (pl.) them (animate)
I čhi-1 ... wa- ...
bl- ...
m- ...
čhi- ... -pi wičhawa- ...
wičhabl- ...
wičham- ...
you (sg.) maya- ...
mayal-2 ...
mayan- ...
ya- ...
l- ...
n- ...
ya- ... -pi
l- ... -pi
n- ... -pi
wičhaya- ...
wičhal- ...
wičhan- ...
he/she/it ma- ... ni- ... - ... uŋ(k)- ... -pi ni- ... -pi wičha- ...
we ni-3 ... -pi uŋ(k)- ... -pi ni- ... -pi wičhauŋ(k)-4 ... -pi
you (pl.) maya- ... -pi
mayal- ... -pi
mayan- ... -pi
ya- ... -pi
l- ... -pi
n- ... -pi
ya- ... -pi5
l- ... -pi
n- ... -pi
wičhaya- ... -pi
wičhal- ... -pi
wičhan- ... -pi
they ma- ... -pi ni- ... -pi ... -pi - ... -pi ni- ... -pi wičha- ... -pi
  • 1 The affix čhi- covers cases where I-subject and you-object occurs in transitive verbs.
  • 2 Class II and Class III verbs have irregular yal- and yan- respectively.
  • 3 These prefixes are separated when uŋ(k)- must be prefixed while ni- et al. must be infixed.

Example: uŋkánipȟepi "We are waiting for you" from apȟé "to wait for somebody".

  • 4 uŋ(k)- precedes all affixes except wičha-. In the last column, verbs which require uŋ(k)- to be prefixed are more complex because of competing rules: uŋ(k)- must be prefixed, but must also follow wičha-. Most speakers resolve this issue by infixing wičhauŋ(k) after the initial vowel, then repeating the initial vowel again.

Example: iwíčhauŋkičupi "We took them" from ičú "to take something/somebody".

  • 5 Since the suffix -pi can appear only once in each verb, but may pluralize either subject or object (or both), some ambiguity exists in the forms: uŋ- ... -pi, uŋni- ... -pi, and uŋya-/uŋl-/uŋn- ... -pi.

Enclitics

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Lakota has a number of enclitic particles which follow the verb, many of which differ depending on whether the speaker is male or female.

Some enclitics indicate the aspect, mood, or number of the verb they follow. There are also various interrogative enclitics, which in addition to marking an utterance as a question show finer distinctions of meaning. For example, while he is the usual question-marking enclitic, huŋwó is used for rhetorical questions or in formal oratory, and the dubitative wa functions somewhat like a tag question in English (Rood and Taylor 1996; Buchel 1983). (See also the section below on men and women's speech.)

Men's and women's speech

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A small number of enclitics (approximately eight) differ in form based on the gender of the speaker. Yeló (men) ye (women) mark mild assertions. Kštó (women only according to most sources) marks strong assertion. Yo (men) and ye (women) mark neutral commands, yetȟó (men) and nitȟó (women) mark familiar, and ye (both men and women) and na mark requests. He is used by both genders to mark direct questions, but men also use hųwó in more formal situations. So (men) and se (women) mark dubitative questions (where the person being asked is not assumed to know the answer).

While many native speakers and linguists agree that certain enclitics are associated with particular genders, such usage may not be exclusive. That is, individual men sometimes use enclitics associated with women, and vice versa (Trechter 1999).

Examples of enclitic usage
Enclitic Meaning Example[28] Translation
hAŋ continuous yá-he "was going"
pi plural iyáyapi "they left"
la diminutive záptaŋla "only five"
kA attenuative wašteke "somewhat good"
ktA irrealis uŋyíŋ kte "you and I will go" (future)
šni negative hiyú šni "he/she/it did not come out"
s’a repeating eyápi s’a "they often say"
séčA conjecture ú kte séče "he might come"
yeló assertion (masc) blé ló "I went there (I assert)"
assertion (fem) hí yé "he came (I assert)"
he interrogative Táku kȟoyákipȟa he? "What do you fear?"
huŋwó interrogative (masc. formal) Tókhiya lá huŋwó? "Where are you going?"
huŋwé interrogative (fem. formal, obsolete) Hé tákula huŋwé? "What is this little thing?"
waŋ dubitative question séča waŋ "can it be as it seems?"
škhé evidential yá-ha škhé "he was going, I understand"
kéye evidential (hearsay) yápi kéye "they went, they say"

Ablaut

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  • All examples are taken from the New Lakota Dictionary.

