Yahgan or Yagán (also spelled Yaghan, Jagan, Iakan, and also known as Yámana, Háusi Kúta, or Yágankuta) is an
extinct language
An extinct language or dead language is a language with no living native speakers. A dormant language is a dead language that still serves as a symbol of ethnic identity to an ethnic group; these languages are often undergoing a process of r ...
that is one of the indigenous languages of
Tierra del Fuego
Tierra del Fuego (, ; Spanish for "Land of Fire", rarely also Fireland in English) is an archipelago off the southernmost tip of the South America, South American mainland, across the Strait of Magellan.
The archipelago consists of the main is ...
, spoken by the
Yahgan people. It is regarded as a
language isolate
A language isolate is a language that has no demonstrable genetic relationship with any other languages. Basque in Europe, Ainu and Burushaski in Asia, Sandawe in Africa, Haida and Zuni in North America, Kanoê in South America, and Tiwi ...
, although some linguists have attempted to relate it to
Kawésqar and
Chono.
Yahgan was also spoken briefly on
Keppel Island in the
Falkland Islands
The Falkland Islands (; ), commonly referred to as The Falklands, is an archipelago in the South Atlantic Ocean on the Patagonian Shelf. The principal islands are about east of South America's southern Patagonian coast and from Cape Dub ...
at a missionary settlement. In 2017, Chile's National Corporation of Indigenous Development convened a workshop to plan an educational curriculum in the Yahgan language, and in June 2019 it planned to inaugurate a
language nest in the community of Bahía Mejillones, near
Puerto Williams
Puerto Williams (; Spanish language, Spanish for "Port Williams") is a city, port and naval base on Navarino Island in Chile. It faces the Beagle Channel. It is the Capital city, capital of Antártica Chilena Province, the Chilean Antarctic Provin ...
.
The government also funded the publication of a "concise and illustrated dictionary" of the Yahgan language.
Following the death of
Cristina Calderón (1928–2022) of
Villa Ukika on
Navarino Island
Navarino Island () is a large Chilean island, with an area of and a coastline of . It is located between Isla Grande de Tierra del Fuego, to the north, and Cape Horn, to the south. The island forms part of the Communes of Chile, Commune of Cabo ...
,
Chile
Chile, officially the Republic of Chile, is a country in western South America. It is the southernmost country in the world and the closest to Antarctica, stretching along a narrow strip of land between the Andes, Andes Mountains and the Paci ...
, no native speakers of Yahgan remain.
[Fallece a los 93 años Cristina Calderón, la última hablante del idioma Yagán]
Phonology
Vowels
There are three analyses of the
phonological
Phonology (formerly also phonemics or phonematics: "phonemics ''n.'' 'obsolescent''1. Any procedure for identifying the phonemes of a language from a corpus of data. 2. (formerly also phonematics) A former synonym for phonology, often prefer ...
system of Yahgan, which differ in many details from one another. The oldest analysis is
Thomas Bridges' dictionary (1894) based on the
English Phonotypic Alphabet; from the middle of the 20th century by Haudricourt (1952) and Holmer (1953); and towards the end of the 20th century, by Guerra Eissmann (1990), Salas y Valencia (1990), and Aguilera (2000).
All vowels are long in stressed syllables. Vowel is the most frequent. It may be pronounced as a schwa in syllables in
pretonic or post-tonic position.
[Salas, Adalberto, y Valencia, Alba (1990): "El fonetismo del yámana o yagán. Una nota en lingüística de salvataje". Revista de Lingüística Teórica y Applicada, Concepción, vol. 28, pp. 147–169 (in Spanish).] In final tonic syllables, vowels and may become a diphthong.
Vowels and are very unstable in final unaccented syllables, alternating with and respectively.
