article

Zuni (also Zuñi or Shiwi) is spoken by over 10,000 people in New Mexico and much smaller numbers in parts of Arizona. Its speakers are known as the Zuni.

Genetic relations


Zuni is now generally considered a language isolate. Some linguists have categorized it as a Penutian language, and Bertha Dutton * once posed the hypothetical statement that according to the Swadesh list, "If the Zuni language is a member of the Penutian language family, then it is a distant relative of the Tanoan languages (Tewi)."

The Penutian Hypothesis was advanced by Alfred Kroeber and Roland B. Dixon [http://www.mnsu.edu/emuseum/information/biography/abcde/dixon_roland.html and later refined by Edward Sapir, and was an attempt to reduce the number of unrelated language families in a culturally diverse area that was centered in California's central coast. While this theory was plausible for some of the languages, the problem of verification of this theory was that to find any evidence of any cognates between the California languages and Zuni, one would possibly have to trace the languages' lineage by as much as 3000-5000 years or more.

Dell Hymes offers information on California languages where one can form a comparative of certain Zuni words to the languages of California, e.g.Wintu, Maidu, Miwok, and may have relevance to studies of the Pueblo Peoples, the Pecos Classification, and the Hohokam. In a speculative work The Zuni Enigma ([http://www.nativecalling.org/archives/2000/jul/07252000.ram The controversy in RealAudio), Nancy Yaw Davis offers a comparative of cognates between the Zuni language and another language isolate, the Japanese language.

Zuni world view


A bibliography of books and articles concerning the Zuni language lists items dealing with syntax and semantics, as does Zuni Curtis D. Cook's article and the work of Stanley Newman. Others, such as Ruth Bunzel's Pueblo Pottery and Jane M. Young'sbook on Rock Art, are important in the study of pragmatics and the Zuni World View [http://www.prophetsrock.com/zuni_world_view/page1.html as it is reflected in the Zuni language. The Zuni worldview may properly be considered as a study in orthology. The form and function of design images and pictographic rock art images and their interpretation according to Zuni mythology or cosmology sufficed as a form of communication prior to the appearance of a written language.

Also important are the books on and by Frank Hamilton Cushing. He was the first anthropologist to undertake studies by means of the method of participant observation, and became a member of the Zuni's Priesthood of the Bow during his tenure at the Pueblo from 1879-1884. Of special interest in regard to the Zuni language is his correspondences edited by Jesse Green, and their relevance to the Zuni language as it reflects their worldview.

Sounds


Consonants

The 16 consonants of Zuni:

Bilabial Alveolar Postalveolar Velar Glottal
central lateral plain labial
Stop
Affricate
Nasal
Fricative
Approximant

