Slavey language 

Slavey
ᑌᓀ ᒐ Dene Tha (South Slavey)
ᑲᑊᗱᑯᑎᑊᓀ K’áshogot’ine;
ᓴᑋᕲᒼᑯᑎᑊᓀ Sahtúgot’ine;
ᗰᑋᑯᑎᑊᓀ Shihgot’ine
(North Slavey)
Spoken in: Canada 
Region: Northwest Territories
Total speakers: Total: 3,545
North Slavey: 1,235
South Slavey: 2,310 1
Language family: Dené-Yeniseian
 Na-Dené
  Athabaskan-Eyak
   Athabaskan
    Northern Athabaskan
     Slavey 
Official status
Official language in: Northwest Territories
Regulated by: no official regulation
Language codes
ISO 639-1: none
ISO 639-2: den
ISO 639-3: variously:
den – Slave (Athapascan)
scs – North Slavey
xsl – South Slavey

Slavey (also Slave, Slavé, pronounced /ˈsleɪvi/) is an Athabaskan language spoken among the Slavey First Nations of Canada in the Northwest Territories where it is also has official status. 2

In older literature, the name of the language was spelt Slave; however, the connotations of this, along with the pronunciation of the homograph slave (the final e should be pronounced) have caused the change to Slavey instead.

The language is written using Canadian Aboriginal syllabics or the Latin alphabet.

Slavey was the native language spoken by the fictional band in the Canadian television series North of 60. Nick Sibbeston, a former Premier of the Northwest Territories, was a Slavey language and cultural consultant for the show.

Contents

North Slavey language and South Slavey language

North Slavey language is spoken by the Sahtu people in the Mackenzie District along the middle Mackenzie River from Fort Norman north, around Great Bear Lake, and in the Mackenzie Mountains of the Canadian territory of Northwest Territories.

Statistics: Speakers: 1,065 (2006 Statistics Canada)

Alternate names: Slavi, Dené, Mackenzian, Slave

Dialects: Hare, Bearlake, Mountain

South Slavey language or Dene-thah, is spoken in the region of Great Slave Lake, upper Mackenzie River and drainage in Mackenzie District, northeast Alberta, northwest British Columbia.

Statistics: Speakers: 1,605 (2006 Statistics Canada)

Alternate names: Slavi, Slave, Dené, Mackenzian

Sounds

This article contains IPA phonetic symbols. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters.

Consonants

Labial Alveolar Lateral Postalveolar Velar /
palatal
Glottal
Stops Plain p t k ʔ
Aspirated
Ejective
Affricates Plain ts
Aspirated tsʰ tɬʰ tʃʰ
Ejective tsʼ tɬʼ tʃʼ
Fricatives Voiceless s ɬ ʃ x h
Voiced z ɮ ʒ ɣ
Nasals m n
Semivowels w j

The consonant inventories in the dialects of Slavey differ considerably. The table above lists the 30 consonants common to most or all varieties. Hare lacks aspirated affricates (on red background), while Mountain lacks /w/ (on blue). In addition, for some speakers of Hare, an alveolar flap /ɾ/ has developed into a separate phoneme.

The most pronounced difference is however the realization of a series of consonants that varies greatly in their place of articulation:verification needed

Slavey proper Mountain Bearlake Hare
Plain stop/affricate t̪θ p
Aspirated t̪θʰ kʷʰ -
Ejective t̪θʼ kʷʼ ʔw
Voiceless fricative θ f ʍ f
Voiced fricative / semivowel ð v w w

In Slavey proper, these are dental affricates and fricatives; comparative Athabaskan work reveals this to be the oldest sound value. Mountain has labials, with the voiceless stop coinciding with pre-existing /p/. Bearlake has labialized velars, but has lenited the voiced fricative to coincide with pre-existing /w/. The most complicated situation is found in Hare, where the plain stop is (as in Bearlake) a labialized velar, the aspirated member is missing, the ejective member is replaced by a /ʔw/ sequence, the voiceless fricative is (as in Mountain) /f/, and the voiced fricative has (again as in Bearlake) been lenited to /w/.

Phonological processes

The following phonological and phonetic statements apply to all four dialects of Slavey.

Vowels

=Tone =

Slavey has two tones:

In Slavey orthography, high tone is marked with an acute accent, and low tone is unmarked.

Tones are both lexical and grammatical.

Lexical: /ɡáh/ 'along' vs. /ɡàh/ 'rabbit'

Grammar

Notes

  1. ^ Statistics Canada: 2006 Census
  2. ^ Northwest Territories Official Languages Act, 1988 (as amended 1988, 1991-1992, 2003)

See also

References

Further reading