Consonants
Morphophonology
Yahgan shows a number of
sandhi
Sandhi ( ; , ) is any of a wide variety of sound changes that occur at morpheme or word boundaries. Examples include fusion of sounds across word boundaries and the alteration of one sound depending on nearby sounds or the grammatical function o ...
effects on
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 ...
s and
vowel
A vowel is a speech sound pronounced without any stricture in the vocal tract, forming the nucleus of a syllable. Vowels are one of the two principal classes of speech sounds, the other being the consonant. Vowels vary in quality, in loudness a ...
s. For instance, the terminal of 'to see, recognize' when
affix
In linguistics, an affix is a morpheme that is attached to a word stem to form a new word or word form. The main two categories are Morphological derivation, derivational and inflectional affixes. Derivational affixes, such as ''un-'', ''-ation' ...
ed by 'to have trouble/difficulty doing' becomes :- of 'have trouble recognizing/seeing'
In
syllable
A syllable is a basic unit of organization within a sequence of speech sounds, such as within a word, typically defined by linguists as a ''nucleus'' (most often a vowel) with optional sounds before or after that nucleus (''margins'', which are ...
s reduced through
morphophonetic processes, terminal vowels (, ) of original bisyllables will often drop (except for , which tends to remain, leaving previous material unaffected), and resultant final stops will fricativize (r becomes sh). Aside from losing stress, any vowels preceding these shifted consonants will often shift from tense to lax. Ex. 'for self, with one's own' > . 'to take, convey' > , and so on.
Present tense usually results in the dropping of the final vowel of the
infinitival form of the
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 ...
and associated changes as above, as does affixation by many, but not all, further
derivational and
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
suffix
In linguistics, a suffix is an affix which is placed after the stem of a word. Common examples are case endings, which indicate the grammatical case of nouns and adjectives, and verb endings, which form the conjugation of verbs. Suffixes can ca ...
es beginning with
stops,
affricate
An affricate is a consonant that begins as a stop and releases as a fricative, generally with the same place of articulation (most often coronal). It is often difficult to decide if a stop and fricative form a single phoneme or a consonant pai ...
s, and other consonants. Ex. 'to fight' 'to fight confusedly'.
The sounds m, n, and l are particularly labile in some environments. 'to eat' 'to leave off eating' (not ). n from 'state' is often reduced to -V: when one would expect -Vn-. lt can disappear entirely before some consonants. 'to drink', or 'to drink'. Initial h- in roots and affixes drops in many instances. Ex. 'to float, be in boat'+ 'to walk, go' gives . ng (as in English 'hang') is purely morphophonetic, from terminal n before a velar consonant. Many instances of m before a labial consonant are similarly motivated. w after a passive/reflexive prefix often drops. w often vocalizes to u: or o: or drops (depending on preceding material): causative plus 'work' is 'make work'. y is also relatively labile- after reduced > the suffix 'to leave off' becomes . In combination with preceding -a y often vocalizes: 'woman' plus 'plural animates/people' becomes .
Stress
In recent analyses of the speech of remaining speakers,
word stress
In linguistics, and particularly phonology, stress or accent is the relative emphasis or prominence given to a certain syllable in a word or to a certain word in a phrase or sentence. That emphasis is typically caused by such properties as i ...
was felt to be
nondistinctive. However, in the mid-19th century Yahga Strait dialect (which is likely not the ancestor of the surviving one) word stress was distinctive at least at the level of the individual
morpheme
A morpheme is any of the smallest meaningful constituents within a linguistic expression and particularly within a word. Many words are themselves standalone morphemes, while other words contain multiple morphemes; in linguistic terminology, this ...
, with stress shifting in regular patterns during word formation. Certain otherwise identical
word roots
A root (also known as a root word or radical) is the core of a word that is irreducible into more meaningful elements. In morphology, a root is a morphologically simple unit which can be left bare or to which a prefix or a suffix can attach. Th ...
are distinguishable by different stress marking. No information is available about phrase or clause level stress phenomena from the Yahga dialect.
Some roots, particularly those with doubled consonants, exhibit stress on both vowels flanking the doublet. Diphthongs appear to attract stress when they are morphophonetic in origin, sometimes removing it from vowels on both sides that would otherwise be stressed. The first vowel -V- (influenced by the preceding terminal root vowel) in '(be) in a state' also appears to attract stress, while 'attain' repels stress to the left. Thus the combination 'get into a state' is harmonious. Diphthongal attraction often trumps , drawing stress further left, while two successive diphthongs often have the stress on the rightmost one (counterintuitively). Syllables reduced morphophonetically generally lose whatever stress they might have carried. The vast majority of 'irregular' stress renderings in Bridges' original dictionary manuscript seem to arise from just these five sources.
