Omaha–Ponca Language
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Omaha–Ponca is a Siouan language spoken by the
Omaha Omaha ( ) is the largest city in the U.S. state of Nebraska and the county seat of Douglas County. Omaha is in the Midwestern United States on the Missouri River, about north of the mouth of the Platte River. The nation's 39th-largest city ...
(''Umoⁿhoⁿ'') people of Nebraska and the Ponca (''Paⁿka'') people of
Oklahoma Oklahoma (; Choctaw language, Choctaw: ; chr, ᎣᎧᎳᎰᎹ, ''Okalahoma'' ) is a U.S. state, state in the South Central United States, South Central region of the United States, bordered by Texas on the south and west, Kansas on the nor ...
and Nebraska. The two dialects differ minimally but are considered distinct languages by their speakers.


Use and revitalization efforts

There are today only 60 speakers of Omaha, and 12 fluent speakers, all over 70; and a handful of semi-fluent speakers of Ponca. The University of Nebraska offers classes in the Omaha language, and its Omaha Language Curriculum Development Project (OLCDP) provides Internet-based materials for learning the language. A February 2015 article gives the number of fluent speakers as 12, all over age 70, which includes two qualified teachers; the Tribal Council estimates about 150 people have some ability in the language. The language is taught at the Umónhon Nation Public School. An Omaha Basic iPhone app has been developed by the Omaha Nation Public Schools (UNPS) and the Omaha Language Cultural Center (ULCC). Members of the Osage Nation of Oklahoma have expressed an interest in partnerships to use the language as a basis of revitalizing the Osage language, which is similar. Louis Headman edited a dictionary of the Ponca People, published by the University of Nebraska Press.


Phonology


Consonants

One consonant, sometimes written ''l'' or ''th,'' is a velarized lateral approximant with interdental release, , found for example in ''ní btháska'' "flat water" ( Platte River), the source of the name Nebraska. It varies freely from to a light , and derives historically from Siouan *r. Initial consonant clusters include approximates, as in and . Consonants are written as in the IPA in school programs, apart from the alveopalatals ''j, ch, chʰ, zh, sh, shʼ'', the glottal stop ''’'', the voiced velar fricative ''gh'', and the dental approximant ''th''. Historically, this ''th'' has also been written ''dh, ð, ¢'', and the ''sh'' and ''x'' as ''c'' and ''q''; the tenuis stops ''p t ch k'' have either been written upside-down or double (''pp, kk,'' etc.). These latter unusual conventions serve to distinguish these sounds from the ''p t ch k'' of other Siouan languages, which are not specified for voicing and so may sound like either Omaha–Ponca ''p t ch k'' or ''b d j g''. The letters ''f, l, q, r, v'' are not used in writing Omaha-Ponca.


Vowels

The simple vowels are , plus a few words with in men's speech. The letter ‘o’ is phonemically /au/, and phonetically w There are two or three nasal vowels, depending on the variety. In the Omaha and Ponca Dhegiha dialects *õ and *ã have merged unconditionally as , which may range across and is written in Omaha and in Ponca. The close front nasal vowel remains distinct. Nasalized vowels are fairly new to the Ponca language. Assimilation has taken place leftward, as opposed to right to left, from nasalized consonants over time. "Originally when the vowel was oral, it nasalized the consonant and a nasalized vowel never followed suit, instead, the nasalized vowel came to preceded it"; though this is not true for the Omaha, or its 'mother' language." Omaha/Ponca is a tonal language that utilizes downstep (accent) or a lowering process that applies to the second of two high-tone syllables. A downstepped high tone would be slightly lower than the preceding high tone.”: ''wathátʰe'' "food", ''wáthatʰe'' "table". Vowel length is distinctive in accented syllables, though it is often not written: "heart", "(inside) wall". Omaha-Ponca is a daughter language to the Siouan mother language, but has developed some of its own rules for nasalization and aspiration. What were once allophones in Proto-Siouan have become phonemes in the Omaha–Ponca language. Many contrasts in the Omaha/Ponca language are unfamiliar to speakers of English. Below are examples of minimal pairs for some sounds which in English would be considered allophones, but in Omaha/Ponca constitute different phonemes: In many languages nasalization of vowels would be a part of assimilation to the next consonant, but Omaha/Ponca is different because it is always assimilating. For example: iⁿdáthiⁿga, meaning mysterious, moves from a nasalized /i/ to an alveolar, stop. Same thing happens with the word iⁿshte, meaning, for example, has the nasalized /i/ which does not assimilate to another nasal. It changes completely to an alveolar fricative.


Morphology

Omaha Ponca language adds endings to its definite articles to indicate animacy, number, position and number. Ponca definite articles indicate animacy, position and number


Syntax

Omaha-Ponca's syntactic type is subject-object-verb.Syntax
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Notes


References

* Boas, Franz
"Notes on the Ponka grammar"
''Congrès international des américanistes'', Proceedings 2:217-37. * Dorsey, James Owen.
Omaha and Ponka Letters
'' Washington: Government Printing Office, 1891 * Dorsey, James Owen.
The Cegiha Language
'' Washington: Government Printing Office. 1890 * Dorsey, Rev. J. Owen
Omaha Sociology
'' Washington: Smithsonian, Bureau of American Ethnology, Report No. 3, 1892–1893


External links



native-language.org * . Extensive language learning materials, including audio.
Omaha Ponca dictionary



OLAC resources in and about the Omaha-Ponca language Chairman Elmer Blackbird Delivers Introduction (in Omaha-Ponca)
.mp3
Ponca Hymns sung by the congregation of White Eagle United Methodist Church
{{DEFAULTSORT:Omaha-Ponca language Omaha (Native American) people Ponca Subject–object–verb languages Indigenous languages of Oklahoma Western Siouan languages