Although no longer spoken, it is fairly extensively documented in the early 20th-century work (mostly unpublished) of linguistsMorris Swadesh[7][8] and John R. Swanton. Swadesh in particular wrote a full grammar and dictionary, and collected numerous texts from the last two speakers, although none of this is published.
Language revitalization efforts are underway to teach the language to a new generation of speakers.[9][10][11] Tribal members have received Rosetta Stone software for learning the language. As of 2015, a new Chitimacha dictionary is in preparation, and classes are being taught on the Chitimacha reservation.[12]
Classification
Chitimacha has recently been proposed to be related to, or a member of, the hypothetical Totozoquean language family.[13] An automated computational analysis (ASJP 4) by Müller et al. (2013) found lexical similarities between Chitimacha, Huave, and Totozoquean.[14]
However, since the analysis was automatically generated, the grouping could be either due to mutual lexical borrowing or genetic inheritance.
An earlier, more speculative, proposal suggested an affinity with the also hypothetical group of Gulf languages.[13]
Phonology
Brown, Wichmann, and Beck (2014) give the following phoneme inventory based on Morris Swadesh's 1939 analysis.[15]
Transcription has been done by researchers in a number of orthographies, including French, Spanish,[16] and Americanist.[17] Members of the Chitimacha tribe have developed a practical orthography using the Latin alphabet which does not use diacritics[17] or special characters.[18] It retains elements of the orthography earlier used by Morris Swadesh.[18]
Grammar
Chitimacha has a grammatical structure which is not dissimilar from modern Indo-European languages but it is still quite distinctive. Chitimacha distinguishes several word classes: verbs, nouns, adjectives (verbal and nominal), quantifiers, demonstratives. Swadesh (1946) states that the remaining word classes are hard to distinguish but may be divided "into proclitics, postclitics, and independent particles". Chitimacha has auxiliaries which are inflected for tense, aspect and mood, such as to be. Polar interrogatives may be marked with a final falling intonation and a clause final post-position.
Chitimacha does not appear to have adopted any grammatical features from their interactions with the French, Spanish or Americans.[19]
Pronouns
Verbs are inflected for person and number of the subject. Ambiguity may be avoided by the use of the personal pronouns (shown in the table below), but sentences without personal pronouns are common. There is no gender in the personal pronouns and verbal indexes. Subject and object personal pronouns are identical.
Pronouns are more restricted than nouns when appearing in a possessive construction. Pronouns cannot be proceeded by a possessive unlike nouns.
Nouns
There are definite articles in Chitimacha.[21] Nouns are mostly uninflected; there are only approximately 30 nouns (mostly kinship or referring to persons) which distinguish a singular or plural form through a plural suffix or other formations.
Nouns are free, or may be possessed by juxtaposing the possessor and the possessed noun.
ʔiš ʔinž̹i = my father ("I father")
was ʔasi ʔinž̹i = that man's father ("that man father")
Sample sentences
The following sentences and translations are from the book "Modern Chitimacha (Sitimaxa)" (2008), endorsed by the Chitimata Tribal government's Cultural Department. [22]
^Brightman, Robert A. (2004). "Chitimacha". In Sturtevant, William (ed.). Handbook of North American Indians. Vol. 14: Southeast. p. 642.
^Waldman, Carl (2009). Encyclopedia of Native American Tribes. Infobase. ISBN978-1438110103.
^Granberry, Julian (2008). "7". Modern Chitimacha (Sitimaxa) (2nd ed.). München: LINCOM Europa. ISBN978-3895863523. Called Sitimaxa by its speakers - 'Language of Many Waters,' the lanuguage has been spoken since time immemorial in southern Louisiana along the Gulf Coast from the Mississippi River Delta West to the Texas border.
^ abBrown, Cecil H.; Wichmann, Søren; Beck, David (2014). "Chitimacha: A Mesoamerican language in the Lower Mississippi valley". International Journal of American Linguistics. 80 (4): 425–474. doi:10.1086/677911. S2CID145538166.
^Swadesh, Morris (1939). "Chitimacha grammar, texts and vocabulary" (Document). Philadelphia: Franz Boas Collection of Materials for American Linguistics, American Philosophical Society. Mss.497.3.B63c G6.5.
^Swadesh, Morris (1946). "Chitimach". In Hoijer, Harry (ed.). Linguistic structures of native America. New York: Viking Fund. pp. 312–336.
^Granberry, Julian (2008). "5. Sitimaxa Particles". Modern Chitimacha (Sitimaxa). München: LINCOM Europa. p. 86.
^Kaufman, David V. (2014). The Lower Mississippi Valley as a Language Area (Doctoral dissertation). University of Kansas.
^Granberry, Julian (2008). "Sample Siximaxa Sentences". Modern Chitimacha (Sitimaxa). München: LINCOM Europa. pp. 101–104.
Further reading
Brown, Cecil H.; Wichmann, Søren; Beck, David (2014). "Chitimacha: a Mesoamerican language in the Lower Mississippi Valley". International Journal of American Linguistics. 80 (4): 425–474. doi:10.1086/677911. JSTOR10.1086/677911. S2CID145538166.