Tonkawa language


The Tonkawa language was a language spoken in Oklahoma, Texas, and New Mexico by the Tonkawa people. A language isolate, with no known related languages, Tonkawa has not had L1 speakers since the mid 20th century. Few Tonkawa people speak the language, but revitalization is underway.

Phonology

Vowels

Tonkawa has 10 vowels:
  • Each vowel is distinguished by the quality of sound and the length of the vowel.
  • The vowels occur in five pairs that have differing vowel lengths.
  • In the front and the mid back vowel pairs, the short vowels are phonetically lower than their long counterparts: →, →, →.
  • The low vowels vary between central and back articulations:.
  • Vowels that are followed by j and w are slightly raised in their position of articulation

Consonants

Tonkawa has 15 consonants:
  • The affricate and fricative vary freely between dental and postalveolar articulations, i.e. and. There is a tendency for to occur at the end of words.
  • The other coronals are consistently dental.
  • The dorsal obstruents are produced with a palatal place of articulation before front vowels, otherwise they are velar:
  • * →
  • The dorsal approximants are consistently palatal and labiovelar respectively.

Consonant clusters

There are two environments in which consonant clusters occur in Tonkawa:
  • when a consonant is repeated
  • when the cluster is within the syllable
Repeated or identical consonants are treated as one unit. However, the condition that causes this repetition has not been fully analyzed.
  • Example: ' 'he scrapes it' versus ' 'lightning strikes him'
There are cases where the glottal stop is not used in the cluster or combination
There are certain consonants that can either begin or end in a cluster. However, if the cluster begins the syllable, there can be no intervening vowel.
  • Initial Cluster Consonants:
  • Final Cluster Consonants:

Phonological processes and morphophonemics

Initial stem syllables that begin with h-
  • the h- is dropped when a prefix is added
  • if the syllable is C + V, then the vowel is lengthened and given the quality of the stem vowel.
  • if the syllable ends in a consonant, then the initial stem forms a new syllable with the final consonant of the prefix.
Final stem syllables
  • Forms: C V w or C V y
  • The form changes to C if followed by a suffix that starts with a consonant
  • If a long vowel occurs the suffixes change from to
An interesting feature of Tonkawan phonology is that the vowels in even-numbered syllables are reduced. That is, long vowels are shortened, while short vowels disappear. Analyses of this were given by Kisseberth, Phelps and Noske.

Syllable structure

The Tonkawa language is a syllabic language that bases its word and sentence prosody on even stressed syllables.
  • Disyllabic words are when the stress is placed on the final syllable.
  • Polysyllabic words are when the stress is moved to the next to last syllable, the penult.
There are five types of syllable arrangements:
  • C + V → ka-la 'mouth'
  • C + V + C → tan-kol 'back of head'
  • CC + V → ' 'he scrapes it'
  • CC + V + C → ' 'lightning strikes him'
  • C + V + or / / → jam- 'I paint his face'

Writing system

The orthography used on the Tonkawa Tribe's website is based on Americanist phonetic notation.
AlphabetPronunciationAlphabetPronunciation
ca
haꞏ
ke
eꞏ
li
miꞏ
no
poꞏ
su
tuꞏ
w
x
y

Long vowels are indicated with a following middle dot. The affricate is written. The glottal stop is written as a saltillo. The palatal glide is written.
The phonemic orthography used in Hoijer's Tonkawa Texts is in a slightly different version of Americanist transcription. It uses a colon for long vowels and the IPA glottal stop letter.

Morphology

In English, pronouns, nouns, verbs, etc., are individual words; Tonkawa forms the parts of speech differently, and the most important grammatical function is affixation. This process shows the subjects, objects, and pronouns of words and/or verbs. Within affixations, the suffix has more importance than the prefix.
The differentiation between subject and object is shown in the suffix. While the word order tends to be subject-object-verb, compounding words is very common in Tonkawa. Reduplication is very common in Tonkawa and affects only the verb themes. Usually, only one syllable undergoes reduplication, and it notes a repeated action, vigorous action, or a plural subject.

