Aleut ( ) or
is the language spoken by the
Aleut
Aleuts ( ; (west) or (east) ) are the Indigenous people of the Aleutian Islands, which are located between the North Pacific Ocean and the Bering Sea. Both the Aleuts and the islands are politically divided between the US state of Alaska ...
living in the
Aleutian Islands
The Aleutian Islands ( ; ; , "land of the Aleuts"; possibly from the Chukchi language, Chukchi ''aliat'', or "island")—also called the Aleut Islands, Aleutic Islands, or, before Alaska Purchase, 1867, the Catherine Archipelago—are a chain ...
,
Pribilof Islands,
Commander Islands, and the
Alaska Peninsula (in Aleut , the origin of the state name Alaska).
Aleut is the sole language in the Aleut branch of the
Eskimo–Aleut language family. The Aleut language consists of three
dialect
A dialect is a Variety (linguistics), variety of language spoken by a particular group of people. This may include dominant and standard language, standardized varieties as well as Vernacular language, vernacular, unwritten, or non-standardize ...
s, including (Eastern Aleut), / (Atka Aleut), and / (Western Aleut, now extinct).

Various sources estimate there are fewer than 100 to 150 remaining active Aleut speakers. Because of this, Eastern and Atkan Aleut are classified as "critically endangered and extinct" and have an
Expanded Graded Intergenerational Disruption Scale
The Expanded Graded Intergenerational Disruption Scale (EGIDS), developed by Lewis and Simons (2010) as an expansion of Joshua Fishman's GIDS, measures a language's status in terms of Language endangerment, endangerment or development.
The table ...
(EGIDS) rating of 7. The task of revitalizing Aleut has largely been left to local government and community organizations. The overwhelming majority of schools in the historically Aleut-speaking regions lack any language/culture courses in their curriculum, and those that do fail to produce fluent or even proficient speakers.
History
The Eskimo and Aleut peoples were part of a migration from Asia across
Beringia
Beringia is defined today as the land and maritime area bounded on the west by the Lena River in Russia; on the east by the Mackenzie River in Canada; on the north by 70th parallel north, 72° north latitude in the Chukchi Sea; and on the south ...
, the Bering land bridge between 4,000 and 6,000 years ago. During this period, the
Proto-Eskimo-Aleut language was spoken, which broke up around 2000 BC. Differentiation of the two branches is thought to have happened in Alaska because of the linguistic diversity found in the Eskimo languages of Alaska relative to the entire geographic area where Eskimo languages are spoken (eastward through Canada to Greenland). After the split between the two branches, their development is thought to have occurred in relative isolation.
Evidence suggests a culture associated with Aleut speakers on the Eastern Aleutian Islands as early as 4,000 years ago, followed by a gradual expansion westward over the next 1,500 years to the
Near Islands
The Near Islands or the Sasignan Islands (, ) are a group of volcanic islands in the Aleutian Islands in southwestern Alaska, between the Russian Commander Islands to the west and Buldir Island and the Rat Islands to the east.
Geography
Th ...
. Another westward expansion may have occurred about 1,000 years ago, which may explain the lack of obvious diversification among the Aleut dialects, with Eastern Aleut features having spread westward. This second westward expansion is characterized as a period of cultural affinity with southeastern Alaska and the Pacific Northwest Coast, which may explain linguistic features that Aleut shares with neighboring non-Eskimo languages, such as rules of plural formation.
Due to colonization by Russian colonizers and traders in the 18th and 19th centuries, Aleut has a large portion of Russian loanwords. However, they do not affect the basic vocabulary and thus do not suggest undue influence on the language.
In March 2021, the last native speaker of the Bering dialect, Vera Timoshenko, died aged 93 in
Nikolskoye,
Bering Island, Kamchatka.
Dialects
Within the Eastern group are the dialects of the Alaskan Peninsula,
Unalaska,
Belkofski,
Akutan, the
Pribilof Islands,
Kashega and
Nikolski. The Pribilof dialect has more living speakers than any other dialect of Aleut.
The Atkan grouping comprises the dialects of Atka and
Bering Island.
Attuan was a distinct dialect showing influence from both Atkan and Eastern Aleut. Copper Island Aleut (also called
Medny Aleut) was a Russian-Attuan
mixed language
A mixed language, also referred to as a hybrid language or fusion language, is a type of contact language that arises among a bilingual group combining aspects of two or more languages but not clearly deriving primarily from any single language. ...