It may be that these effects help to preserve morpheme boundary and identity information. For instance, given the importance of derivation of verbs from nouns and adjectives using and , shifted stress allows one to differentiate these morphemes from lexical (common enough) and those 's that are part of lexical roots (also relatively common). itself will often lose stress and reduce to a tense vowel before other suffixes, leaving the shifting as a hint of its underlying presence.
Stress can also differentiate otherwise identical voice morpheme strings: causative reflexive (get someone else to do/make one) from (1) the causative of making oneself seem, or pretend to be in some state, and (2) the circumstantial ( allomorph before m-) of same (i.e. to seem/pretend at any specified time or place, with any particular tools, for any reasons, etc.). Circumstantial T has different allomorphs- some having following stressable vowel, others not- this also complicates matters for the learner but may also help disentangle morpheme boundaries for the listener.
Sound symbolism
There appears to be a great deal of remnant sound symbolism in the Yahgan lexicon. For example, many roots ending in -m encode as part of their senses the notion of a texturally softened positive curve (similar to -mp in such words as lump or hump in English), while an -l in similar position often shows up when the reference is to bloody core parts, often out from once safe confinement inside the body. Many roots with initial ch- refer to repeated, spiny extrusions, final -x to dry, hard-edged, or brittle parts, and so on.
The historical sources of these patterns cannot be known for sure, but it may be possible that there was at one time a shape and texture classifier system of some sort behind them. Such systems are rather common in South American languages.
There is little direct onomatopoeia recorded by Bridges, despite descriptions of highly animated imitative behavior on the part of speakers being recorded in the late 19th century. Several bird names are perhaps reduplications of calls (or other nonvocal behavior), and there are a couple of imitative cries and sound words. Most words denoting sounds end in an unproductive verb-deriving suffix (in at least one case , and r is known to alternate with sh), which may be derived from the Yahgan root 'voice, language, uttered words, speech, cry', or 'to cry' — e.g. 'to rattle'.
In the Bridges dictionary of the language one may note several otherwise identical terms differing only in whether they are spelled with an s or a ch — e.g. / 'skin'. It is not known whether this was dialectal, dialect mixture, ideolectal, gender-based usage or a real grammatical variation such as might occur with augmentative/diminutive sound symbolic shifting.
Alphabet
The
alphabet
An alphabet is a standard set of letter (alphabet), letters written to represent particular sounds in a spoken language. Specifically, letters largely correspond to phonemes as the smallest sound segments that can distinguish one word from a ...
currently sanctioned officially in Chile is as follows:
a, æ, ch, e, ö, f, h, i, j, k, l, m, n, o, p, r, rh, s, š, t, u, w, x.
A simplified
orthography
An orthography is a set of convention (norm), conventions for writing a language, including norms of spelling, punctuation, Word#Word boundaries, word boundaries, capitalization, hyphenation, and Emphasis (typography), emphasis.
Most national ...
is a variant of the old Bridges system, created for online use on the Waata Chis discussion list on
Yahoo Groups and elsewhere. It has tense and lax vowels as well as voiced and voiceless consonants. In the system,
tenseness
In phonology, tenseness or tensing is, most generally, the pronunciation of a sound with greater muscular effort or constriction than is typical. More specifically, tenseness is the pronunciation of a vowel with less centralization (i.e. either ...
is marked by colon (:) following the vowel sign: a, a:, ai, au, e, e:, i, i:, iu:, o, o:, oi, u, u:, v (pronounced as a schwa, not ), all corresponding to unique graphemes in the Bridges orthography. The consonants are b, d, ch, f, g, h, j, k, l, m, n, ng, p, r, s, sh, t, w, x, y, z, all corresponding to unique Bridges graphemes. Some are found only in restricted environments. The phonemes hm, hn, hl, hr, hw, and hy are used as well, and are digraphs in the earlier Bridges writings, but single graphemes in later ones.
