Geographic distribution
At the time of first European contact Tolowa was spoken in several large and prosperous village communities along the Del Norte County coast in the far northwestern corner of California and along the southern coast of adjacent Curry County, Oregon. Today the term ''Tolowa'' (or sometimes ''Smith River'') is used primarily by those residing in California, most of whom are affiliated with Tolowa Dee-ni' Nation. Those residing in Oregon, most of whom are affiliated with the Confederated Tribes of Siletz southwest of Portland, where their ancestors were removed in the 1850s (Beckham 1971), refer to themselves as ''Chetco'', ''Tututni'', or ''Deeni''. For details of the linguistic documentation of Chetco-Tolowa and a survey of Oregon Athabaskan phonology and grammar, see Golla (2011:70-75).Phonology
As with many Athabaskan languages, Tolowa features contrasting aspirated, unaspirated, and ejective stops, as well as contrasting vowel length and nasality. Tolowa is not fully tonal, but instead has a pitch accent. This is typical of the Pacific Coast Athabaskan languages.Consonants
/ɬ/ is affricated to after vowels. /j/ is realized as after nasal vowels.Vowels
Tolowa vowels have some degree of allophonicity. /u/ and /o/ are in free variation; is an allophone of /a/ after palatals and velars; /ə/ is raised to near palatals and to before velars, and is nasalized ( �̃ before nasal consonants. In addition, Tolowa has three diphthongs: i u and iSiletz Talking DictionaryAlphabet
Syllables are usually separated with an en dash (-) for clarity. The 1997 Tolowa Dee-niʼ alphabet (below) replaces the special characters ą, į, ɨ, ł, ų, and ʉ with a~, i~, lh, u~ and v, respectively. Note that the distinction between ɨ and ʉ is lost.Tolowa language revitalization
Loren Bommelyn, a fluent speaker and linguist, has published several pedagogical books and teaches young Tolowa students inSiletz Dee-ni language revitalization
Siletz Dee-ni is a form of Tolowa historically spoken by members of the Confederated Tribes of Siletz Indians on the Siletz Indian Reservation in Oregon. According to a report by the National Geographic Society and the Living Tongues Institute for Endangered Languages, it is the last of many languages spoken on the reservation and was said in 2007 to have only one living speaker. However, the language has since been at least partially revived, and in some areas, ‘many now text each other in Siletz Dee-ni’. Courses for 6th- through 8th-graders have been offered at Oregon's Siletz Valley Charter School. Alfred "Bud" Lane has gathered 14,000 words of Siletz Dee-ni, a variety of Chetco-Tolowa "restricted to a small area on the central Oregon coast," in an online audio/picture dictionary for the use of the community.Notes
Bibliography
* Beckham, Stephen Dow (1971). ''Requiem for a People: The Rogue River Indians and the Frontiersmen.'' Norman: University of Oklahoma Press. * Bommelyn, Loren (1995). ''Now You're Talking Tolowa.'' Arcata: Humboldt State University, Center for Indian Community Development. * Collins, James (1998). ''Understanding Tolowa Histories: Western Hegemonies and Native American Responses.'' London: Routledge * Golla, Victor (2011). ''California Indian Languages.'' Berkeley: University of California Press. . * Macnaughtan, Don. ''Oregon Athapaskan Languages: Bibliography of the Athapaskan Languages of Oregon''.External links
*