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Oowekyala

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Oowekyala / uː ˈ w iː k j ə l ə / , also Ooweekeeno and ’Wuik̓ala in the language itself, is a dialect (or a sublanguage) of Heiltsuk–Oowekyala , a Northern Wakashan language spoken around Rivers Inlet and Owikeno Lake in the Central Coast region of the Canadian province of British Columbia , spoken by the Wuikinuxv , whose government is the Wuikinuxv Nation .

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23-469: The name is also spelled Wuikala, Wuikenukv, Oweekeno, Wikeno, Owikeno, Oowekeeno, Oweekano, Awikenox, Oowek'yala, Oweek'ala . The 45 consonants of Oowekyala: Phonologically, affricates are treated as stops, and nasals and approximants are treated as sonorants. Additionally, /ɦ/ and /ʔ/ are treated as sonorants. Oowekyala has phonemic short, long, and glottalized vowels: Oowekyala, like Nuxálk (Bella Coola), allows long sequences of obstruents, as in

46-426: A bunchberry plant.' Other examples are: There has been some dispute as to how to count the syllables in such words, what, if anything, constitutes the nuclei of those syllables, and if the concept of 'syllable' is even applicable to Nuxalk. However, when recordings are available, the syllable structure can be clearly audible, and speakers have clear conceptions as to how many syllables a word contains. In general,

69-491: A role, with e.g. ɬxʷtʰɬt͡sʰxʷ 'you spat on me' consisting of all syllabic consonants in citation form ( ɬ.xʷ.tʰ.ɬ.t͡sʰ.xʷ ) but condensed to stop-fricative syllables ( ɬxʷ.tɬ.t͡sʰxʷ ) at fast conversational speed. This syllabic structure may be compared with that of Miyako . The linguist Hank Nater has postulated the existence of a phonemic contrast between syllabic and non-syllabic sonorants : /m̩, n̩, l̩/ , spelled ṃ, ṇ, ḷ . (The vowel phonemes /i, u/ would then be

92-427: A syllable may be C̩ , CF̩ (where F is a fricative), CV , or CVC . When C is a stop, CF syllables are always composed of a plain voiceless stop ( pʰ, tʰ, t͡sʰ, kʰ, kʷ, qʰ, qʷ ) plus a fricative ( s, ɬ, x, xʷ, χ, χʷ ). For example, płt 'thick' is two syllables, pʰɬ.t , with a syllabic fricative, while in tʼχtʰ 'stone', stʼs 'salt', qʷtʰ 'crooked', k̓ʰx 'to see' and ɬqʰ 'wet' each consonant

115-560: Is a speech sound such as [ k ] , [ d͡ʒ ] , or [ f ] that is formed by obstructing airflow . Obstruents contrast with sonorants , which have no such obstruction and so resonate. All obstruents are consonants , but sonorants include vowels as well as consonants. Obstruents are subdivided into: Obstruents are often prototypically voiceless , but voiced obstruents are common. This contrasts with sonorants, which are prototypically voiced and only rarely phonemically voiceless. This phonetics article

138-441: Is a boy', nusʔūlχ-Ø ti-q̓s-tx 'the one who is ill is a thief'. There is a further causative paradigm whose suffixes may be used instead: This has a passive counterpart: This may also have a benefactive gloss when used with events involving less activity of their participant (e.g. nuyamł-tus ti-ʔimlk-tx ti-ʔimmllkī-tx 'the man made/let the boy sing'/'the man sang for the boy'), while in events with more active participants only

161-495: Is a separate syllable. Stop-fricative sequences can also be disyllabic, however, as in tɬ 'strong' (two syllables, at least in the cited recording) and kʷs 'rough' (one syllable or two). Syllabification of stop-fricative sequences may therefore be lexicalized or a prosodic tendency. Fricative-fricative sequences also have a tendency toward syllabicity, e.g. with sx 'bad' being one syllable or two, and sχs 'seal fat' being two syllables ( sχ.s ) or three. Speech rate plays

184-599: Is being referred to). Proximal demonstrative space roughly corresponds to the area of conversation, and proximal non-demonstrative may be viewed as the area in which one could attract another's attention without raising one's voice. Visible space beyond this is middle demonstrative, space outside of this but within the invisible neighborhood is medial non-demonstrative. Everything else is distal, and non-demonstrative if not mentioned earlier. The deictic prefixes and suffixes are as follows: Obstruent An obstruent ( / ˈ ɒ b s t r u ə n t / OB -stroo-ənt )

207-669: Is challenged by the Nuxalk language, in that the language includes long strings of consonants without any intervening vowel or other sonorant . Salishan languages , and especially Nuxalk, are famous for this. For instance, the following word contains only obstruents : clh- possess- p'xwlht- bunchberry- lhp- plant- lhh- PAST . PERF - s= 3SG . SUB / 3SG . OBJ = kwts then clh- p'xwlht- lhp- lhh- s= kwts possess- bunchberry- plant- PAST.PERF- 3SG.SUB/3SG.OBJ= then 'then he had had in his possession

230-430: Is running'. Whether the parenthesized segments are included in the suffix depends on whether the stem ends in an underlying resonant (vowel, liquid, nasal) and whether it is non-syllabic. So qāχla 'drink' becomes qāχla-ł 'we drink', qāχla-nap 'you (pl.) drink', qāχla-naw 'they drink', but nuyamł 'sing' becomes nuyamł-ił 'we're singing', nuyamł-ap 'you (pl.) are singing', nuyamł-aw 'they're singing'. However,