Still later, Bridges made further orthographic modifications: w, h, and y became superscripts, and à is read as ya, á as ha, and ā as wa. Superscripts could combine to give hw, hy, etc. Because iu: could now be represented by u: plus y- superscript (ù:), and because the original
grapheme
In linguistics, a grapheme is the smallest functional unit of a writing system.
The word ''grapheme'' is derived from Ancient Greek ('write'), and the suffix ''-eme'' by analogy with ''phoneme'' and other emic units. The study of graphemes ...
s for u: and u were easily confused with each other as well as with the now-superscripted w, Bridges began using the now-redundant grapheme for iu: (approximately ų) for u: in his renderings. All of these changes took place in a very short time frame, and have led to substantial confusion on the part of later scholars.
In addition, Bridges' modifications of the 19th century phonetic alphabet of Alexander Ellis also included a number of signs meant for transliterations of foreign terms.
There are some ambiguities in Bridges' renderings. He himself notes that g/k, j/ch, d/t and p/f are, in many instances, interchangeable. In certain environments s and sh are hard to distinguish (as before high front vowels). The same goes for ai versus e: and au versus o:. Such ambiguities may go far to help explain the loss or lack of contrasts in the surviving dialect.
Pronunciation
Grammar
Syntax
Yahgan exhibits extensive case marking on nouns and equally extensive voice marking on verbs. Because of this, word order is relatively less important in determining subject and object relations. Most of the clauses in the three published biblical texts, the dictionary, and the various grammars show either verb medial or verb final orders. Certain clause types are verb initial, but are the distinct minority.
Further analysis of the biblical texts is showing that the Yahga dialect allowed for semantic reordering of constituents. For instance, if SVO is considered the default order for subject and object flanking the verb, then when O is left-shifted (SOV) there is often a sense that the object nominal has more say in his/her patient-hood than if kept to the right of the verb. Similarly, when the subject is right-shifted (VSO) its agent-hood appears often less than what one would expect. It will remain to be seen how pervasive this principle is in the language, and how intricately it interacts with Tense-Aspect-Mood and Polarity marking, topicalization, focus, etc.
The adverb 'fast, quick(ly)' can be used lexically to modify predications, but in the three biblical texts it is also apparently used to mark the second component clause in 'if-then' types of constructions. There is no mention made of this in surviving grammars, nor in the dictionary glosses of . The progressive verb suffix may be related.
Grammaticalization
Grammaticalization is a historical linguistic process whereby regular lexical items shift function (and sometimes form) and become part of the grammar structure.
An example of this in Yahgan would be the change of posture verbs into aspectual markers. Yahgan has a system of verbs which denote the posture of an entity: 'stand' , 'sit' , 'lie' and others (for instance 'fly/jump', 'float' etc.). In normal lexical usage one could say
: 'I sat'. ( full pronoun first person singular, bound version unmarked for number, past tense).
: 'You stood'. ( full pronoun second singular, bound).
But with the same root in their grammaticalized forms added:
: 'I stood regularly, or as a rule'.
: 'You often sat, or were ready to sit'.
The semantic bases of such usage seems to the degree of bodily contact with the substratum, vigilance, engagement, etc. Flying/jumping means ceasing some activity of interest entirely and going off to do something else rather suddenly, standing implies readiness to do something else as needed but attending to the activity when one can. Sitting is regular involvement in the activity, though not to the exclusion of other things that need doing. Lying (not just on but also within) is deep involvement, almost to the exclusion of other activities (English 'immersed in', being 'wrapped up in', 'in a rut' 'be up to one's neck/ears in', 'in over one's head', 'buried in (as work)' etc. have similar import). Relative height is another way to look at it- we say we are 'over' with something to mean 'done with' (equivalent to the jump/fly term in Yahgan), with a hint of relative dominance implied as well. While English has a plethora of colorful expressions for denoting such circumstances, Yahgan has reduced the system to a well-defined smallish set of terms from the domain of posture verbs. Such reduction is one symptom of grammaticalization.
Such contact/engagement-based semantic clines are relatively common cross-linguistically, and the phenomenon of posture verbs changing to aspect marking morphemes is well known among linguists, though it is not the only pathway to creating such terms.
