Lushootseed
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Lushootseed (also xʷəlšucid, dxʷləšúcid, Puget Salish, Puget Sound Salish, Skagit-Nisqually) is the language or dialect continuum of several Salish Native American groups of modern-day Washington state. Lushootseed is a member of Coast Salish, one of the two main divisions of the Salishan language group.
Lushootseed, like its neighbour Twana, is in the Southern Coast Salish subgroup of the Salishan family of languages. The language was spoken by many Puget Sound region peoples, including the Duwamish, Steilacoom, Suquamish, Squaxin Island Tribe, Muckleshoot, Nisqually, and Puyallup in the south and the Snohomish, Stillaguamish, Skagit, and Swinomish in the north.
The language is noteworthy for its lack of nasal consonants, especially as it, like other Northwest Coast languages, contains a very large number of consonants.
Ethnologue reports that there are only 60 fluent speakers of Lushootseed, evenly divided between the northern and southern dialects.[1] On the other hand, the Ethnologue's list of United States languages also lists, alongside Lushootseed's 60 speakers, 100 speakers for Skagit, 107 for Southern Puget Sound Salish, and 10 for Snohomish (a dialect on the boundary between the northern and southern varieties).[2]
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[edit] Subdivisions
Lushootseed consists of two dialect groups which can be further divided into subdialects:
- Northern Lushootseed
- Snohomish (at Tulalip)
- Stillaguamish
- Lower Skagit-Swinomish (on Skagit River and on Whidbey Island)
- Upper Skagit[1]
- Sauk-Suiattle (on Sauk River and Suiattle River])
- Southern Lushootseed
- Skykomish
- Snoqualmie
- Steilacoom
- Suquamish
- Duwamish
- Whulshootseed (Muckleshoot people) (on Green and White rivers)
- Puyallup
- Nisqually
- Sahewamish
The division into Northern and Southern groups is based on vocabulary and stress patterns. More accurately, the dialects form a cline.
[edit] Some Vocabulary
[edit] Southern Lushootseed Salmonid Vocabulary
- ačədádxʷ
- a word that covers all Pacific salmon and some species of trout.
- sác̓əb
- Chinook or King
- x̌ʔəwádxʷ
- sockeye salmon
- sq̓ə́čqs
- coho salmon
- ƛ̕xʷáy
- chum salmon
- hədúʔ
- the pink salmon
- qíw̓x̌
- steelhead
- pədkʷəxʷic
- coho season
- sc̓áy’t
- gills
- ɬičáʔa
- nets
- ɬičaʔalikʷ
- net fishing
- ʔálil tiʔíɬ ƛ̕usq̓íl
- spawning season
- skʷəlúb
- body fat
- sč̕ət̓šáds
- tailfin
- t̓áltəd
- fillet knife
- sq̓wəlús
- fish dried for storage
- səlúsqid
- fish heads
- qəlx̌
- dried salmon eggs
- ƛ̕ə́bƛ̕əbqʷ
- fresh eggs
- sɬúʔb
- dried chum
- sxʷúdzəʔdaliɬəd
- fish with a large amount of body fat
- xʷšábús
- lightly smoked
[edit] Northern Lushootseed Salmonid Vocabulary
- sʔuladxʷ
- a word that covers all Pacific salmon and some species of trout.
- yubəč
- Chinook or King
- scəqiʔ
- sockeye salmon
- ƛ̕xʷayʔ
- chum salmon
- skʷəxʷic
- silver salmon
[edit] Northern Lushootseed Aquatic Vocabulary
- qal’qaləx̌ič
- Orca - Killer Whale
- čəxʷəluʔ
- Grey Whale
- sq̓aƛ̕
- otter
- sup̓qs
- seal
- sťəqxʷ
- beaver
- sqibk̕ʷ
- octopus
- ʔaləšək
- Western pond turtle
- waq̓waq̓
- frog
- sk̕ʷic̕i
- sea urchin
- təǰabac
- sea cucumber
- q̓ʷəlačiʔ
- star fish
- bəsqʷ
- crab
- ťaɫigʷs
- Rock Cod
- p̓uay̓
- flounder
- kəlapx̌ʷəlč
- jelly fish
- sʔax̌ʷuʔ
- clam
- tulqʷ
- mussel
- ƛ̕ux̌ʷƛ̕ux̌ʷ
- oyster
- c̕ubc̕ub
- banacle
- sx̌aʔaʔ
- little neck steam clams
- xʷč́iɫqs
- large native oyster
- gʷidəq
- geoduck
- stxʷub
- butter clam
- sx̌əpab
- cockle clam
- haʔəc
- horse clam
- č́ič́əlpyaqid or puʔps
- periwinkle
- sč́awyʔ
- any seashell
- ʔuk̕ʷs
- large chiton
- x̌ald
- small chiton
[edit] References
- ^ Van Eijk, Jan. The Lillooet Language: Phonology, Morphology, Syntax, UBC Press, 1985, p.xxiv.
[edit] External links
- The Tulalip Lushootseed Department's Website
- History professor helps keep local Native American language alive by Drew Brown for PLU Scene Magazine
- Lushootseed Peoples of Puget Sound Country
- Ethnologue report