(
Copper Island (, ''Medny'', ''Mednyj'') having been settled by Attuans). Despite the name, after 1969 Copper Island Aleut was spoken only on Bering Island, as Copper Islanders were evacuated there. After the death of the last native speaker in 2022, it became extinct.
All dialects show lexical influence from
Russian; Copper Island Aleut has also adopted many Russian inflectional endings. The largest number of Russian
loanword
A loanword (also a loan word, loan-word) is a word at least partly assimilated from one language (the donor language) into another language (the recipient or target language), through the process of borrowing. Borrowing is a metaphorical term t ...
s can be seen in the Bering Aleut.
Phonology
Consonants
The
consonant
In articulatory phonetics, a consonant is a speech sound that is articulated with complete or partial closure of the vocal tract, except for the h sound, which is pronounced without any stricture in the vocal tract. Examples are and pronou ...
phoneme
A phoneme () is any set of similar Phone (phonetics), speech sounds that are perceptually regarded by the speakers of a language as a single basic sound—a smallest possible Phonetics, phonetic unit—that helps distinguish one word fr ...
s of the various Aleut dialects are represented below. Each cell indicates the
International Phonetic Alphabet
The International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) is an alphabetic system of phonetic notation based primarily on the Latin script. It was devised by the International Phonetic Association in the late 19th century as a standard written representation ...
(IPA) representation of the phoneme; consonants existing only in loanwords are in parentheses. Some phonemes are unique to specific dialects of Aleut.
The palato-alveolar affricate and uvular stop are pronounced with strong aspiration.
Attuan labial fricative is pronounced voiced or devoiced.
Voiceless approximants and
devoiced
Voice or voicing is a term used in phonetics and phonology to characterize speech sounds (usually consonants). Speech sounds can be described as either voiceless (otherwise known as ''unvoiced'') or voiced.
The term, however, is used to ref ...
nasals are
preaspirated. The preaspiration of approximants causes very little friction and may pronounced more as a breathy voice. The preaspiration of devoiced nasals starts with a voiceless airstream through the nose and may end voiced before a vowel. The preaspiration feature is represented orthographically with an preceding the given sound. For example, a devoiced, preaspirated labial nasal would be written .
Voiced approximants and nasals may be partly devoiced in contact with a voiceless consonant and at the end of a word.
The voiceless glottal approximant functions as an initial aspiration before a vowel. In Atkan and Attuan, the prevocalic aspiration contrasts with an audible but not written glottal stop initiation of the vowel. Compare ('to turn the head') and ('to need'). This contrast has been lost in Eastern Aleut.
Modern Eastern Aleut has a much simpler consonant inventory because the voice contrasts among nasals,
sibilants and approximants have been lost.
Consonants listed in the dental column have varied places of articulation. The stop, nasal, and lateral dentals commonly have a laminal articulation. The voiced dental fricative is pronounced interdentally.
The pronunciation of the sibilant varies from an alveolar articulation to a retracted articulation like a palato-alveolar consonant. There is no contrast between and in Aleut. Many Aleut speakers experience difficulties with this distinction while learning English.
Vowels
Aleut has a basic three-vowel system including the high front , low , and high back . Aleut vowels contrast with their long counterparts , , and .
Notably, Aleut is pronounced slightly lower than in the vowel space.
The long vowel is pronounced retracted in the vowel space creating a significant distinction relative to the vowel length of . The two high vowels are pronounced with the same vowel quality regardless of vowel length.
In contact with a
uvular, is lowered to , is backed to , and is lowered to . In contact with a
coronal, is raised to or , and is fronted to .
The mid-vowels and occur only in family names like ''Nevzorof'' and very recently introduced Russian loanwords.
Syllable structure
(C)(C)V(V) ± ± C
An Aleut word may contain one to about a dozen syllables, all syllables with a vocalic nucleus. In Atkan and Attuan, there is a word-final CC due to
apocopation. There also exist word initial CCC in loanwords.
Phonotactics
A word may begin or end in a vowel, both short and long, with few exceptions. Due to apocopation, short is not found in the final position. The same is true for short , except in some obsolete suffixes, such as 'your' (pl.) which is realized as and in modern Eastern and Atkan Aleut.
Vowels within a word are separated by at least one consonant. All single consonants can appear in an intervocalic position, with the following exceptions:
* and do not occur in intervocalic positions
* does not occur in contact with
* does not occur in contact with
Words begin with any consonant except and preaspirated consonants (with the exception of the preaspirated in Atkan Aleut). Only in loanwords do , , and the borrowed consonants (''p, b, f, d, g,
ɹ/
ɾ)'' appear word-initially.