The term "ablaut" refers to the tendency of some words to change their final vowel in certain situations. Compare these sentences.

  • Šúŋka kiŋ sápa čha waŋbláke.
  • Šúŋka kiŋ sápe.
  • Šúŋka kiŋ sápiŋ na tȟáŋka.

The last vowel in the word "SápA" changed each time. This vowel change is called "ablaut". Words which undergo this change are referred to as A-words, since, in dictionary citations, they are written ending in either -A or -Aŋ. These words are never written with a final capital letter in actual texts. Derivatives of these words generally take the ablaut as well, however there are exceptions.

There are three forms for ablauted words: -a/-aŋ, -e, -iŋ. These are referred to as a/aŋ-ablaut, e-ablaut, and iŋ-ablaut respectively. Some words are ablauted by some and not others, like "gray" hóta or hótA. Ablaut always depends on what word follows the ablauted word.

A/aŋ-ablaut

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This is the basic form of the word, and is used everywhere in which the other forms are not utilized.

E-ablaut

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There are two cases in which e-ablaut is used.

  1. Last word in the sentence
  2. Followed by a word which triggers e-ablaut
1. Last word in sentence
[edit]
Examples
Héčhiya yé He went there. (e-ablaut of the verb )
Yúte She ate it. (e-ablaut of the verb yútA)
Thípi kiŋ pahá akáŋl hé. The house stands on a cliff. (e-ablaut of the verb hÁŋ)
2. Followed by a word which triggers e-ablaut
[edit]

There are three classes of words which trigger e-ablaut

  1. various enclitics, such as ȟča, ȟčiŋ, iŋčhéye, kačháš, kiló, kštó, któk, lakȟa, -la, láȟ, láȟčaka, ló, séčA, sékse, s’eléčheča, so, s’a, s’e, šaŋ, šni, uŋštó
  2. some conjunctions and articles, such as kiŋ, kiŋháŋ, k’éaš, k’uŋ, eháŋtaŋš
  3. some auxiliary verbs, such as kapíŋ, kiníča (kiníl), lakA (la), kúŋzA, phiča, ši, wačhíŋ, -yA, -khiyA
Examples
Škáte šni. He did not play. (enclitic)
Škáte s’a. He plays often. (enclitic)
Škáte ló. He plays. (enclitic (marking assertion))
Okȟáte háŋtaŋ... If it is hot... (conjunctive)
Sápe kiŋ The black one (definite article)
Glé kúŋze. He pretended to go home. (auxiliary verb)
Yatké-phiča. It is drinkable. (auxiliary verb)

Iŋ-ablaut

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The -ablaut (pronounced i by some) occurs only before the following words:

ktA (irrealis enclitic)
yetȟó (familiar command enclitic)
na, naháŋ (and)
naíŋš (or, and or)
(polite request or entreaty enclitic)
Examples
Waŋyáŋkiŋ yetȟó. Take a look at this, real quick.
Yíŋ kte. She will go.
Skúyiŋ na wašté. It was sweet and good.
Waŋyáŋkiŋ yé. Please, look at it.

