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Blackfoot is the name of any of the Algonquian languages spoken by the Blackfoot tribe of Native Americans, who currently live in the northwestern plains of North America.

Like the other Algonquian languages, Blackfoot is typologically polysynthetic. Whorf hypothesized that it was oligosynthetic, but mainstream linguistics has rejected this.

Of all the Algonquian languages, Blackfoot is often said to have diverged most drastically from Proto-Algonquian. It is significantly different both phonologically and, especially, grammatically from the other languages in the family.

Sounds


Consonants

Labial Alveolar Velar Glottal
Stop
Fricative
Nasal
Semivowel

Blackfoot also has two affricates, , . The velar consonants become palatals and when preceded by front vowels.

Vowels

Front Central Back
Close
Close-Mid
Open-Mid
Open

Some allophonic changes among the vowels: /a/ is raised to when followed by a long consonant, /i/ becomes in closed syllables, /æ/ becomes * when followed by and in closed syllables, and /o/ becomes when followed by a long consonant. Blackfoot is pitch accent based, meaning every word has at least one high-pitched vowel, and high pitch is contrastive with non-high pitch. At the end of a word, non-high pitched vowels are devoiced.

Writing System


A script for Blackfoot was created by John William Tims in the 19th century. The script uses a symbol for each consonant+vowel combination. There is only one symbol for each consonant, but it is rotated to face different directions to indicate the vowel which goes with it. The consonant symbols appear to be loosely based on the latin alphabet, only made less symetrical. Symbols for consonants without any vowels are based on the consonant symbol minus the stem.

Many of the symbols are shared with the Cree language, but were given completely different pronunciations for Blackfoot. In particular the order of all the vowels was swapped around.

If you want to view this alphabet you will need to download a font such as Sans Serif, which you can get from this site: LanguageGeek.com font downloads. After you have installed the font, the table below should display correctly (as should all Wikipedia native American language pages).

In addition to the original Blackfoot script (shown below), sometimes Blackfoot is (confusingly) written in a version of the Cree script. Blackfoot is also often written in Latin.

Unicode table for Blackfoot

Syllabics Unicode Blackfoot
= 003D -w-
141F +i
1420 +u(o)
1421 N
1422 M
1424 P
1426 KH
1427 -s-
1428 T
1449 -y-
144A H
146B Pa
146D Pe
146F Pi
1472 Po
1489 Ma
148B Me
148D Mi
1490 Mo
14A3 Ta
14A5 Te
14A7 Ti
14AA To
14ED Sa
14EF Se
14F1 Si
14F4 So
1508 S
1526 Ya
1528 Ye
152A Yi
152D Yo
15B0 E
15B1 I
15B2 O
15B3 A
15B4 We
15B5 Wi
15B6 Wo
15B7 Wa
15B8 Ne
15B9 Ni
15BA No
15BB Na
15BC Ke
15BD Ki
15BE Ko
15BF Ka
1601 K

External links


Algonquian languages | Blackfoot culture | Indigenous languages of the North American Plains | Languages of Canada | Languages of the United States

Pikanieg | Nigrapieda lingvo | Mustajalka

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Blackfoot language".

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