The word-initial CC can take many forms, with various restrictions on the distribution of consonants:
* a stop or , followed by a
continuant
In phonetics
Phonetics is a branch of linguistics that studies how humans produce and perceive sounds or, in the case of sign languages, the equivalent aspects of sign. Linguists who specialize in studying the physical properties of speech ...
other than or
* a coronal stop or , followed by a postlingual continuant (velar, uvular, or glottal).
* postlingual stop or , followed by
* or , followed by
Intervocalic CC can occur in normal structure or as the result of syncopation.
In CC clusters of two voiced continuants, there is often a short transitional vowel. For example, 'umbilical cord' is pronounced
iĝ-">liĝ- similar to 'brain'.
Almost all possible combinations of coronal and postlingual consonants are attested.
The combination of two postlingual or two coronal consonants is rare, but attested, such as 'rain pants', 'wolf', 'fit for me', 'to say; to tell; to call'.
In CCC clusters, the middle consonant is either , , . For example, 'pulse', 'to wrap up', 'short fishline'.
The most common single consonants to appear word-final are , , , , , and .
Through apocopation, word-final single consonants and occur, and word-final consonant clusters ending with or .
Syncopation
The details of the extensive
syncopation
In music, syncopation is a variety of rhythms played together to make a piece of music, making part or all of a tune or piece of music off-beat (music), off-beat. More simply, syncopation is "a disturbance or interruption of the regular flow of ...
characteristic of the Eastern Aleut dialect are described below. In the examples, the syncopated vowel will be shown in parentheses.
A word medial short vowel may be syncopated between single consonants, except after an initial
open
Open or OPEN may refer to:
Music
* Open (band), Australian pop/rock band
* The Open (band), English indie rock band
* ''Open'' (Blues Image album), 1969
* ''Open'' (Gerd Dudek, Buschi Niebergall, and Edward Vesala album), 1979
* ''Open'' (Go ...
short syllable and/or before a final open short syllable. For example, 'it is good' and 'what for?'.
The syncopation often creates consonant clusters beyond those prescribed by the general rules of Aleut phonotactics. The resulting clusters include:
* clusters of two stops: 'he killed it'
* geminate consonants: 'is young'
* a regular three consonant cluster: 'after a short while (he)'
In some frequently encountered syncopated forms, which otherwise result in irregular three consonant clusters, the middle uvular fricative is deleted along with the preceding vowel. For example, 'saying' and 'being said'.
At slower speeds of speech, the syncopation may not be realized. Compare 'you are getting skinny' beside 'I am getting skinny'.
Stress
Aleut stress is indeterminate and often difficult to define. Stress varies based on the relation to the beginning or end of the word form, the length of the vowels, the sonority of the consonants, open- or closeness of the syllables, or the number of syllables in sentential rhythm and intonation. Stress affects the length of both vowels and consonants. Stress underlies the distinctive
syncopation
In music, syncopation is a variety of rhythms played together to make a piece of music, making part or all of a tune or piece of music off-beat (music), off-beat. More simply, syncopation is "a disturbance or interruption of the regular flow of ...
characteristics of Eastern Aleut. In the following discussion, the acute accent (á) indicates the stronger stress and the grave accent (à) indicates the weaker.
In Eastern Aleut, stronger stress tends to fall on the penultimate syllable if it is short (has a short vowel), or on the last syllable if it is long (has a long vowel). The weaker stress commonly falls on the first syllable. For example, 'house', 'talked', 'without talking', 'he himself'.
Eastern Aleut words with more than two syllables exhibit a wider variety of stress patterns. Stress may be attracted to another syllable by a long vowel or relatively sonorant consonant, or by a closed syllable. It is possible the stress can be determined by rhythmic factors so that one word will have different stress in different contexts, such as compared to , both meaning 'arrow'.
In Atkan and Attuan Aleut, stronger stress more commonly falls on the first syllable. However, long vowels, sonorants, etc. have similar effects on stress as in Eastern Aleut. For example, 'how many' vs 'where'; 'spear' vs 'sea'.
Stress may also be expressive, as with exclamations or polite requests. Stronger stress falls on the last syllable and is accompanied by a lengthening of a short vowel. For example, 'coffee is coming'. There is a similar structure for polite requests: 'please eat!' vs 'eat'.
