The Navajo Sound System

The Navajo Sound System

Author: J.M. McDonough

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Published: 2012-12-06

Total Pages: 222

ISBN-13: 940100207X

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The Navajo language is spoken by the Navajo people who live in the Navajo Nation, located in Arizona and New Mexico in the southwestern United States. The Navajo language belongs to the Southern, or Apachean, branch of the Athabaskan language family. Athabaskan languages are closely related by their shared morphological structure; these languages have a productive and extensive inflectional morphology. The Northern Athabaskan languages are primarily spoken by people indigenous to the sub-artic stretches of North America. Related Apachean languages are the Athabaskan languages of the Southwest: Chiricahua, Jicarilla, White Mountain and Mescalero Apache. While many other languages, like English, have benefited from decades of research on their sound and speech systems, instrumental analyses of indigenous languages are relatively rare. There is a great deal ofwork to do before a chapter on the acoustics of Navajo comparable to the standard acoustic description of English can be produced. The kind of detailed phonetic description required, for instance, to synthesize natural sounding speech, or to provide a background for clinical studies in a language is well beyond the scope of a single study, but it is necessary to begin this greater work with a fundamental description of the sounds and supra-segmental structure of the language. Inkeeping with this, the goal of this project is to provide a baseline description of the phonetic structure of Navajo, as it is spoken on the Navajo reservation today, to provide a foundation for further work on the language.


Shonto

Shonto

Author: William Yewdale Adams

Publisher:

Published: 1963

Total Pages: 372

ISBN-13:

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A study of 100 Navajo households served by the Shonto Trading Post in the northwest of the Navajo Indian Reservation.


Progress in Language Planning

Progress in Language Planning

Author: Juan Cobarrubias

Publisher: Walter de Gruyter

Published: 1983

Total Pages: 404

ISBN-13: 9789027933584

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CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE SOCIOLOGY OF LANGUAGE brings to students, researchers and practitioners in all of the social and language-related sciences carefully selected book-length publications dealing with sociolinguistic theory, methods, findings and applications. It approaches the study of language in society in its broadest sense, as a truly international and interdisciplinary field in which various approaches, theoretical and empirical, supplement and complement each other. The series invites the attention of linguists, language teachers of all interests, sociologists, political scientists, anthropologists, historians etc. to the development of the sociology of language.


North American Indian Language Materials, 1890-1965

North American Indian Language Materials, 1890-1965

Author: G. Edward Evans

Publisher:

Published: 1980

Total Pages: 196

ISBN-13:

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This annotated bibliography provides a listing of Indian language sources intended to supplement James Pilling's nine American linguistic bibliographies for the U.S. Bureau of Ethnology.