Morphemes

The morphemes in Tonkawa can be divided as follows:
I. Themes
  • Free – the stem can stand alone
  • Bound – the stem must have a suffix or prefix attached; it cannot stand alone
In Tonkawa the theme is composed of morphologic units. The basic unit is the stem. The stem is composed of two elements and modified by affixes. The theme, or stem, is functional, which means it changes as more affixation is added. This leads to the fusion of the stem and affix where it becomes difficult to isolate the word into its smaller units.
II. Affixes
  • Transformative – the affix changes the meaning and/or function of the word
  • Verbal – the affix changes a certain aspect of the verb
  • Noun and Pronoun – the affix changes a certain aspect of the noun or pronoun
III. Enclitics

Nouns

Nouns function as free themes, or stems, in Tonkawa. There is a limit of only two or three affixes that can compound with a noun. However, there are cases of a bound theme occurring in noun compounds, which occurs with the suffix -an is added. In English, pronouns and nouns are usually grouped together, but because pronouns in Tonkawa are bound themes, they will be discussed with the verb section.
CaseIndefinite Definite
Nominative-la/ -ka-/ -
Accusative-lak/ -kak-/ -
Genitive--
Dative -
Dative -
Instrumental-es / -kas-/ -
Conjunctive--
Vocative

Verbs

Verbs are bound morphemes that have a limit of only two themes, the second theme being the modifying theme and usually serving as an adverbial theme. However, if the suffix -/-wa is added the verb functions as a free theme.

Pronouns

Pronouns are not used except for emphasis on the subject and are affixated as prefixes. Person and number are usually indicated by the affixation of the verb. Most pronouns are bound themes, especially the demonstrative pronouns.
singularplural
1st personsaː-
me
kew-saː-
we/us
2nd personnaː-
you
we-naː-
you pl./them
3rd personʔa-
him/her
we-naː-
you pl./them

Demonstrative pronouns

Demonstrative adverbs can be formed by adding -ca 'place', -l 'direction', -c 'manner' to the demonstrative pronouns below.
Interrogative pronouns can be formed by adding the prefix he- to the demonstrative pronouns as well by using the same format for the demonstrative adverbs.
Indefinite pronouns can also be formed with affixation.
Tonkawa DemonstrativeEnglish Demonstrative
the one aforementioned
this
/ / that
one yonder

Also within the verbal-prefix category are the causatives and, where is the older form.

Verb suffixes

Verb suffixes are important in Tonkawa because they usually indicate the tense, negativity, and manner of the action performed.
SuffixFunctionPlacement
-ape/-apNegation suffixfollows the theme but follows a second-person plural object pronoun, if present
-/ -Dual subject suffixfollows the negation suffix, future tense suffix, and second-person plural object pronoun
-/ -Plural subject suffixsame position as the dual subject; occurs in the first and second persons in all modes
-/ -Future tense suffixafter the stem/theme
-no/ -nContinuative suffixafter the stem
-we/ -/ -odeclarative mode suffixafter the present or past tense
-Exclamatory suffixafter the 3rd person singular or at the end of the word
-wImperative modeonly in the singular, dual, or second-person plural

Enclitics

Enclitics are bound morphemes that are suffixed to verbs, nouns, and demonstratives that end with -k. Enclitics often express modal concepts in Tonkawa, which occur in the declarative, interrogative, and quotative/narrative clauses or statements.
ClauseSuffixSpecial Circumstances
Declarative-aw or -
Interrogative-je or -both take the suffix unless there is an interrogative pronoun
Quotative/ Narrative-/ -only added to verb forms with –k suffix and if the verb is used in telling a mythical story

Lexicon

Vocabulary
EnglishTonkawa
OneWe:'ispax
TwoKetay
ThreeMetis
FourSikit
FiveKaskwa
ManHa:'ako:n
WomanKwa:nla
Dog'Ekwan
SunTaxas
WaterA:x

Sample text

The following text is the first four sentences of Coyote and Jackrabbit, from Hoijer's Tonkawa Texts.
Gloss:
In this gloss, S is an abbreviation for "it is said", and afm for "the aforementioned".