Under ordinary strong stress, a short syllable tends to be lengthened, either by lengthening the vowel or geminating the following single consonant. Lengthening of the vowel is most common in Eastern, but is found in Atkan before a voiced consonant. In all dialects gemination is common between an initial stressed syllable with a short vowel and a following stressed syllable. For example, 'from him' pronounced and 'a boy' pronounced .
Phrasal phonology
The following descriptions involve phonological processes that occur in connected speech.
Word-final velar and uvular fricatives are voiceless when followed by a word-initial voiceless consonant and are voiced when followed by a word-initial voiced consonant or a vowel.
Word-final nasals and are frequently deleted before an initial consonant other than . For example, 'on the ground' and 'the interior of the house'.
In Eastern Aleut, the final vowel may be elided before or contracted with the initial vowel of the following word, as in 'he is bleeding awfully'.
In Atkan, the final syllable of a word form may be clipped off in fast speech. This is even frequent at slow speed in certain constructions with
auxiliary verbs. The result will be a sequence of vowels or full contraction:
* , , 'he's about to come'
* , , 'I'll go home'
Orthography
Latin (1972–present)
The modern practical Aleut orthography was designed in 1972 for the Alaskan school system's bilingual program:
: * denotes letters typically used in loanwords
: † only found in Atkan Aleut
Cyrillic
Old
The historic Aleut (
Cyrillic
The Cyrillic script ( ) is a writing system used for various languages across Eurasia. It is the designated national script in various Slavic, Turkic, Mongolic, Uralic, Caucasian and Iranic-speaking countries in Southeastern Europe, Ea ...
) alphabet found in both Alaska and Russia has the standard pre-1918
Russian orthography
Russian orthography () is an orthography, orthographic tradition formally considered to encompass spelling ( rus, орфогра́фия, r=orfografiya, p=ɐrfɐˈɡrafʲɪjə) and punctuation ( rus, пунктуа́ция, r=punktuatsiya, p=p ...
as its basis, although a number of Russian letters were used only in loanwords. In addition, the extended Cyrillic letters г̑ (г with inverted breve), ҟ, ҥ, ў, х̑ (х with inverted breve) were used to represent distinctly Aleut sounds.
A total of 24+ letters were used to represent distinctly Aleut words, including 6 vowels (а, и, й, у, ю, я) and 16 consonants (г, г̑, д, з, к, ԟ, л, м, н, ҥ, с, т, ў, х, х̑, ч). The letter
ӄ has replaced the letter
ԟ (Aleut Ka) for the
voiceless uvular plosive in modern Aleut Cyrillic publications.
: * denotes letters typically used in loanwords
: † only found in Atkan Aleut
New
The modern Aleut orthography (for
Bering dialect):
Comparison
Morphology
Open word classes in Aleut include nouns and verbs, both derived from stems with suffixes. Many stems are ambivalent, being both nominal and verbal (see
§ Derivation). There are no adjectives other than verbal nouns and participles. Other word classes include pronouns, contrastives, quantifiers, numerals, positional nouns, demonstratives, and interrogatives.
Nouns
Ordinary nouns have suffixes for
*
number
A number is a mathematical object used to count, measure, and label. The most basic examples are the natural numbers 1, 2, 3, 4, and so forth. Numbers can be represented in language with number words. More universally, individual numbers can ...
: singular, dual, and plural
* relational case:
absolutive and relative
*
person
A person (: people or persons, depending on context) is a being who has certain capacities or attributes such as reason, morality, consciousness or self-consciousness, and being a part of a culturally established form of social relations suc ...
: first, second,
anaphoric third, reflexive third
The anaphoric third person refers to a proceeding term, specified by being marked in the relative case or from context. For example, 'the man's house' and 'his house'.
As free forms, the pronouns are used primarily as an object, like fully specified nouns. As
enclitics they function as subject markers.
Positional nouns
Positional nouns indicate positional, directional, or some more abstract relation to a definite referent (a person or proceeding noun in relative case). Positional nouns have possessive suffixes but no inherent number.
Unlike ordinary nouns, positional nouns have two adverbial cases:
locative and/or
ablative. The most important stem , called the dative, has only a locative form (largely irregular) meaning 'to, at, for-'.
Most are used in absolutive case, as in 'he passed behind the house'. They can also be used in the relative case, as in 'the house behind the store'.
Numerals
The numeral system is decimal with 'ten' and 'hundred' as the basic higher terms. The higher tens numerals are derived through multiplication (e.g. 2 x10 for 'twenty'). The multiplicative numerals are derived with the suffix on the base numeral followed by 'ten'. For example, 'forty'.
