Nawathinehena language


Nawathinehena is an extinct Algonquian language formerly spoken among the Arapaho. It had a phonological development quite different from either Gros Ventre or Arapaho proper. It has been identified as the former language of the Southern Arapaho, who switched to speaking Arapaho proper in the 19th century. However, the language is not well attested, being documented only in a vocabulary collected in 1899 by Alfred L. Kroeber from the Oklahoma Arapaho.

Phonology

While it shares many important phonological innovations with Arapaho, it presents the merger of *r, *θ and *s with *t as t instead of n as in Arapaho, a sound change reminiscent of Blackfoot and Cheyenne. PA *w changes to m instead of merging with *r, *s and *n as n.

Vocabulary

Some numbers of the Nawathinehena language:
NawathinehenaEnglish
tcäⁿcinaha’one
nīsähä’two
nahahathree
niabaha’four
niotanähä’five
neixθiotisix
nīciotaⁿseven
nexiotähähäⁿeight
cioxtähähäⁿnine
maxtoxtanähäⁿten

Works cited

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General references

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