Ojibwe, Ojibwa, Chippewa or Anishinaabemowin ' in Eastern Ojibwe syllabics) is the third most commonly spoken Native language in Canada (after Cree and Inuktitut), and the fourth most spoken in North America (behind Navajo, Cree, and Inuktitut). It is spoken by the Ojibwe people (Anishinaabeg). As their fur trading with the French increased the Ojibwes’ power, the language became the trade language of the Great Lakes region, and was for hundreds of years an extremely significant presence in the northern US. In the Ojibwe language, the proper term for itself is Anishinaabemowin or Nishnaabemwin, which includes the Algonquin language and Mississauga language, though they are not considered Ojibwa due to not being part of the Council of Three Fires. Ojibwa forms of Anishinaabemowin are often called Ojibwemowin and Saulteaux form as Nakawêmowin. Many consider the Severn Ojibwe as a separate language functioning as a transitional language between Ojibwe and Cree; the Severn Ojibwe (or Oji-Cree) call themselves Anishinini and their language Anishininimowin''.
Many dialects have separate Ethnologue entries and SIL codes: ALQ (Algonquin), CIW (Southwestern Ojibwe ("Chippewa")), OJC (Central Ojibwe), OJG (Eastern Ojibwe), OJB (North(west)ern Ojibwe), OJS (Severn Ojibwe), OJW (Plains Ojibwe/Salteaux ("Western Ojibwe")), and OTW (Odaawaa).
Ojibwe dialects generally have 18 consonants. Obstruents are often said to have a lenis/fortis contrast, where those written as voiceless are pronounced more strongly, significantly longer in duration, and often aspirated or pre-aspirated, while those written as voiced are pronounced less strongly and significantly shorter in duration. For many communities, however, the distinction has become a simple voiced/voiceless one.
There are three short vowels, , and three corresponding long vowels, , as well as a fourth long vowel which lacks a corresponding short vowel, . The short vowels differ in quality as well as quantity from the long vowels, are phonetically closer to , , and . is pronounced for many speakers, and is for many . There are also nasal vowels, which are comparatively rare.
With regards to stress, Ojibwe divides words into metrical "feet," each foot containing a strong syllable and (if two-syllables long) a weak syllable. The strong syllables all receive at least secondary stress. In general, the strong syllable in the third foot from the end of a word receives the primary stress. In many dialects, unstressed vowels are frequently lost or change quality.
Like many Native American languages, Ojibwe is polysynthetic, meaning it exhibits a great deal of synthesis and a very high morpheme-to-word ratio. It is agglutinating, and thus builds up words by stringing morpheme after morpheme together, rather than having several affixes, each of which carry numerous different pieces of information.
There is a distinction between two different types of third person, the proximate (the third person deemed more important or in-focus) and the obviative (the third person deemed less important or out-of-focus). Nouns can be singular or plural, and one of two genders, animate or inanimate. Separate personal pronouns exist, but are usually used for emphasis; they distinguish inclusive and exclusive first person plurals.
Verbs constitute the most complex word class. Verbs are inflected for one of three orders (indicative, the default, conjunct, used for participles and in subordinate clauses, and imperative, used with commands), as negative or affirmative, and for the person, number, animacy, and proximate/obviative status of both its subject and object, as well as for several different modes (including the dubitative and preterit) and tenses.
Ojibwe is written using a syllabary, which is usually said to have been developed by missionary James Evans around 1840 and based on Pitman's shorthand. In the United States, the language is most often written phonemically with Roman characters. Syllabics are primarily used in Canada. The newest Roman character-based writing system is the Double Vowel System, devised by Charles Fiero. Although there is no standard orthography, the Double Vowel System is quickly gaining popularity among language teachers in the United States and Canada because of its ease of use.
| Aabiding | gii-ayaawag | niizh | ikwewag: | mindimooyenh, | odaanisan | bezhig. | |||||
| aabiding | gii- | ayaa | -wag | niizh | ikwe | -wag | mindimooyenh, | o- | daanis | -an | bezhig. |
| once | PAST- | be in a certain place | -3PL | two | woman | -PL | old woman, | 3SG.POSS- | daughter | -OBV | one. |
| Once | they were in a certain place | two | women: | old woman, | her daughter | one. | |||||
| Iwidi | Chi-achaabaaning | akeyaa | gii-onjibaawag. | ||||
| iwidi | chi- | achaabaan | -ing | akeyaa | gii- | onjibaa | -wag. |
| over there | big- | bowstring | -LOC | that way | PAST- | come from | -3PL. |
| Over there | at Big-Bowstring | that way | they came from there. | ||||
| Inashke | naa | mewinzha | gii-aawan, | mii eta go | imaa | sa | wiigiwaaming | gaa-taawaad | igo. | ||||||
| inashke | naa | mewinzha | gii- | aawan | mii | eta | go | imaa | sa | wiigiwaam | -ing | gaa- | daa | -waad | igo. |
| look | thus | long ago | PAST- | be | EMPH | only | EMPH | there | EMPH | wigwam | -LOC | PAST.CONJ- | live | -3PL.CONJ | EMPH. |
| Look | thus | long ago | it was, | only | there | so | in a wigwam | that they lived | just then. | ||||||
| Mii dash | iwapii, | aabiding | igo | gii-awi-bagida'waawaad, | giigoonyan | wii-amwaawaad. | ||||||||
| mii | dash | iw- | -apii | aabiding | igo | gii- | awi- | bagida'waa | -waad, | giigoonh | -yan | wii- | amw | -aawaad. |
| EMPH | CONTR | that- | -then | once | EMPH | PAST- | go and- | fish with a net | -3PL.CONJ | fish | -OBV | DESD- | eat | -3PL/OBV |
| And then | then, | once | just then | that they went and fished with a net | those fish | they are going to eat those | ||||||||
Abbreviations:
| SG | singular |
| PL | plural |
| POSS | possessive |
| OBV | obviative |
| LOC | locative |
| EMPH | emphatic |
| CONJ | conjunct order |
| CONTR | contrastive |
| FUT | future |
| DESD | desiderative |
Ojibwa language | Languages of the United States | Languages of Canada | Algonquian languages | Indigenous languages of the North American eastern woodlands | Indigenous languages of the North American Subarctic | Ojibwa tribe | Agglutinative languages
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