Phrases

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"Háu kȟolá", literally "Hello, friend", is the most common greeting, and was transformed into the generic motion picture American Indian "How!", just as the traditional feathered headdress of the Teton was "given" to all movie Indians. As háu is the only word in Lakota which contains a diphthong, /au/, it may be a loanword from a non-Siouan language.[9]

Language revitalization efforts

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Lakota prayer song recorded in 2013

Assimilating Indigenous peoples into the expanding American society of the late 19th and early 20th centuries depended on suppression or full eradication of each tribe's unique language as the central aspect of its culture. Indian residential schools in the US and Canada that separated Indigenous children from their parents and relatives enforced this assimilation process with beatings and other forms of violence for speaking tribal languages(Powers).[full citation needed] The Lakota language survived this suppression. "Lakota persisted through the recognized natural immersion afforded by daily conversation in the home, the community at reservation-wide events, even in texts written in the form of letters to family and friends. people demonstrated their cultural resilience through the positive application of spoken and written Lakota." (Powers)[full citation needed]

Even so, employment opportunities were based on speaking English; a Lakota who was bilingual or spoke only English was more likely to be hired.[5]

In 1967, the Red Cloud Indian School at Pine Ridge began offering Lakota language classes. This was over two decades before the Native American Languages Act of 1990.[29]

In the mid-1970s the Rosebud Reservation established their Lakota Language and Culture department at the Sinte Gleska University under the chairmanship of Ben Black Bear, Jr., who employed textbooks and orthography developed by the Colorado University Lakota Project (CULP). A few years later Black Bear was replaced as a chair of the department by Albert White Hat, who discontinued the use of the Colorado University textbooks. In 1992 White Hat published a textbook with his own orthography, for use at all levels of language learning on Rosebud. Sinte Gleska University now uses the orthography developed by Albert White Hat.[16]

In 2002 Sinte Gleska University rejected the Lakota Language Consortium invitation to support their organization. Rosebud Cultural Studies teacher Randy Emery spoke to the Lakota Journal, stating, "The Lakota Language Consortium has created the misleading impression that Sinte Gleska University is one of the schools that supports their organization," and that the LLC had circulated a document to this effect with other misleading information about the state of the language, "The (LLC) documentation strongly implies that there are no fluent speakers younger than the elder age group and the presentation implies that the Lakota cannot deal with the problem themselves; therefore outside help must be brought in to lead the program. This appears to us as a sugar coated attack on sovereignty".[15]

In 2008, the Red Cloud School at Pine Ridge launched their Lakota language curriculum for K–12 students.[29] In November 2012, the incoming president of the Oglala Sioux Tribe, Bryan Brewer, announced that he intended "to lead a Lakota Language Revitalization Initiative that will focus on the creation and operation of Lakota language immersion schools and identifying all fluent Lakota speakers."[30] A Lakota language immersion daycare center is scheduled to open at Pine Ridge.[31] Also in 2012, Lakota immersion classes were provided for children in an experimental program at Sitting Bull College on the Standing Rock Reservation, where children speak only Lakota for their first year.[32] Tom Red Bird is a Lakota teacher at the program who grew up on the Cheyenne River Reservation. He believes in the importance of teaching the language to younger generations as this would close the gap in the ages of speakers.[33] In 2014, it is estimated that about five percent of children age four to six on Pine Ridge Indian Reservation speak Lakota.[34] Language Revitalization efforts continued to be strengthened by the establishment of several independent, grassroots Lakota language immersion schools and camps, such as those at the Dakota Access Pipeline protests camps at Standing Rock in 2016.[35]

On May 3, 2022, the Standing Rock Sioux Tribal Council passed Resolution Number 150-22, which, along with banishing the LLC, contains provisions to protect the Nation's intellectual property rights and data sovereignty.[24][25]

It reclaimed copyrights over all language materials created by the consortium and called for their immediate return, to be placed in the care of "the first-language speakers and knowledge-keepers in our communities."[24][25]

Lakota Language Education Program (LLEAP)

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In 2011, Sitting Bull College (Fort Yates, North Dakota, Standing Rock) and the University of South Dakota began degree programs to create effective Lakota language teachers. By earning a Bachelor of Arts in education at the University of South Dakota or a Bachelor of Science in education at Sitting Bull College, students can major in "Lakota Language Teaching and Learning" as part of the Lakota Language Education Action Program, or LLEAP.

