Coast Oregon Penutian languages

The Coast Oregon Penutian languages are a proposed family of three small languages or language clusters on the Oregon Coast that has moderate support.[1] Although much of their similarity is demonstrably due to language contact, linguists such as Scott DeLancey believe they may be genealogically related at a greater time depth. They are part of the much more hypothetical Penutian proposal.[2]

Coast Oregon Penutian
(proposed)
Geographic
distribution
western North America
Linguistic classificationPenutian?
  • Coast Oregon Penutian
Subdivisions
GlottologNone

Languages

The Coast Oregon Penutian languages are:

All Coast Oregon Penutian languages became extinct in the 20th century.

Vocabulary

Below is a comparison of selected basic vocabulary items in Alsea, Coos, and Lower Umpqua (a Coosan language variety). The lexical data is from Leo J. Frachtenberg's works.

glossAlsea[3]Coos[4]Lower Umpqua[5]
head kusiʼntsi, ʟōkˑxwî´l̄uxᵘxwā´ka
hair pelūʽʼpᴇlū, ʟōʼsinxˑne´kˑ; yı̂´akᵘhī´qūⁱ
eye hayaʼnīyustǃ, kˑǃīkˑxwa´lxwalkōpx
ear tskwaīʼsalyustǃkᵘha´n̄asqa´kwīx
nose tᴇsiʼntcūɬʟᵒwa´sî
tooth tǃᴇliʼlqtsätʼîx
tongue stilaʼkˑayustǃhe´ˡltatʽǃa´lˑtʽǃalˑ
mouth kxaiye´esʟaa´
hand tāʼmtᴇmkˑe´ɬatcīʟ; ʟpīkᵘ
foot yūⁿʼsalyustǃkxlatsı̄kᵘ
breast ɫkwa᷇ⁿ 'nipple'ɬqū´wa (of man)
meat hatsīʼlāltǃeˣtnı̄ʟ
blood puʼstᴇxwı̂´tı̂nqā´wī
bone qēʼkuslā´makˑ (pl.)tsnā´wî
person hīʼtsʟᴇmmahītc
name ʟān, ɫaʼniɬn̻´nasɬīn
dog tsqax, tsqēⁿxkwī´yos < Jargoncqaxtc < Siuslaw
fish tsūdaīʼsɬtʼī´aⁱ̄
louse täts; mî´tcîɬta´wî
tree kōts, kōʼxᵘɬqaⁱ´ʽtū
leaf kˑ'ēʼpauɬⁱnēlˑʟǃīp
flower hālēʼtxaūtcāᵃxānᵋ
water kˑiʼlūxāᵃptcī
fire tkᴇlɫtsǃīʼs, ʟkˑilīʼtǃatc!waɬʟīya´aᵘ
stone kˑlīlkᵘɬī´yexqayū´ʷⁱnts
earth leʽwīʼʟǃtāʟǃa´ᵃⁱ
salt qaʼlōsmî´tsǃlîshîlˑa´xwa
road yāʼxalīᵋtǃ, xˑūʼlamīt'he´wı̂ltstxaⁱnᵋ
eat nūns-qǃm-; ʟōᵘ-ɬītǃ-
die hask-, qan-e´qexaū-
I qann̻; nᴇx
you nīxeᵋnı̄xᵃts

References

  1. Grant, A. (1997). Coast Oregon Penutian: Problems and Possibilities. International Journal of American Linguistics, 63(1), 144-156.
  2. DeLancey, S., & Golla, V. (1997). The Penutian Hypothesis: Retrospect and Prospect. International Journal of American Linguistics, 63(1), 171-202.
  3. Frachtenberg, Leo J. (1920). Alsea texts and myths. Washington: Government Printing Office.
  4. Frachtenberg, Leo J. (1913). Coos texts. New York: Columbia University Press.
  5. Frachtenberg, Leo J. (1914). Lower Umpqua texts and notes on the Kusan dialects. Columbia University Contributions to Anthropology (vol. 4, pp. 141–150). (Reprinted 1969, New York: AMS Press).
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