Vowels

Front Central back
Close i u
Mid e o
Open a

References


  • Bunzel, Ruth L. The Pueblo Potter: A Study of Creative Imagination in Primitive Art. New York: Dover, 1929, ISBN 0486228754
  • Bunzel, Ruth L. Introduction to Zuni Ceremonialism. Introduction by Nancy Pareto. University of New Mexico Press, 1992, ISBN 0826313760
  • Bunzel, Ruth L. Zuni Texts. Publications of the American Ethnological Society, 15. New York: G.E. Steckert & Co., 1933, ISBN 040458165X
  • Condie, Carol. "Problems of a Chomskyan Analysis of Zuni Transitivity". International Journal of American Linguistics. 39: 207-223, 1973.
  • Cook, Curtis D. "Nucleus and Margin of Zuni Clause Types." Linguistics. 13: 5-37, 1975.
  • Cushing, Frank Hamilton. My Adventures in Zuni, Pamphlet, ISBN 1121395511
  • Cushing, Frank Hamilton. Outlines of Zuni Creation Myths, AMS Press; Reprint edition (June 1, 1996), ISBN 0404118348
  • Cushing, Frank Hamilton. Zuni Breadstuff (Indian Notes and Monographs V.8), AMS Press, 1975, 673 pages, ISBN 0404118356
  • Cushing, Frank Hamilton. Zuni Fetishes Facsimile, pamphlet, ISBN 1125285001
  • Davis, Nancy Yaw. The Zuni Enigma. Norton, 2000, ISBN 0393047881
  • Dutton, Bertha P. American Indians of the Southwest. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1983.
  • Green, Jesse, ed. Zuni: Selected Writings of Frank Hamilton Cushing. Lincoln and London: University of Nebraska Press, 1979, ISBN 0803270070
  • Green, Jesse. Cushing at Zuni: The Correspondence and Journals of Frank Hamilton Cushing, 1879-1884. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1990, ISBN 0826311725
  • Hickerson, Nancy P. "Two Studies of Color: Implications for Cross-Cultural Comparability of Semantic Categories". In Linguistics and Anthropology: In honor of C.F. Voegelin. Pp. 317-330. Ed. By M. Dale Kinkade, Kenneth Hale, and Oswald Werner. The Peter De Ridder Press, 1975.
  • Hieb, Louis A. "Meaning and Mismeaning: Toward an Understanding of the Ritual Clowns". New Perspectives on the Pueblos. Ed. by Alfonso Ortiz. Pp. 163-195. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1972, reprint 1984, ISBN 0826303870
  • Hymes, Dell H. "Some Penutian Elements and the Penutian Hypothesis". Southwestern Journal of Anthropology. 13:69-87, 1957.
  • Kroeber, Alfred L. "Zuni Kin and Clan". AMS Press (June 1, 1984), ISBN 0404156185
  • Miner, Kenneth L. "Noun Stripping and Loose Incorporation in Zuni". International Journal of American Linguistics. 52: 242-254, 1986.
  • Mithun, Marianne (ed.). The Languages of Native North America. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1999.
  • Newman, Stanley. "Vocabulary Levels: Zuni Sacred and Slang Usage." Southwestern Journal of Anthropology. 11: 345-354, 1955.
  • Newman, Stanley. Zuni Dictionary. Indiana University Research Center Publication Six. Bloomington: Indiana University, 1958.
  • Newman, Stanley. "The Zuni Verb 'To Be'". Foundations of Language, Supplemental Series. Vol.1. Ed. by John W. Verhaar, The Humanities Press, 1967.
  • Newman, Stanley. "Sketch of the Zuni Language". In Ives Goddard (ed.) Handbook of North-American Indians Volume 17, Languages, Washington: Smithsonian Institution, 1996.
  • Ortiz, Alfonso, ed. "Zuni". Handbook of North American Indians, Southwest. Vol.9. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1979.
  • Smith, Watson and John Roberts. Zuni Law: A Field of Values. Papers of the Peabody Museum of American Archaeology and Ethnology, Vol. 43. Cambridge, MA: Peabody Museum, 1954, ISBN 0527013129
  • Walker, Willard. "Inflection and Taxonomic Structure in Zuni". International Journal of American Linguistics. 32(3): 217-227, 1966.
  • Walker Willard. "Toward a Sound Pattern of the Zuni". International Journal of American Linguistics. 38(4):240-259, 1968.
  • Young, M. Jane. Signs from the Ancestors:Zuni Cultural Symbolism and Perceptions in Rock Art. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 1988, ISBN 0826312039

External links


  • Ethnologue report for Zuni
  • Zuni World View "Linguistic and Ontological Implications of the Conceptual Presuppositions of the Zuni Worldview", HTML and PDF.
  • Zuni Enigma (Listen in RealAudio…) Did a group of thirteenth century Japanese pilgrims come to the American Southwest and merge with the people of Zuni? Guests include Nancy Yaw Davis, author of "The Zuni Enigma" and members of the Zuni Nation, Hayes Lewis, Arden Kucate, and Malcolm Bowekety.

Language isolates | Languages of the United States | Indigenous languages of the North American Southwest

Zuñi (Sprache) | ズニ語

 

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

Home Pageartsbusinesscomputersgameshealthhospitalshomekids & teensnewsphysiciansrecreationreferenceregionalscienceshoppingsocietysportsworld