Startseite Linguistik & Semiotik 39 Dene – Athabaskan
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39 Dene – Athabaskan

  • Leslie Saxon
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Abstract

The Dene language family includes some 40 distinct languages, and varieties of these languages. The family is large both in the number of languages and in the broadly distributed geographical areas of western North America which sustain Dene peoples. The Dene world takes in Dine and Apache language-speaking communities extending across a wide area including the American Southwest; communities of the Pacific Coast area stretching from present-day NW California to southern Washington state; and communities both west and east of the Rocky Mountains north of the present-day Canada-US border and extending from Cook Inlet at the west as far as Hudson Bay at the east. Because of their size, the Dene territories cover many types of terrain and take in many river systems, and the people have many linguistic and cultural neighbours. This chapter sketches phonological, morphological, syntactic, and semantic properties of Dene languages, chosen with reference to what is happening in Dene language communities driving forward language maintenance, revitalization, and reclamation. The syntactic descriptions are more in depth than other areas of grammar. The goals of this chapter are (1) to provide discussions of linguistic topics potentially useful in revitalization work, (2) to share descriptions and terminology with language learners, instructors, and scholars to support their work, (3) to support access to the range of linguistic resources developed over the past 150-200 years, and (4) to provide some current references.

Abstract

The Dene language family includes some 40 distinct languages, and varieties of these languages. The family is large both in the number of languages and in the broadly distributed geographical areas of western North America which sustain Dene peoples. The Dene world takes in Dine and Apache language-speaking communities extending across a wide area including the American Southwest; communities of the Pacific Coast area stretching from present-day NW California to southern Washington state; and communities both west and east of the Rocky Mountains north of the present-day Canada-US border and extending from Cook Inlet at the west as far as Hudson Bay at the east. Because of their size, the Dene territories cover many types of terrain and take in many river systems, and the people have many linguistic and cultural neighbours. This chapter sketches phonological, morphological, syntactic, and semantic properties of Dene languages, chosen with reference to what is happening in Dene language communities driving forward language maintenance, revitalization, and reclamation. The syntactic descriptions are more in depth than other areas of grammar. The goals of this chapter are (1) to provide discussions of linguistic topics potentially useful in revitalization work, (2) to share descriptions and terminology with language learners, instructors, and scholars to support their work, (3) to support access to the range of linguistic resources developed over the past 150-200 years, and (4) to provide some current references.

Heruntergeladen am 7.10.2025 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783110712742-039/html
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