Chemakum (/ˈɛməkʌm/ CHEM-ək-um; also written as Chimakum or Chimacum) is an extinct Chimakuan language once spoken by the Chemakum, a Native American group that once lived on western Washington state's Olympic Peninsula. It was closely related to the Quileute language, also extinct but undergoing revitalization in the early 21st century. In the 1860s, Chief Seattle and the Suquamish people killed many of the Chimakum people. In 1890, Franz Boas found out about only three speakers, and they spoke it imperfectly, of whom he managed to gather linguistic data from one, a woman named Louise Webster (her brother was another speaker of the three).[1] Several years later in the 1920s, Manuel J. Andrade cross-checked some of Boas' materials with the same speaker. A few semi-speakers continued until the 1940s on the east side of the Olympic Peninsula, between Port Townsend and Hood Canal.[citation needed]

Chemakum
Aqoʞúlo (autoethnonym)
Pronunciation/ʔaˈxʷóqʷolo/
Native toOlympic Peninsula, Washington
EthnicityChimakum
Extinct1940s
Chimakuan
  • Chemakum
Language codes
ISO 639-3xch
xch
Glottologchim1310
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The name Chemakum is an anglicization of the Salishan name for the Chimakum people, perhaps old Twana čə́mqəm (currently čə́bqəb [t͡ʃə́bqəb]).

Phonology

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Boas’[2] original article based on fieldwork with one of the last three native speakers in the summer of 1890 uses the following consonantal symbols: ‹h; k, ʞ, q; u; y; n; t; s, c, tç; ts, tc; m, p; l, lʻ; ′› along with ejectivization usually notated by a following ‹!› on stops and affricates, but sometimes also by a following ‹ߴ›. Labio-dorsals and the lateral ejective were analyzed as consonant clusters as the transcription shows. Based on his own description (in a footnote) and words and sentences cited, along with some comparison to Quileute cognates, the following phonemic inventory can be determined (the plain uvulars were probably pre-uvular and the plain stops and affricates were probably somewhat aspirated as in most languages of the region including Quileute):

Bilabial Alveolar Palato-
alveolar
Labio-
velar
Uvular Glottal
plain sibilant lateral plain labial
Plosive/
Affricate
plain p ‹p› t ‹t› t͡s ‹ts› t͡ʃ ‹tc› ‹ku› q ‹ʞ› ‹ʞu› ʔ ‹′›
ejective ‹p!› ‹t!› t͡sʼ ‹ts!› t͡ɬʼ ‹t!lʻ› t͡ʃʼ ‹tc!› kʷʼ ‹k!u› ‹ʞ!› qʷʼ ‹ʞ!u›
Fricative s ‹s› ɬ ‹lʻ› ʃ ‹c› χ ‹q› χʷ ‹qu› h ‹h›
Sonorant m ‹m› n ‹n› l ‹l› j ‹y› w ‹u›

Transcription isn't fully standardized and some amount of variation is attested. E.g., some instances of ejectives are double-marked with both ‹!› and a following ‹ߴ›. Compare the independent word ‘back’ written ‹ʞ!ߴē′enōkoat› against the corresponding lexical suffix is written ‹-ʞ!ĕnuk›. Similarly, the lexical suffix for ‘hand’ appears as ‹-t!ߴa›. Here, the Quileute cognate ‹-t̓ay› shows that, despite the notation, the sound was probably just an ejective t. Yet another notation for an ejective — simply a following apostrophe — may be found in the word ‹ʞ!ߴautߴátct› ‘bracelet’ if this is indeed cognate to Quileute ‹ḳ̓aḳ̓ʷò·t̓á·yat› ‘bracelet’, and in ‹tcߴālʻa› ‘stone’, cognate to Quileute ‹k̓á·t̓ƚa› ‘stone’.

The labio-dorsals were not analyzed as unit consonants by Boas. The audible rounding on them was either marked as a glide, or the rounding was notationally transferred to a neighboring vowel. Consider the following examples: ‹kuē′lʻ› ‘one’ (Quileute ‹wí·ƚ›), ‹lʻa′kua› ‘two’ (Quileute ‹ƚáʔw›), ‹ʞoā′lē› ‘three’ (Quileute ‹ḳʷáʔl›), ‹-kō› ‘canoe (lexical suffix)’ (Quileute ‹-kʷ›), ‹-ʞōs› ‘neck (lexical suffix)’ (Quileute ‹-ḳ̓ʷó·s›), ‹-tçuʞ› ‘our’ (Quileute ‹-t̓oqʷ›) etc.

The meaning of Boas’ ‹tç› is not entirely certain. Swadesh,[3] working with Boas’ data half a century later, decided to interpret ‹tç› as /t͡ʃʼ/ — in his notation ‹ч̓› — but it is not clear why, especially considering that /t͡ʃʼ/ is witten differently in ‹tcߴālʻa› ‘stone’. Boas himself describes the sound as “dento-alveolar t”, which isn't very helpful. Based on comparative evidence from Quileute, Powell[4] interprets ‹tç› as a variant symbol for /t/ (perhaps notating some allophonic difference that Boas perceived).

Swadesh[3] added a distinction between labio-velar and labio-uvular fricatives for which there is no explicit evidence in Boas’ paper[2] yielding the system below:

Bilabial Alveolar Palato-
alveolar
Labio-
velar
Uvular Glottal
plain sibilant lateral plain labial
Plosive/
Affricate
plain p t t͡s t͡ʃ q ʔ
ejective t͡sʼ t͡ɬʼ t͡ʃʼ kʷʼ qʷʼ
Fricative s ɬ ʃ χ χʷ h
Sonorant m n l j w

Boas[2] transcribed several distinct vowels in the published account of Chemakum (and a few more in his unpublished fieldnotes): ‹ā, a, ē, e, ĕ, ī, ō›, along with a marginal ‹u› whose main purpose was to indicate rounding adjacent to labio-dorsal consonants. The list was reduced to a much simpler phonemic inventory of three short vowels /i a o/ and three long vowels /iː aː oː/ by Powell.[5] The vowels probably exhibited some amount of allophonic variation as Boas’ original transcription shows, but according to Andrade,[6] less so than in Quileute.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Ruby, Robert H.; John Arthur Brown (1992). A Guide to the Indian Tribes of the Pacific Northwest. University of Oklahoma Press. pp. 22–23, 28. ISBN 9780806124797.
  2. ^ a b c Boas, Franz (1892). "Notes on the Chemakum language". American Anthropologist. 5 (1): 37–44. doi:10.1525/aa.1892.5.1.02a00050. JSTOR 658768.
  3. ^ a b Swadesh, Morris (1955). "Chemakum lexicon compared with Quileute". International Journal of American Linguistics. 21 (1): 60–72. doi:10.1086/464309. JSTOR 1263215. S2CID 143862109 – via JSTOR.
  4. ^ Powell, James V. (1974). Proto-Chimakuan: Materials for a Reconstruction. PhD dissertation at the University of Hawaiʻi. p. 16.
  5. ^ Elmendorf, William W. (1990). Suttles, Wayne (ed.). "Chemakum". Handbook of North American Indians. 7 (Northwest Coast): 438–440.
  6. ^ Andrade, Manuel J. (1933). Boas, Franz (ed.). "Quileute". Handbook of Indian American Languages. 3: 151.