A phonetically based cline (based on both oral articulatory position and manner) can be seen in prefixes in Yahgan, and combinations and .
* denotes an activity begun or intended, but not completed
* seems to imply continuation
* removal of impediments to the completion of the activity
Combined forms and appear to accentuate the continuous part of the activity.
In North America, languages of the Siouan and Chemakuan families have similarly structured basic systems (Siouan prefixal, Chemakuan suffixal), but mostly with spatial reference. is standing out, away from some surface, is surface contact, and is containment within a surface, though there are also processual and figure/ground senses involved. Note that standing away minimizes surface contact. Other language families have distance demonstratives which follow similar phonological clines. It is possible that there may be historical connections between the y- form and ki:pa 'woman' and u:- and u:a 'man', which when verbalized apparently refer to less and more forceful or determined attempts to achieve respectively. Verbs 'to intend, wish' and 'pass, surpass', as well as 'do fiercely, forcibly' may be related, with suffixal on the first forms.
Horizontal movement verbs commonly change, cross-linguistically, into tense markers. Yahgan shows evidence of such shifts as well.
Pronouns
The three personal pronoun bases are: first person/proximal, second person/near distal, third person/further distal. These are also the forms found as bound prefixes on verbs.
Free/emphatic forms:
Demonstratives
The demonstrative bases are the same historically as those of the pronouns:
* 'here'
* 'this'
* 'there (close)'
* 'that (close)'
* 'that (further away)'
Adjectives
Yahgan possesses a large number of adjective roots, especially those referring to physical states of matter, health, psychological states, etc. Many do double duty as nouns, adverbs, less often without derivation as verbs. Nouns and adjectives can be verbalized by adding '(be) in a state', or 'become' or both 'develop into a state' (where the identity of V is influenced by the final vowel of the root, but is often not identical to it). Such verbalizations are exceedingly common in the dictionary, and can be further derived and inflected.
Adjectives in Yahgan generally have predicative value when following a noun, but are attributive when preceding. There are large numbers of adjective-noun compounds in the language. Examples of attributive adjectives preceding the noun:
* 'a lying man, i.e. a liar'
* 'a lying woman'
* 'a young child'
* 'a large canoe'
Examples of predicative adjectives following a noun:
* 'tight-tongued i.e. tongue-tied'
* 'weak-handed i.e. not dexterous'
Some more commonly used suffixal forms creating adjectives are:
* 'wishing, wanting to X'
* 'having no ability to resist X'ing'
* 'disposed towards X(ing)'
* 'having difficulty Xing or unable to X'
* 'troubled doing X'
* 'tired of X or Xing'
* 'doing X well'
Examples:
* 'liking to pray'
* 'tired of explaining'
* 'good at writing'
As with other adjective roots, these suffixed forms may be further derived as in the lvmbi example above.
Adverbs
Adverbs are the one-word class that appears to allow for productive reduplication.
Nouns
The physical environment in which the Yahgan people lived was relatively poor in land resources, and historically they spent little time in the interior. It is understandable, then, that the vocabulary reflects this. There are many fewer names for land animals and plants than one might expect based on what is found in other languages from other, richer natural environments. The sea coast was a different matter, and the language had many terms for sea birds and ocean life.
Yahgan emphasized interconnected parts over unanalyzed wholes (also reflected in their verb serialization). Body parts are finely differentiated, as are social relationships. The vocabulary contained a vast number of deverbalized nouns.
Personal names often derived from the name of the place of birth- for instance, a man born in
Ushuaia
Ushuaia ( , ) is the capital city, capital of Tierra del Fuego Province, Argentina, Tierra del Fuego, Antártida e Islas del Atlántico Sur Province, Argentina. With a population of 82,615 and a location below the 54th parallel south latitude, U ...
(meaning 'bay () in the upper back ()') might be . Alternatively one might use the case form 'from' and 'man' giving .
Subject nouns take no overt case marking (subject coreference is on the verb instead). Nouns can be marked for accusative, genitive, dative, locative, instrumental and other cases. Geographical information can be incorporated into the string, as can information about number, collectivity, definiteness, etc. Most of these marks are suffixal.
