Piscataway language

Piscataway
Native to United States
Region Maryland
Extinct (date missing)
Language codes
ISO 639-3 psy
Glottolog pisc1239[1]

Piscataway is an extinct Algonquian language formerly spoken by the Piscataway, a dominant chiefdom in southern Maryland on the Western Shore of the Chesapeake Bay at time of contact with English settlers.[2] Piscataway, also known as Conoy (from the Iroquois ethnonym for the tribe), is considered a dialect of Nanticoke.[3]

This designation is based on the scant evidence available for the Piscataway language. The Doeg tribe, then located in present-day Northern Virginia, are also thought to have spoken a form of the same language. These dialects were intermediate between the Native American groups of Lenape languages formerly spoken to the north of this area (in present-day Delaware and New Jersey) and the Powhatan language, formerly spoken to the south, in what is now Tidewater Virginia.

Classification

Piscataway is Classified as an Eastern Algonquian language.

Algic (42)

Algonquian (40)

Eastern Algonquian (12)

Nanticoke-Conoy (2)

History

The Piscataway dialect, an individual from the Eastern Algonquian family, is wiped out. As per The Languages of Native North America, Piscataway, otherwise called Conoy (from the Iroquois name for the tribe), was a tongue of Nanticoke. This assignment depends on the insufficient accessible proof of both dialects. It is identified with the

gathering of Delaware dialects, and all the more nearly to Powhatan, which was once talked in the area of present-day Virginia.bThe first speakers lived on the western shore of the Chesapeake Bay, now part of the condition of Maryland. In particular, they occupied the range of the lower Potomac and

Patuxent River seepages.

The Piscataway dialect was a piece of the huge Algonquian dialect family. Jesuit evangelist Father Andrew White made an interpretation of the Catholic Catechism into Piscataway in 1610, and other English teachers gathered Piscataway-dialect materials.The original copy is a five-page Catholic instruction written in a

Eastern Algonquian dialect. It is the main surviving record of the dialect which is ventured to be Piscataway (additionally called Conoy). The recognizable proof of the dialect is taking into account the attribution of creation to Father Andrew White, a seventeenth-century English Jesuit preacher.[4]

Geographical Distribution

This Language was only spoken in the United Sates, more specifically in Maryland.

Official Status

Piscataway is an Extinct Language

Grammar

Morphology

Both inflectional and deduction morphological procedures are clear in the questioning. A few, for example, prefixation, obviously mirror the worldview discovered for the most part in the 108 group of dialects. The confirmation for TI and TA derivational morphemes taking after the example of Delaware proposes close ties between those dialects and Piscataway. In addition, the proof of any morphological procedures, particularly the utilization of plural articulation are found on a few things.

Examples

Nanticoke Color Words

oaskagu (BLACK) waappayu (WHITE)
psquaiu (RED) weesawayu (YELLOW)
ahskaahtuckquia(GREEN) puhsquailoau (BLUE)

Nanticoke Vocab

AIR- ayewash

ARM nickpitq

ARROWHEAD ik-ke-hek

BACK daduck-quack

BAD mattitt

BEAR winquipim

CRANE ah!secque

CREEK pamptuckquaskque

CROW kuh!-hos

Notes

  1. Nordhoff, Sebastian; Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds. (2013). "Piscataway". Glottolog. Leipzig: Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology.
  2. Raymond G. Gordon, Jr, ed. 2005. Ethnologue: Languages of the World. 15th edition. Dallas: Summer Institute of Linguistics.
  3. Mithun, Marianne (1999). The languages of Native North America. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-23228-7.
  4. Mackie, Lisa (2006). "Fragments of Piscataway: A Preliminary Description" (PDF). Retrieved February 12, 2016.

References


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