LLEAP is a four-year program designed to create at least 30 new Lakota language teachers by 2014, and was funded by $2.4 million in grants from the U.S. Department of Education. At the end of the initial phase, SBC and USD will permanently offer the Lakota Language Teaching and Learning degree as part of their regular undergraduate Education curriculum. The current LLEAP students' tuition and expenses are covered by the grant from the U.S. Department of Education. LLEAP is the first program of its kind, offering courses to create effective teachers in order to save a Native American language from going extinct, and potentially educate the 120,000 prospective Lakota speakers in the 21st century.[36]

Government support

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In 1990, Senator Daniel Inouye (D-HI) sponsored the Native American Languages Act in order to preserve, protect, and promote the rights and freedoms of Native people in America to practice, develop and conduct business in their native language. This law, which took effect on October 30, 1990, reversed over 200 years of American policy that would have otherwise eliminated the indigenous languages of the United States. This legislation gave support to tribal efforts to fund language education programs.[37]

[edit]

Some resources exist for self-study of Lakota by a person with no or limited access to native speakers. Here is a collection of selected resources currently available:

Additional print and electronic materials have been created by the immersion program on Pine Ridge.[examples needed]

  • Lakota: A Language Course for Beginners by Oglala Lakota College (ISBN 0-88432-609-8) (with companion 15 CDs/Tapes) (high school/college level)
  • Reading and Writing the Lakota Language by Albert White Hat Sr. (ISBN 0-87480-572-4) (with companion 2 tapes) (high school/college level)
  • University of Colorado Lakhota Project: Beginning Lakhota, vol. 1 & 2 (with companion tapes), Elementary Bilingual Dictionary and Graded Readings, (high school/college level)
  • Lakota Dictionary: Lakota-English/English-Lakota, New Comprehensive Edition by Eugene Buechel, S.J. & Paul Manhart (ISBN 0-8032-6199-3)
  • English-Lakota Dictionary by Bruce Ingham, RoutledgeCurzon, ISBN 0-7007-1378-6
  • A Grammar of Lakota by Eugene Buechel, S.J. (OCLC 4609002; professional level)
  • The article by Rood & Taylor, in[9] (professional level)
  • Dakota Texts by Ella Deloria (a bilingual, interlinear collection of folktales and folk narratives, plus commentaries). (University of Nebraska Press, ISBN 0-8032-6660-X; professional level) (Note: the University of South Dakota edition is monolingual, with only the English renditions.)
  • A "Lakota Toddler" app designed for children ages 2–9 is available for the iPhone.[38]
  • Matho Waunsila Tiwahe: The Lakota Berenstain Bears. DVD of 20 episodes of The Berenstain Bears, dubbed in Lakota with fluent Native speakers.

Lakota influences in English

[edit]

Just as people from different regions of countries have accents, Lakota who speak English have some distinct speech patterns. These patterns are displayed in their grammatical sequences and can be heard through some phonological differences. These unique characteristics are also observed in Lakota youth, even those who only learned English.[39]