Verbs
Verbs differ from nouns morphologically by having mood/tense suffixes. Like nominal stems, verb stems may end in a short vowel or consonant. Many stems ending in a consonant had auxiliary vowels which have largely become part of the stem itself.
Negation is sometimes suffixal, preceding or combining with the mood/tense suffix. In some cases the negation will be followed by the enclitic subject pronoun.
Derivation (postbases)
There are 570 derivational suffixes (
postbases) including many composite ones, but about two thirds are found only in a small number of words. There are approximately 175 more common suffixes, considerably less than the Eskimo branch of the family.
A postbase may be nominal or verbal, yielding nouns derived from nouns or verbs, or verbs derived from verbs or nouns, or from nominal phrases. Many stems are ambivalent, being either nominal or verbal and even some derivatives can be ambivalent.
Difficulties distinguishing between nominal and verbal parts of speech arise because the parts of speech in Aleut are not easy to distinguish. A verbal stem may be used as a verbal predicate, and quite often as a noun. The verbal use of nouns is also very common.
The derivational suffixes may combine in strings of up to about six components, some belonging together to form composites. In sequences, each successive suffix often modifies the preceding string.
The majority of derivatives have a single stem that occurs also without the suffixes in question. While some stems are bound, only occurring with some derivational suffix. For example, compare 'to scare, frighten' 'to fear, be afraid of' 'to be terrible, frightening'.
Syntax
Overview
Most Aleut words can be classified as
noun
In grammar, a noun is a word that represents a concrete or abstract thing, like living creatures, places, actions, qualities, states of existence, and ideas. A noun may serve as an Object (grammar), object or Subject (grammar), subject within a p ...
s or
verb
A verb is a word that generally conveys an action (''bring'', ''read'', ''walk'', ''run'', ''learn''), an occurrence (''happen'', ''become''), or a state of being (''be'', ''exist'', ''stand''). In the usual description of English, the basic f ...
s. Notions which in English are expressed by means of
adjective
An adjective (abbreviations, abbreviated ) is a word that describes or defines a noun or noun phrase. Its semantic role is to change information given by the noun.
Traditionally, adjectives are considered one of the main part of speech, parts of ...
s and
adverb An adverb is a word or an expression that generally modifies a verb, an adjective, another adverb, a determiner, a clause, a preposition, or a sentence. Adverbs typically express manner, place, time, frequency, degree, or level of certainty by ...
s are generally expressed in Aleut using verbs or
postbases (
derivational suffixes).
Aleut's canonical
word order
In linguistics, word order (also known as linear order) is the order of the syntactic constituents of a language. Word order typology studies it from a cross-linguistic perspective, and examines how languages employ different orders. Correlatio ...
is subject–object–verb (SOV).
Nouns are obligatorily marked for
grammatical number
In linguistics, grammatical number is a Feature (linguistics), feature of nouns, pronouns, adjectives and verb agreement (linguistics), agreement that expresses count distinctions (such as "one", "two" or "three or more"). English and many other ...
(singular, dual, or plural) and for
absolutive case or
relative case (some researchers, notably Anna Berge, dispute both the characterization of this feature as "case" and the names ''absolutive'' and ''relative''. This approach to Aleut nouns comes from Eskimo linguistics, but these terms can be misleading when applied to Aleut). The absolutive form is the default form, while the relative form communicates a relationship (such as possessive or contrastive) between the noun and another member of the
sentence, possibly one that has been omitted. Absolutive and relative are identical in most combinations of
person
A person (: people or persons, depending on context) is a being who has certain capacities or attributes such as reason, morality, consciousness or self-consciousness, and being a part of a culturally established form of social relations suc ...
and
number
A number is a mathematical object used to count, measure, and label. The most basic examples are the natural numbers 1, 2, 3, 4, and so forth. Numbers can be represented in language with number words. More universally, individual numbers can ...
.
In
possessive
A possessive or ktetic form (Glossing abbreviation, abbreviated or ; from ; ) is a word or grammatical construction indicating a relationship of possession (linguistics), possession in a broad sense. This can include strict ownership, or a numbe ...
constructions, Aleut marks both possessor and possessum, with the possessor preceding the possessum:
The verbal predicate of a simple sentence of the final clause of a complex sentence carries the temporal and modal marking in relation to the speech act. Verbs of non-final clauses are marked in relation to the following clause. A complex sentence may contain an unlimited number of clauses.