In the three biblical texts there are numerous complex noun phrases with very involved case relations. It is unknown whether this is characteristic of speaker usage or an invention of the missionary Bridges.
Verbs can be nominalized through a variety of means, particularly by the prefixation of circumstantial T (with its various allomorphs) and/or suffixation of participial morphemes:
* 'past participle'
* 'present participle'
* 'future participle'.
Examples:
* 'to give at some particular time, in some stated place, using some tool', or 'a gift'
* 'when X saw, or the one who saw'
* 'The boy who lived'
* 'the one who will die'
Verbs
Verbs in Yahgan are often
compounded ("
serialized"). Bound subject pronouns ( 1st, 2nd, 3rd), unmarked for number, are prefixed, coming before voice prefixes (such as passive, causative, permissive, circumstantial (with allomorphs , , , , , , ), back, in response to, etc.). Aspect (such as progressive ), tense (for instance simple past, simple future, with added increments 'further past', 'further future), and mood (generally in that order), etc. are suffixal, along with the two 'benefactive' suffixes 'for self', 'for another'. Number within the verb (number of subjects or acts) can be encoded by overt marking (once -, twice -/, several times , plural /, or even none ) or the many different distinct plural verbs (for instance 'sg. to stand', 'pl. to stand'; 'sg. to take, convey', 'pl. to take, convey').
Ex. 'We () were making them () take ( < 'take') the boat () during ( circumstantial plus locative on) the winter () a while ago'.
A handful of verbs form doublets where one of the pair seems to have an unproductive reversative suffix possibly related to the form '(do) for oneself'. For instance 'to lend', 'to borrow'.
In addition to normal serialization Yahgan also exhibits complex verb stems of a type relatively common in western North America, where the main verb is flanked by instrument/body part manner of action prefixes and pathway/position suffixes. The prefixes are part of a larger, more open system of elements marking various kinds of causes or motivations, grading off into more grammaticalized voice marking. Many of the path/position suffixes (especially posture verbs) do double duty as sources for more grammaticalized aspectual morphology. Tense suffixes seem to derive historically from horizontal motion verbs, and together with the more vertical postural aspect forms, make an interesting Cartesian-style coordinate system for dealing with the temporal dimension.
, to kill by striking while afloat
A small number of commonly used verb roots have irregular present tenses. Instead of dropping the final vowel (triggering reductive processes) these forms instead add after the vowel is dropped. Examples: 'to sit'/'to be', present (from ), 'to lie'/'to be', present , 'to float'/'to be', present . In the last example note that this seemingly suppletive present may in fact hark back to the original historical form, and infinitival may be the changed one.
The form 'to hear' has grammaticalized into an evidential suffix 'hearsay'. Ex. 'They say that in this land many men died'. There are several other evidential suffixes, differentiating sensory mode (hearing, sight, etc.) as well as time. also finds modal use in the clitic space that often follows the first substantive in the sentence: 'He MUST be alive, because they (the ones who told me about it) saw him today'. There are other modal verbs also found in this space.
There is little or no reduplication evident on the Yahgan verb, and sound symbolism of the augmentative/diminutive type appears to be largely lexicalized. On the other hand, Yahgan exhibits a good deal of remnant sound symbolism in the verb, similar to what one sees in English.
A good number of verbs seem to form small 'word families' which have slight semantic differences which may have been encoded using sound symbolism (as one often sees, for instance, in some languages of the Austroasiatic stock). For instance 'go, walk lightly' versus 'walk heavily, plod'. In such cases the original symmetry of form seems often to have been distorted by historical changes.
Vocabulary
Included below are some basic Yahgan words.
*man: , (Bridges ya:gan, yamana)
*woman: (Bridges )
*dog: , (Bridges (v schwa))
*house:
*blood: (Bridges )
*arm: , (Bridges )
*heart: , (Bridges )
*moon: , (Bridges )
*star: , (Bridges )
*rain: (Bridges )
*water: (Bridges )
*fog: , (Bridges , also 'cloud')
*sky: (Bridges )
*fire: (Bridges )
*ash: , , (Bridges , , )
*day: , (Bridges )
*bay, inlet: (Bridges , here likely for )
*canoe: (Bridges )
*vulva: (Bridges 'bladder', but 'the purse', which is a 19th-century English avoidance term for the female genitalia- the two terms may be related, as r often alternated with sh)
Loukotka (1968)
Loukotka (1968) lists the following basic vocabulary items for four Yámana (Yahgan) dialects.
