The Phonology and Morphology of the Tanacross Athabaskan Language

Description of the Tanacross Athabaskan language of Alaska. This dissertation presents a linguistic description of the phonology and morphology of Tanacross Athabaskan, an endangered language spoken by approximately sixty persons in eastern interior Alaska. There is little extant documentation of Ta...

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Main Author: Holton, Gary
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of California Ph.D. dissertation 2000
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11122/6806
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spelling ftunivalaska:oai:scholarworks.alaska.edu:11122/6806 2023-05-15T18:31:18+02:00 The Phonology and Morphology of the Tanacross Athabaskan Language Holton, Gary 2000-08 http://hdl.handle.net/11122/6806 en_US eng University of California Ph.D. dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/11122/6806 Athabaskan language Thesis 2000 ftunivalaska 2023-02-23T21:36:43Z Description of the Tanacross Athabaskan language of Alaska. This dissertation presents a linguistic description of the phonology and morphology of Tanacross Athabaskan, an endangered language spoken by approximately sixty persons in eastern interior Alaska. There is little extant documentation of Tanacross; hence, this description is based primarily on data gathered from first-hand field work. Tanacross is typical of the Athabaskan family in its typological characteristics. There is a relatively small phonemic inventory, and most of the phonemic contrasts are neutralized outside the stem-syllable onset position. The lexicon is relatively small, consisting of perhaps six thousand distinct morphemes. Noun morphology is relatively straightforward, with few active morphological processes. In contrast, verb structure is extremely complex, consisting of a possibly discontinuous root morpheme together with a string of inflectional and derivational affixes which combine via an elaborate system of non- concatenative templatic morphology. The verb word may stand alone as entire utterance. Members of other minor word classes tend to be monomorphemic. Tanacross exhibits several unique properties which distinguish it from neighboring Athabaskan languages and invite further study. Tanacross is unique among the Alaska Athabaskan languages in having high tone as the reflex of Proto-Athabaskan constriction. In addition, more than any other tonal language in Alaska Tanacross has preserved segmental information lost via apocope through an elaborate system of compound tone. Tanacross also has many unique phonetic features, including the loss of suffix vowels and the devoicing of stem-initial fricatives. Tanacross morphology reflects its transitional status between the (historically) conservative languages of the lower Tanana river and the innovative languages of the Tanana and Yukon uplands. US National Science Foundation CHAPTER 1: Introduction CHAPTER 2: Phonology CHAPTER 3: Two Phonetic Studies CHAPTER 4: Noun Morphology ... Thesis Tanacross Alaska Yukon University of Alaska: ScholarWorks@UA Yukon
institution Open Polar
collection University of Alaska: ScholarWorks@UA
op_collection_id ftunivalaska
language English
topic Athabaskan language
spellingShingle Athabaskan language
Holton, Gary
The Phonology and Morphology of the Tanacross Athabaskan Language
topic_facet Athabaskan language
description Description of the Tanacross Athabaskan language of Alaska. This dissertation presents a linguistic description of the phonology and morphology of Tanacross Athabaskan, an endangered language spoken by approximately sixty persons in eastern interior Alaska. There is little extant documentation of Tanacross; hence, this description is based primarily on data gathered from first-hand field work. Tanacross is typical of the Athabaskan family in its typological characteristics. There is a relatively small phonemic inventory, and most of the phonemic contrasts are neutralized outside the stem-syllable onset position. The lexicon is relatively small, consisting of perhaps six thousand distinct morphemes. Noun morphology is relatively straightforward, with few active morphological processes. In contrast, verb structure is extremely complex, consisting of a possibly discontinuous root morpheme together with a string of inflectional and derivational affixes which combine via an elaborate system of non- concatenative templatic morphology. The verb word may stand alone as entire utterance. Members of other minor word classes tend to be monomorphemic. Tanacross exhibits several unique properties which distinguish it from neighboring Athabaskan languages and invite further study. Tanacross is unique among the Alaska Athabaskan languages in having high tone as the reflex of Proto-Athabaskan constriction. In addition, more than any other tonal language in Alaska Tanacross has preserved segmental information lost via apocope through an elaborate system of compound tone. Tanacross also has many unique phonetic features, including the loss of suffix vowels and the devoicing of stem-initial fricatives. Tanacross morphology reflects its transitional status between the (historically) conservative languages of the lower Tanana river and the innovative languages of the Tanana and Yukon uplands. US National Science Foundation CHAPTER 1: Introduction CHAPTER 2: Phonology CHAPTER 3: Two Phonetic Studies CHAPTER 4: Noun Morphology ...
format Thesis
author Holton, Gary
author_facet Holton, Gary
author_sort Holton, Gary
title The Phonology and Morphology of the Tanacross Athabaskan Language
title_short The Phonology and Morphology of the Tanacross Athabaskan Language
title_full The Phonology and Morphology of the Tanacross Athabaskan Language
title_fullStr The Phonology and Morphology of the Tanacross Athabaskan Language
title_full_unstemmed The Phonology and Morphology of the Tanacross Athabaskan Language
title_sort phonology and morphology of the tanacross athabaskan language
publisher University of California Ph.D. dissertation
publishDate 2000
url http://hdl.handle.net/11122/6806
geographic Yukon
geographic_facet Yukon
genre Tanacross
Alaska
Yukon
genre_facet Tanacross
Alaska
Yukon
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/11122/6806
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