Simple sentences may include a subject or no subject. The predicate may be a verb with no complement, a predicate noun with a copula, or a verb with a preceding direct object in the absolutive case and/or an oblique term or local complement.
The number of
arguments
An argument is a series of sentences, statements, or propositions some of which are called premises and one is the conclusion. The purpose of an argument is to give reasons for one's conclusion via justification, explanation, and/or persua ...
may be increased or decreased by verbal derivative suffixes. Arguments of a clause may be explicitly specified or anaphoric.
The verb of a simple sentence or final clause may have a nominal subject in the absolutive case or a first-/second-person subject marker. If the nominal subject is left out, as known from context, the verb implies an anaphoric reference to the subject:
Positional nouns are a special, closed set of nouns which may take the
locative or
ablative noun cases; in these cases they behave essentially as
postposition
Adpositions are a class of words used to express spatial or temporal relations (''in, under, towards, behind, ago'', etc.) or mark various semantic roles (''of, for''). The most common adpositions are prepositions (which precede their complemen ...
s.
Morphosyntactically, positional noun phrases are almost identical to possessive phrases:
Verbs are inflected for
mood and, if finite, for
person
A person (: people or persons, depending on context) is a being who has certain capacities or attributes such as reason, morality, consciousness or self-consciousness, and being a part of a culturally established form of social relations suc ...
and number. Person/number endings
agree with the subject of the verb if all nominal participants of a sentence are overt:
If a 3rd person complement or subordinate part of it is omitted, as known from context, there is an anaphoric suffixal reference to it in the final verb and the nominal subject is in the relative case:
When more than one piece of information is omitted, the verb agrees with the element whose grammatical number is greatest. This can lead to
ambiguity
Ambiguity is the type of meaning (linguistics), meaning in which a phrase, statement, or resolution is not explicitly defined, making for several interpretations; others describe it as a concept or statement that has no real reference. A com ...
:
Comparison to Eskimo grammar
Although Aleut derives from the same parent language as the Eskimo languages, the two language groups (Aleut and Eskimo) have evolved in distinct ways, resulting in significant
typological differences. Aleut
inflection
In linguistic Morphology (linguistics), morphology, inflection (less commonly, inflexion) is a process of word formation in which a word is modified to express different grammatical category, grammatical categories such as grammatical tense, ...
al morphology is greatly reduced from the system that must have been present in Proto-Eskimo–Aleut, and where the Eskimo languages mark a verb's arguments morphologically, Aleut relies more heavily on a fixed word order.
Unlike the Eskimo languages, Aleut is not an
ergative-absolutive language. Subjects and objects in Aleut are not marked differently depending on the
transitivity of the verb (i.e. whether the verb is
transitive or
intransitive); by default, both are marked with a so-called absolutive noun ending. However, if an understood complement (which may either be a complement of the verb or of some other element in the sentence) is absent, the verb takes an "anaphoric" marking and the subject noun takes a "relative" noun ending.
A typological feature shared by Aleut and Eskimo is
polysynthetic derivational morphology, which can lead to some rather long words:
Research history
The first contact of people from the Eastern Hemisphere with the Aleut language occurred in 1741, as
Vitus Bering
Vitus Jonassen Bering ( , , ; baptised 5 August 1681 – 19 December 1741),All dates are here given in the Julian calendar, which was in use throughout Russia at the time. also known as Ivan Ivanovich Bering (), was a Danish-born Russia ...
's expedition picked up place names and the names of the Aleut people they met. The first recording of the Aleut language in lexicon form appeared in a word list of the Unalaskan dialect compiled by
Captain James King on
Cook's voyage in 1778. At that time the Imperial Academy of Sciences in
Saint Petersburg
Saint Petersburg, formerly known as Petrograd and later Leningrad, is the List of cities and towns in Russia by population, second-largest city in Russia after Moscow. It is situated on the Neva, River Neva, at the head of the Gulf of Finland ...
became interested in the Aleut language upon hearing of Russian expeditions for trading.
In
Catherine the Great
Catherine II. (born Princess Sophie of Anhalt-Zerbst; 2 May 172917 November 1796), most commonly known as Catherine the Great, was the reigning empress of Russia from 1762 to 1796. She came to power after overthrowing her husband, Peter I ...