253-451: The causative gloss is possible. In the later group even more active verbs have a preference for the affix -lx- (implying passive experience) before the causative suffix. The executor in a transitive sentence always precedes the experiencer. However, when an event is proceeded by a lone participant, the semantic content of the event determines whether the participant is an executor or an experiencer. This can only be determined syntactically if

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276-429: The choice of the 3ps marker -Ø or -s is conditioned by semantics rather than phonetics. For example, the sentences tix-s ti-ʔimlk-tx and tix-Ø ti-ʔimlk-tx could both be glossed 'it's the man', but the first is appropriate if the man is the one who is normally chosen, while the second is making an assertion that it is the man (as opposed to someone else, as might otherwise be thought) who is chosen. The following are

299-517: The executor, the experiencer, or both to have focus: The affix -amk- ( -yamk- after the antipassive marker -a- ) allows an implement to have its preposition removed and to be focused. For example: There are four prepositions which have broad usage in Nuxalk: Nuxalk has a set of deictic prefixes and suffixes which serve to identify items as instantiations of domains rather than domains themselves and to locate them in deictic space. Thus

322-551: The following 7-obstruent word: Nux%C3%A1lk language Nuxalk ( / ˈ n uː h ɒ l k / , NOO -holl'k ), also known as Bella Coola / ˈ b ɛ l ə . ˈ k uː l ə / , is a Salishan language spoken by the Nuxalk people. Today, it is an endangered language in the vicinity of the Canadian town of Bella Coola , British Columbia . While the language is still sometimes called Bella Coola by linguists,

345-543: The major B.C. universities. CKNN-FM Nuxalk Radio is also working to promote the language. The name "Nuxalk" for the language comes from the native nuxalk (or nuχalk) , referring to the " Bella Coola Valley ". "Bella Coola" is a rendering of the Heiltsuk bḷ́xʷlá , meaning "stranger". Nowadays, Nuxalk is spoken only in Bella Coola, British Columbia , surrounded by Wakashan - and Athabascan -speaking tribes. It

368-616: The native name Nuxalk is preferred by some, notably by the Nuxalk Nation's government. Though the number of truly fluent speakers has not increased, the language is now taught in both the provincial school system and the Nuxalk Nation's own school, Acwsalcta, which means "a place of learning". Nuxalk language classes, if taken to at least the Grade 11 level, are considered adequate second-language qualifications for entry to

391-406: The participant is marked by the preposition ʔuł- , which marks the experience. Some events are inherently transitive or intransitive, but some may accept multiple valencies (e.g. ʔanayk 'to be needy'/'to want [something]'). Prepositions may mark experiencers, and must mark implements. Any participants which are not marked by prepositions are focussed . There are three voices, which allow either

414-415: The possible person markers for transitive verbs, with empty cells indications non-occurring combinations and '--' identifying semantic combinations which require the reflexive suffix -cut- followed by the appropriate intransitive suffix: E.g. sp̓-is ti-ʔimlk-tx ti-stn-tx 'the man struck the tree'. Whether a word can serve as an event isn't determined lexically, e.g. ʔimmllkī-Ø ti-nusʔūlχ-tx 'the thief

437-549: The presence of marked gender ). Nuxalk also borrows many words from contiguous North Wakashan languages (especially Heiltsuk ), as well as some from neighbouring Athabaskan languages and Tsimshian . Nuxalk has 29 consonants depicted below in IPA and the Americanist orthography of Davis & Saunders when it differs from the IPA. What are transcribed in the orthography as 'plain' velar consonants are actually palatals, and

460-537: The sentences wac̓-Ø ti-ƛ̓ikm-tx and ti-wac̓-Ø ti-ƛ̓ikm-tx , both 'the one that's running is a dog', are slightly different – similar to the difference between the English sentences 'the visitor is Canadian' and 'the visitor is a Canadian' respectively. The deixis system has a proximal/medial/distal and a non-demonstrative/demonstrative distinction. Demonstratives may be used when finger pointing would be appropriate (or in distal space when something previously mentioned

483-752: The sibilants s c c̓ palatalize to š č č̓ before x k k̓ . /i/ may be pronounced: /a/ may be pronounced: /o/ may be pronounced: In addition to the Americanist orthography of Davis & Saunders used in this article for clarity, Nuxalk also has a non-diacritical Bouchard-type practical orthography that originated in Hank Nater's The Bella Coola Language (1984), and was used in his 1990 Nuxalk-English Dictionary . It continues to be used today at Acwsalcta for Nuxalk language learning, as well as in Nuxalk documents and names. The orthographic variants are summarized below. The notion of syllable

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506-400: The syllabic counterparts of /j, w/ .) Words claimed to have unpredictable syllables include sṃnṃnṃuuc 'mute', smṇmṇcaw '(the fact) that they are children'. The first element in a sentence expresses the event of the proposition. It inflects for the person and number of one (in the intransitive paradigm) or two (in the transitive paradigm) participants. E.g. ƛ̓ikm-Ø ti-wac̓-tx 'the dog

529-477: Was once spoken in over 100 settlements, with varying dialects, but in the present day most of these settlements have been abandoned and dialectal differences have largely disappeared. Nuxalk forms its own subgroup of the Salish language family . Its lexicon is equidistant from Coast and Interior Salish , but it shares phonological and morphological features with Coast Salish (e.g., the absence of pharyngeals and

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