Deg Xinag language

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Deg Xinag
Degexit’an
Native to United States
Region Alaska (lower Yukon River, Anvik River, Innoko River)
Ethnicity 280 Deg Hit'an (2007)[1]
Native speakers
40 (2007)[1]
Latin (Northern Athabaskan alphabet)
Language codes
ISO 639-3 ing
Glottolog dege1248[2]

Deg Xinag[pronunciation?] is a Northern Athabaskan language spoken by the Deg Hit’an peoples in Shageluk and Anvik and at Holy Cross along the lower Yukon River in Alaska. The language is nearly extinct, as most people are shifting to English.

The language was referred to as Ingalik by Osgood (1936). While this term sometimes still appears in the literature, it is today considered pejorative. The word "Ingalik" from Yup'ik Eskimo language: < Ingqiliq "Indian".

Engithidong Xugixudhoy (Their Stories of Long Ago), a collection of traditional folk tales in the Deg Xinag language by the elder Belle Deacon, was published in 1987 by the Alaska Native Language Center. A literacy manual with accompanying audiotapes was published in 1993.

Dialects

There are two main dialects, an Yukon and a Kuskokwim one. The Yukon dialect (Yukon Deg Xinag, Yukon Ingalik) is the traditional language of the villages of Lower Yukon River (Anvik, Shageluk and Holy Cross), although as of 2009 there are no longer any speakers living in Anvik and Holy Cross. Other dialect (Kuskokwim Deg Xinag, Kuskokwim Ingalik) is traditional language of the settlements of Middle Kuskokwim. [3]

Examples

[4]

  • q'unt'ogh airplane
  • ggagg animal
  • ggagg chux bear (lit 'big animal')
  • sraqay children
  • dran day
  • xik'ugił'anh doctor, nurse
  • łegg fish
  • łek dog
  • sileg my dog
  • vileg her dog
  • tso tl'ogh iy mammoth
  • dina' k'idz doll (lit. 'little person')
  • xidondiditey door
  • ngan' dit'anh earthquake
  • sito' my father
  • vito' her father
  • yix house
  • tinh ice
  • dangan iron, metal
  • deloy mountain
  • vanhgiq Indian ice cream
  • choghlugguy (in Anvik) ; niq'asrt'ay (in Shageluk) fox
  • vinixiłyiq in the morning
  • giłiq one
  • teqa two
  • togg three
  • denhch'e four
  • niłq'osnal giłiggi viq'idz iy eleven

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Deg Xinag at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
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  3. Sharon Hargus 2009.Vowel quality and duration in Yukon Deg Xinag
  4. ankn.uaf.edu: Deg Xinag Ałixi Ni’elyoy / Deg Xinag Learners' Dictionary (2007)

External links

Bibliography

  • Alaskan Native Language Center. Retrieved on 2007-03-14.
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  • Osgood, Cornelius. 1936. The Distribution of the Northern Athapaskan Indians. (Yale University Publications in Anthropology, no. 7). New Haven: Yale University.