Notes

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  1. ^ a b Lakota at Ethnologue (25th ed., 2022) Closed access icon
  2. ^ "Ella Cara Deloria". Association for Women in Science. Association for Women in Science. Retrieved 22 February 2024.
  3. ^ "Winged Messenger Nations: Birds in American Indian Oral Tradition: Albert White Hat Sr. & Francis Cut". The Winged Messenger Project. The Winged Messenger Project. Retrieved 22 February 2024.
  4. ^ Sneve, Paul (2013). "Anamnesis in the Lakota Language and Lakota Concepts of Time and Matter". Anglican Theological Review. 95 (3): 487–493.
  5. ^ a b Andrews, Thomas G (2002). "Turning the Tables on Assimilation: Oglala Lakotas and the Pine Ridge Day Schools 1889–1920s". Western Historical Quarterly. 33 (4): 407–430. doi:10.2307/4144766. JSTOR 4144766.
  6. ^ Walker, J.R.; DeMallie, R.J.; Jahner, E. (1980). Lakota Belief and Ritual. Bison books. U of Nebraska Press. p. 106. ISBN 978-0-8032-9867-5. Retrieved December 18, 2021.
  7. ^ Little, John A. (May 2020). Vietnam Akíčita: Lakota and Dakota Military Tradition in the Twentieth Century (PhD thesis). University of Minnesota. pp. 58–64.
  8. ^ Elementary Bilingual Dictionary English–Lakhóta Lakhóta–English (1976) CU Lakhóta Project University of Colorado
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h Rood, David S., and Taylor, Allan R. (1996). Sketch of Lakhota, a Siouan Language, Part I. Handbook of North American Indians, Vol. 17 (Languages), pp. 440–482.
  10. ^ a b (2004). Lakota letters and sounds.
  11. ^ Mithun, Marianne (2007). The Languages of Native North America. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 33.
  12. ^ "Language Materials Project: Lakota". UCLA. Archived from the original on 30 December 2010. Retrieved 23 December 2010.
  13. ^ Powers, William K. (1990). "Comments on the Politics of Orthography". American Anthropologist. 92 (2): 496–498. doi:10.1525/aa.1990.92.2.02a00190. JSTOR 680162.
  14. ^ Palmer, 2
  15. ^ a b c d Thunder Hawk, Cal (Aug 30, 2002). "Sinte Gleska University to reject Lakota Language Consortium membership". Lakota Journal - Around Lakota Country. Archived from the original on 2021-12-15. Retrieved 2021-12-15. Emery said, based on their review of "Lakota Language Revitalization: General Overview," a document published by the LLC and widely circulated in Lakota country by LLC this spring, Lakota Studies will not recommend SGU participation in the consortium. He continued, "The presentation suggests that a goal for the program is standardization of the language. We feel that this approach will cause problems because the language is utilized diversely. If standardization is determined to be the approach of the organization, then the question is whose version will be adopted? This will cause dissent and politics to become a factor in the process."
  16. ^ a b Arlene B. Hirschfelder (1995). Native Heritage: Personal Accounts by American Indians, 1790 to the Present. VNR AG. ISBN 978-0-02-860412-1.
  17. ^ John, Sonja (2018). "Orality Overwritten: Power Relations in Textualization". In Fink, Sebastian; Lang, Martin; Schretter, Manfred (eds.). Mehrsprachigkeit. Vom Alten Orient bis zum Esperanto (PDF). Zaphon, Münster www.zaphon.de. p. 98. ISBN 978-3-96327-004-8. In a next step, the Rosebud Sioux Tribe adopted Tribal Resolution No. 2012–343, on December 13, 2012, declaring Albert White Hat's Lakota orthography to be the standard on the Rosebud reservation: "THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED, the Rosebud Sioux Tribe hereby adopts the Official Rosebud Sioux Tribe Lakota Language Orthography recommended by the Rosebud Sioux Tribe Education Department." The tribe thus banned the LLC and its "Czech orthography" from the reservation and its educational system.
  18. ^ a b c John, Sonja (2018). "Orality Overwritten: Power Relations in Textualization". In Fink, Sebastian; Lang, Martin; Schretter, Manfred (eds.). Mehrsprachigkeit. Vom Alten Orient bis zum Esperanto (PDF). Zaphon, Münster www.zaphon.de. pp. 86–87. ISBN 978-3-96327-004-8.