's project to compile a giant comparative dictionary on all the languages spoken in what was the spread of the
Russian empire
The Russian Empire was an empire that spanned most of northern Eurasia from its establishment in November 1721 until the proclamation of the Russian Republic in September 1917. At its height in the late 19th century, it covered about , roughl ...
at that time, she hired
Peter Simon Pallas
Peter Simon Pallas Fellow of the Royal Society, FRS FRSE (22 September 1741 – 8 September 1811) was a Prussia, Prussian zoologist, botanist, Ethnography, ethnographer, Exploration, explorer, Geography, geographer, Geology, geologist, Natura ...
to conduct the fieldwork that would collect linguistic information on Aleut. During an expedition from 1791 to 1792, Carl Heinrich Merck and Michael Rohbeck collected several word lists and conducted a census of the male population that included prebaptismal Aleut names. Explorer
Yuriy Feodorovich Lisyansky compiled several word lists. in 1804 and 1805, the czar's plenipotentiary,
Nikolai Petrovich Rezanov collected some more.
Johann Christoph Adelung and
Johann Severin Vater published their , which included Aleut among the languages it catalogued, similar to Catherine the Great's dictionary project.
It was not until 1819 that the first professional linguist, the Dane
Rasmus Rask, studied Aleut. He collected words and paradigms from two speakers of Eastern Aleut dialects living in Saint Petersburg. In 1824 came the man who would revolutionize Aleut as a
literary language
Literary language is the Register (sociolinguistics), register of a language used when writing in a formal, academic writing, academic, or particularly polite tone; when speaking or writing in such a tone, it can also be known as formal language. ...
.
Ioann Veniaminov, a
Russian Orthodox
The Russian Orthodox Church (ROC; ;), also officially known as the Moscow Patriarchate (), is an autocephaly, autocephalous Eastern Orthodox Church, Eastern Orthodox Christian church. It has 194 dioceses inside Russia. The Primate (bishop), p ...
priest who would later become a saint, arrived at Unalaska studying Unalaskan Aleut. He created an orthography for this language (using the Cyrillic alphabet; the Roman alphabet would come later), translated the Gospel according to St. Matthew and several other religious works into Aleut, and published a grammar of Eastern Aleut in 1846.
The religious works were translated with the help of Veniaminov's friends Ivan Pan'kov (chief of Tigalda) and
Iakov Netsvetov (the priest of Atka), both of whom were native Aleut speakers. Netsvetov also wrote a dictionary of Atkan Aleut. After Veniaminov's works were published, several religious figures took interest in studying and recording Aleut, which would help these Russian Orthodox clerics in their missionary work. Father Innocent Shayashnikov did much work in the Eastern Fox-Island dialect translating a Catechism, all four Gospels and Acts of Apostles from the New Testament, and an original composition in Aleut entitled: "Short Rule for a Pious Life".
Most of these were published in 1902, although written years earlier in the 1860s and 1870s. Father Lavrentii Salamatov produced a Catechism, and translations of three of the four Gospels (St. Mark, St. Luke, St. John) in the Western-Atkan dialect. Of Father Lavrentii's work, the Gospel of St. Mark was published in a revised orthography (1959), and in its original, bilingual Russian-Aleut format (2007), together with his Catechism for the youth of Atka Island (2007). The Atkan-dialect Gospel of St. John was also electronically published (2008), along with the Gospel of St. Luke (2009) in the original bilingual format, completing the set of Fr. Lavrentii's biblical translations.
The first Frenchman to record Aleut was
Alphonse Pinart, in 1871, shortly after the
United States
The United States of America (USA), also known as the United States (U.S.) or America, is a country primarily located in North America. It is a federal republic of 50 U.S. state, states and a federal capital district, Washington, D.C. The 48 ...
purchase of
Alaska
Alaska ( ) is a non-contiguous U.S. state on the northwest extremity of North America. Part of the Western United States region, it is one of the two non-contiguous U.S. states, alongside Hawaii. Alaska is also considered to be the north ...
. A French-Aleut grammar was also produced by Victor Henry, titled (Paris, 1879). In 1878, American
Lucien M. Turner began work on collecting words for a word list.
Benedykt Dybowski, a Pole, began taking word lists from the dialects of the Commander Islands in 1881, while Nikolai Vasilyevich Slyunin, a Russian doctor, did the same in 1892.
From 1909 to 1910, the
ethnologist Waldemar Jochelson traveled to the Aleut communities of Unalaska, Atka, Attu and Nikolski. He spent nineteen months there doing fieldwork. Jochelson collected his ethnographic work with the help of two Unalaskan speakers,
Aleksey Yachmenev and
Leontiy Sivtsov. He recorded many Aleut stories, folklore and myth, and had many of them not only written down but also recorded in audio. Jochelson discovered much vocabulary and grammar when he was there, adding to the scientific knowledge of the Aleut language.
