Article contents
Eyak: a preliminary report
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 June 2016
Extract
This paper is an informal summary preview of Eyak structure, with a minimum of exemplification and a maximum of structural tables and diagrams. Included are a number of historical and comparative remarks with reference to Athapaskan and Tlingit. There are still three persons capable of serving adequately as informants for Eyak. The following is a summary report of the results of field-work with these persons, up to July 10, 1964, on a grant from the National Science Foundation. The phonology of Eyak is now well understood, as is, more surprisingly, the verb. In addition, the list of morphemes is approaching exhaustiveness. The consonant inventory is shown in Table I:
- Type
- Research Article
- Information
- Canadian Journal of Linguistics/Revue canadienne de linguistique , Volume 10 , Issue 2-3 , Spring 1965 , pp. 167 - 187
- Copyright
- Copyright © Canadian Linguistic Association 1965
References
1 Krauss, Michael E., “Proto-Athapaskan-Eyak and the Problem of Na-Dene: The Phonology,” IJAL 30 (1964), 118–31 Google Scholar.
2 Li, Fang-Kuei, “Chipewyan,” in Hoijer, H. et al., Linguistic Structures of Native America (New York, 1946), 398–423 Google Scholar.
3 Hoijer, Harry, “The Apachean Verb,” IJAL 11 (1945), 193–203; 12 (1946), 1–13, 51–9; 14 (1948), 247–59; 15 (1949), 12–22 Google Scholar.
4 The s of this morpheme usually becomes š by assimilation when a consonant of the dž-series is present in the stem. The s of the 1st pers. sg. objective-possessive never thus assimilates, however.
5 “Chronology of the Athapaskan Languages,” IJAL 22 (1956), 219-32.
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