  19. ^ John, Sonja (2018). "Orality Overwritten: Power Relations in Textualization". In Fink, Sebastian; Lang, Martin; Schretter, Manfred (eds.). Mehrsprachigkeit. Vom Alten Orient bis zum Esperanto (PDF). Zaphon, Münster www.zaphon.de. p. 73. ISBN 978-3-96327-004-8.
  20. ^ a b John, Sonja (2018). "Orality Overwritten: Power Relations in Textualization". In Fink, Sebastian; Lang, Martin; Schretter, Manfred (eds.). Mehrsprachigkeit. Vom Alten Orient bis zum Esperanto (PDF). Zaphon, Münster www.zaphon.de. pp. 97–98. ISBN 978-3-96327-004-8. In addition the residential schools aimed at separating children from the influence of their parents in order to educate them in the non-Native way.
        WHEREAS, issues of non-native American sources entering the reservation and school systems with their own welfare in mind; and their entities are utilizing individuals' names without consent for the sake of contributors lists to mislead the public and further receive support of unsuspecting school districts, school boards, or programs
        BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, that any individual, entity, or any other source that wishes to research or document any information regarding the Lakota Language, History, and Culture must first go through the approval of the Rosebud Sioux Tribal Council and Administration or designated entity such as Education Committee, RST Tribal Education, local Collaborations Groups, or Advisory Committee.
  21. ^ a b c Hauff, Tasha. "Beyond Colors, Numbers and Animals". JSTOR. University of Minnesota Press. Retrieved December 16, 2021.
  22. ^ a b Simmons-Ritchie, Daniel. "Red Cloud School Fights to Save Lakota Language". Native Times. Rapid City Journal. Retrieved December 16, 2021.
  23. ^ a b Rust, Jody (8 August 2018). "Immersion School Seeks to spark everyday use of Lakota language and preserve cultural identity". West River Eagle. Retrieved December 16, 2021.
  24. ^ a b c Brewer, Graham Lee (3 June 2022). "Lakota elders helped a white man preserve their language. Then he tried to sell it back to them". NBC News. Retrieved 3 June 2022.
  25. ^ a b c Standing Rock Tribal Council (3 June 2022). "Standing Rock banishment resolution". NBC News. Retrieved 3 June 2022.
  26. ^ Cho, Taehong. "Some phonological and phonetic aspects of stress and intonation in Lakhota: a preliminary report", Published as a PDF at :humnet.ucla.edu "Lakhota", Linguistics, UCLA
  27. ^ "Ten studies in the alphabet of the Lakota language". Lakota Times. 13 November 2008.
  28. ^ Deloria, Ella (1932). Dakota Texts. New York: G.E. Stechert.
  29. ^ a b "Celebrating 125 Years". Red Cloud Country. Spring 2013. Retrieved 2021-12-17. Note: Prior to 1969, the school was known as Holy Rosary.
  30. ^ Cook, Andrea (2012-11-16). "Brewer pledges to preserve Lakota language". Retrieved 2012-11-20.
  31. ^ Aaron Moselle (November 2012). "Chestnut Hill native looks to revitalize "eroded" American Indian language". NewsWorks, WHYY. Archived from the original on 2013-05-18. Retrieved 2012-11-29.
  32. ^ Donovan, Lauren (2012-11-11). "Learning Lakota, one word at a time". Bismarck Tribune. Bismarck, ND. Retrieved 2012-11-20.
  33. ^ DONOVAN, L (2012). "Tribal College Program Teaches Lakota Language to Youngsters". Community College Week. 25 (9): 10.
  34. ^ Doering, Christopher (2014-06-19). "Indians press for funds to teach Native languages". Argus Leader. Retrieved 2014-06-28.
  35. ^ Ecoffey, Brandon (2016-09-01). "School Opens In Protector Camp". Retrieved 2021-12-10.
  36. ^ Campbell, Kimberlee (2011). "Sitting Bull Offers New Lakota Curriculum". Tribal College Journal. 22 (3): 69–70.
  37. ^ Barringer, Felicity (8 January 1991). "Faded but Vibrant, Indian Languages Struggle to Keep Their Voices Alive". The New York Times. Retrieved 2013-10-25.
  38. ^ "App Shopper: Lakota Toddler (Education)". Retrieved 2012-09-12.
  39. ^ Flanigan, Olson. "Language Variation Among Native Americans: Observations of Lakota English". Journal of English Linguistics. Retrieved 2013-10-25.

References

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Further reading

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