In the 1930s, two native Aleuts wrote down works that are considered breakthroughs in the use of Aleut as a literary language. Afinogen K. Ermeloff wrote down a literary account of a shipwreck in his native language, while Ardelion G. Ermeloff kept a diary in Aleut during the decade. At the same time, linguist
Melville Jacobs picked up several new texts from Sergey Golley, an Atkan speaker who was hospitalized at the time.
John P. Harrington furthered research into the Pribilof Island dialect on
St. Paul Island in 1941, collecting some new vocabulary along the way. In 1944, the
United States Department of the Interior
The United States Department of the Interior (DOI) is an United States federal executive departments, executive department of the Federal government of the United States, U.S. federal government responsible for the management and conservation ...
published ''The Aleut Language'' as part of the war effort, allowing World War II soldiers to understand the language of the Aleuts. This English–language project was based on Veniaminov's work.
In 1950,
Knut Bergsland began an extensive study of Aleut, perhaps the most rigorous to date, culminating in the publication of a complete Aleut dictionary in 1994 and a descriptive grammar in 1997. Bergsland's work would not have been possible without key Aleut collaborators, especially Atkan linguist
Moses Dirks.
Michael Krauss,
Jeff Leer,
Michael Fortescue, and
Jerrold Sadock have published articles about Aleut.
Alice Taff has worked on Aleut since the 1970s. Her work constitutes the most detailed accounts of Aleut phonetics and phonology available.
Anna Berge conducts research on Aleut. Berge's work includes treatments of Aleut discourse structure and morphosyntax, and curricular materials for Aleut, including a conversational grammar of the Atkan dialect, co-authored with Moses Dirks.
Bering Island dialect and
Mednyj Aleut language have been extensively studied by Soviet and Russian linguists: , , . A dictionary
and a comprehensive grammar
were published.
In 2005, the parish of All Saints of North America Orthodox Church began to re-publish all historic Aleut language texts from 1840–1940. Archpriest Paul Merculief (originally from the Pribilofs) of the Russian Orthodox Diocese of Alaska and the
Alaska State Library Historical Collection generously contributed their linguistic skills to the restoration effort. The historic Aleut texts are available in the parish's Aleut library.
Revitalization
Revitalization efforts are a recent development for the Aleut language and are mostly in the hands of the Aleuts themselves. The first evidence of the preservation of the language came in the form of written documentation at the hands of the Russian Orthodox Church missionaries. However, as the historical events and factors transpired, Aleut's falling out of favor has brought upon a necessity for action if the language is to survive much longer. Linguistic experts have been reaching out to the Aleut community in attempts to record and document the language from the remaining speakers. Such efforts amount to "100 hours of conversation, along with the transcription and translation in Aleut, that will be transferred to compact disks or DVDs". If Aleut does go extinct, these records will allow linguists and descendants of the Aleutian people to pass on as much knowledge of the language as they can. Efforts like this to save the language are being sponsored by universities and local community interest groups, like the Aleutian/Pribilof Islands Association Task Force for Language Revitalization, while government relations with the Aleut people are severely limited. Similarly to the native languages of California, the native languages of Alaska had been given little attention from the United States government. While linguists are working to record and document the language, the local Aleutian community groups are striving to preserve their language and culture by assisting the linguists and raising awareness of the Aleut population.
There is an Aleut course named ''Unangam Qilinĝingin'' on
Memrise.
References
REL:relative case
POSSM:possessum
ANA:anaphoric
Bibliography
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External links
ANLA University of Alaska Fairbanks, Unangan Collections ListAlaska Native Languages: Unangam TunuuUnangam Tunuu Language ToolsAleut LanguageOrthodox texts in Aleut 1826–1967 (cf
The Alaskan Orthodox Texts Project celebrates its 10th anniversary May 2015)
Learn and practice Unangam Tunuu on MemriseUnangam Tunuu Tools and Resources small dictionary, phrases, stories in Eastern dialect with audio recordings
The Aleut Language Richard Henry Geoghegan, 1944; grammar and dictionary (old orthography)
{{DEFAULTSORT:Aleut Language
Aleut culture
Critically endangered languages
Aleut language
Indigenous languages of Alaska
Indigenous languages of the North American Arctic
Northern Northwest Coast Sprachbund (North America)
Indigenous languages of Siberia
Agglutinative languages
Indigenous languages of North America
Official languages of Alaska
Languages written in Cyrillic script
Eskaleut languages