Comanche is a Uto-Aztecan language spoken by the Comanche people. It is closely related to the language of the Shoshone, from which the Comanche diverged around 1700. Although efforts are now being made to ensure its survival, most speakers of the language are elderly, and less than one percent of the Comanches can speak the language. In the late 1800s, Comanche children were placed in boarding schools where they were discouraged from speaking their native language, and even severely punished for doing so. The second generation then grew up speaking English, because of the belief that it was better for them not to know Comanche.
During World War II, a group of seventeen young men referred to as the Comanche Code Talkers, were trained and used by the U.S. Army to send messages conveying sensitive information that could not be deciphered by the enemy.
Comanche has six vowels which occur voiced with short and long forms, and voiceless in a short form. The phoneme is phonetically or .
| Front | Central | Back | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| short | long | voiceless | short | long | voiceless | short | long | voiceless | |
| Close | |||||||||
| Mid | |||||||||
| Open | |||||||||
Comanche has two diphthongs:
| Labial | Dental | Palatal | Velar | Glottal | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| plain | labial | |||||
| Stop | p | t | k | |||
| Affricate | ||||||
| Fricative | s | h | ||||
| Nasal | m | n | ||||
| Approximant | w | j |
The Comanche Alphabet was developed by Dr. Alice Anderton, a linguistic anthropologist, and was adopted as the official Comanche Alphabet by the Comanche Nation in 1994. The alphabet is not entirely phonemic, as there are some phonemes that are represented by two letters. The alphabet is as follows:
| Alphabet | Pronunciation | Alphabet | Pronunciation |
|---|---|---|---|
| a | /a/ | p | * /p/ |
| b | /p/ | r | /t/ |
| e | /e/ | s | /s/ |
| h | /h/ | t | * /t/ |
| i | /i/ | u | /u/ |
| k | /k/ | ʉ | /ə/ |
| m | /m/ | w | /w/ |
| n | /n/ | y | /j/ |
| o | /o/ |
The following are examples of words from the Comanche language. They are based primarily on the Comanche Vocabulary: Trilingual Edition by Manuel García Rejón. The orthography used here is not the official Comanche Alphabet, but is based on Spanish orthography. In it, doubled letters are long, and h is always sounded as in the English "hit", even in the middle of a word, as in "cuhtz" (buffalo). An accent mark indicates stress on that syllable.
| English | Comanche |
|---|---|
| Boy | Tuinéhpua |
| Brother (Older) | Bávi |
| Brother (Younger) | Rámi |
| Buffalo | Cuhtz |
| Corn | Janib |
| Cougar | Toyarohco |
| Coyote | Tzensa |
| Cricket | Tuaahtaqui |
| Deer | Areca |
| Dog | Sarrie |
| Father | Ap |
| Fire | Cuuna |
| Fish | Pécui |
| Frog | Pasauiyió |
| Grass | Sonip |
| Horse | Puc |
| House | Caani |
| Jerky | Inap |
| Moon | Muea |
| Mother | Pia |
| No | Niatz |
| Owl | Mupitz |
| Rabbit | Tábo |
| Rain | Emar |
| Rainbow | Paracoa |
| River | Piajunubi |
| Sister (Older) | Batzi |
| Sister (Younger) | Nami |
| Sky | Tomóbi |
| Star | Tatzinupi |
| Sun | Taabe |
| Water | Paa |
| Yes | Jaa |
Languages of the United States | Indigenous languages of the North American Plains | Uto-Aztecan languages
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Comanche language".
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