:
See also
*
Fuegians
*
Mamihlapinatapai
*
Selkʼnam
*
Alacaluf people (Kawésqar)
*
Kawésqar language
*
Haush language
*
Fuegian languages
References
Bibliography
*Aguilera Faúndez, Óscar (2000): "En torno a la estructura fonologica del yagán. Fonología de la palabra". Onomazein, Santiago, vol. 5, pp. 233–241.
*Bridges, Thomas (1894): "A few notes on the structure of Yahgan". Journal of the Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland, London, vol. 23, pp. 53–80.
*Golbert de Goodbar, Perla (1977): "Yagan I. Las partes de la oración". Vicus, Amsterdam, vol. 1, pp. 5–60.
*Golbert de Goodbar, Perla (1978): "Yagan II. Morfología nominal". Vicus, Amsterdam, vol. 2, pp. 87–101.
*Guerra Eissmann, Ana M. (1990): "Esbozo fonológico del yagán", en Actas del Octavo Seminario Nacional de Investigación y Enseñanza de la Lingüística. Santiago: Universidad de Chile y Sociedad Chilena de Lingüística, vol. V, pp. 88–93.
*Guerra Eissmann, Ana M. (1992): "Las fluctuaciones de fonemas en el yagán". Revista de Lingüística Teórica y Applicada, Concepción, vol. 30, pp. 171–182.
*Haudricourt, André (1952): "Yamana", en Antoine Meillet y Marcel Cohen (eds.): Les langues du monde. París: Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, pp. 1196–1198.
*Holmer, Nils M. (1953): "Apuntes comparados sobre la lengua de los yaganes (Tierra del Fuego)". Revista de la Facultad de Humanidades y Ciencias, Montevideo, vol. 10, pp. 193–223, y vol. 11 (1954), pp. 121–142.
*Salas, Adalberto, y Valencia, Alba (1990): "El fonetismo del yámana o yagán. Una nota en lingüística de salvataje". Revista de Lingüística Teórica y Applicada, Concepción, vol. 28, pp. 147–169 (in Spanish).
External links
* South American Missionary Society : Tierra del Fuego, 1898:
Tekenika: young Yahgan womenLenguas AustralesYagán (Universidad de Chile)Waata Chis, a discussion list on the Yahgan people, their language, and their cultureMoribund 'Savages' of Tierra del FuegoLittle Yagan Dictionary(''Yagankuta: Pequeño Diccionario Yagan'') (in Spanish)
* Parts of the Bible translated into the Yahgan Language:
** '' Acts of the Apostles translated into the Yahgan Language.'' London, 1883
archive.orgGoogle Books US
** '' The Gospel of S. John translated into the Yahgan Language.'' London, 1886
archive.orgGoogle Books US
** '' The Gospel of S. Luke translated into the Yahgan language.'' London, 1881
archive.org
* Julius Platzmann: ''Glossar der feuerländischen Sprache.'' Leipzig, 1882
archive.org
YAMANA ENGLISH DICTIONARY OF THE SPEECH OF TIERRA DEL FUEGO (1933), www.archive.org
Mission scientifique du Cap Horn, 1882–1883, Volume 7, pp. 262–335 on Yahgan language, grammar
*
Oracion matutina y vespertina, colectas (Yahgan)
Anglican liturgical translation
1865 (early) version of Yahgan-English, English-Yahgan dictionary by Thomas Bridges
Yahgan Phonetic Alphabet by Thomas Bridges
Yagán
( Intercontinental Dictionary Series)
1866 grammar manuscript booklet
by Thomas Bridges, containing many grammatical facts not found in any other resource.
{{DEFAULTSORT:Yahgan language
Agglutinative languages
Language isolates of South America
Fuegian languages
Extinct languages of South America
2022 disestablishments in Chile
Languages extinct in the 2020s
Yaghan