1=Language considerations (Cahuilla)Please see Module:checkparams for help with this warning.
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Policies – Entries: CFI - EL - NORM - NPOV - QUOTE - REDIR - DELETE. Languages: LT - AXX. Others: BLOCK - BOTS - VOTES. |
This policy explains considerations for Cahuilla entries that are not covered by WT:ELE and other general policies.
There are as yet no native or fluent speakers of this language on Wiktionary, so this page is at best a crude work-in-progress. Nonetheless, it's important to document the choices made in representing the language here for better understanding of the entries.
Until a century or two ago, Cahuilla had not been committed to writing. What's more, it has no official status nor a large number of readers or writers, so there's no widely-agreed-upon standard orthography. The two most important published ones are those of Hansjakob Seiler, who authored or co-authored the most complete and linguistically-rigorous grammar and dictionary of the language, and of Pamela Munro and Katherine Siva Saubel, who wrote the best instructional grammar of the language, Chem'ivillu (Let's Speak Cahuilla).
Although the best reference works on the language use it, Seiler's orthography contains several characters that are well-known to linguists, but not conveniently produced with standard English-language keyboards. Munro and Saubel's orthography was carefully designed to use as few non-English characters as possible- only the Spanish letter ñ is likely to cause any trouble. Therefore, this has been chosen as the standard orthography for Wiktionary.
Here's a table showing the sounds (phonemes) of the language as represented by Munro & Saubel's orthography, Seiler's orthography, and IPA characters:
Munro & Saubel | Seiler | IPA | Notes |
' | ʔ | ʔ | * |
a | a | ɑ | |
aa | aa | ɑː | Long vowel |
ch | č | t͡ʃ | "c" in some orthographies ** |
d | d | ð | Spanish loanwords |
e | e | ɛ | |
ee | ee | ɛ: | Long vowel |
f | f | f | Spanish loanwords |
g | g | ɣ | Spanish loanwords |
h | h | h | Never silent |
i | i | i | |
ii | ii | i: | Long vowel |
k | k | k | |
l | l | l | |
ll | l̃ | ʎ | Often "ly" in other orthographies |
m | m | m | |
n | n | n | |
ng | ŋ | ŋ | |
ñ | ñ | ɲ | Often "ny" in other orthographies |
o | o | o | Spanish loanwords |
oo | oo | o: | Spanish loanwords (Long vowel) |
p | p | p | |
q | q | q | |
qw | kʷ | kʷ | |
r | r | ɾ | Spanish loanwords |
s | s | s | |
sh | š | ʃ | "c" in some orthographies ** |
t | t | t | |
u | u | u | |
uu | uu | u: | Long vowel |
v | v | v | |
w | w | w | |
x | x | x | often "kh" in other orthographies |
xw | xʷ | xʷ | "hw" in some orthographies |
y | y | j |
* There are no word-initial vowels- they always have a glottal stop (') or other consonant in front of them. Many older sources tend to omit the glottal stop- even between vowels- though its presence can often be deduced from the use of hyphens between syllables.
** ch and sh are really the same sound, with ch appearing before vowels and sh everywhere else, but both Seiler and Munro & Saubel treat them as separate letters. Many other orthographies use "c" for both.
The stress is generally on the first syllable of the root, but isn't completely predictable. It is never shown in the entry title at the top of the page, but should be shown in the headword as an acute accent on the first part of the vowel of the stressed syllable (á,áa,é,ée,ó,óo,ú,úu), using the head= parameter.
Like many American Indian languages, Cahuilla is of the polysynthetic type: a great deal of information commonly represented in other languages by separate words is represented in Cahuilla by prefixes, suffixes and infixes. This can be quite hard to fit into a standard dictionary format.
Mostly these are in the form of subject and object prefixes on verbs, and possessor prefixes on nouns. With two classes of subject prefixes, there are a total of four sets of pronoun prefixes. There are different forms for 1st, 2nd and 3rd persons in both singular and plural. The 3rd-person singular tends to be the simplest form, in some cases expressed as nothing at all (the "null prefix").
Person | Singular | Plural | Notes | ||
1st | ne- | my | chem- | our | No distinction between inclusive and exclusive |
2nd | 'e- | your | 'em- | ||
3rd | or hé- | his/her/its | hem- | their |
Note: Certain 1-syllable nouns lose their accent to the prefix, and have he- for the 3rd-person singular prefix instead of nothing.
Person | Singular | Plural | Notes | ||
1st | ne- | I | chem- | us | No distinction between inclusive and exclusive |
2nd | 'e- | you | 'em- | ||
3rd | he/she/it | hem- | they |
Although the subject and object are separate prefixes, the object prefix is never seen without a subject prefix before it, so only the combinations will be shown.
Subject Person | Subject Number | Object Person | Object Number | Prefixes | ||
1st | S. | I | 1st | S. | me | - |
1st | S. | I | 1st | Pl. | us | - |
1st | S. | I | 2nd | S. | you | 'en- |
1st | S. | I | 2nd | Pl. | you | 'emen- |
1st | S. | I | 3rd | S. | him/her/it | pen- |
1st | S. | I | 3rd | Pl. | them | men- |
1st | Pl. | we | 1st | S. | me | - |
1st | Pl. | we | 1st | Pl. | us | - |
1st | Pl. | we | 2nd | S. | you | 'echem- |
1st | Pl. | we | 2nd | Pl. | you | 'emechem- |
1st | Pl. | we | 3rd | S. | him/her/it | pichem- |
1st | Pl. | we | 3rd | Pl. | them | michem- |
2nd | S. | you | 1st | S. | me | ne' |
2nd | S. | you | 1st | Pl. | us | cheme'- |
2nd | S. | you | 2nd | S. | you | - |
2nd | S. | you | 2nd | Pl. | you | - |
2nd | S. | you | 3rd | S. | him/her/it | pe'- |
2nd | S. | you | 3rd | S. | them | me'- |
2nd | Pl. | you | 1st | S. | me | ne'em |
2nd | Pl. | you | 1st | Pl. | us | cheme'em- |
2nd | Pl. | you | 2nd | S. | you | - |
2nd | Pl. | you | 2nd | Pl. | you | - |
2nd | Pl. | you | 3rd | S. | him/her/it | pe'em- |
2nd | Pl. | you | 3rd | Pl. | them | me'em- |
3rd | S. | he/she/it | 1st | S. | me | ne- |
3rd | S. | he/she/it | 1st | Pl. | us | cheme- |
3rd | S. | he/she/it | 2nd | S. | you | 'e- |
3rd | S. | he/she/it | 2nd | Pl. | you | 'eme- |
3rd | S. | he/she/it | 3rd | S. | him/her/it | pe- |
3rd | S. | he/she/it | 3rd | Pl. | them | me- |
3rd | Pl. | they | 1st | S. | me | nem- |
3rd | Pl. | they | 1st | Pl. | us | chemem- |
3rd | Pl. | they | 2nd | S. | you | 'em- |
3rd | Pl. | they | 2nd | Pl. | you | 'emem- |
3rd | Pl. | they | 3rd | S. | him/her/it | pem- |
3rd | Pl. | they | 3rd | S. | them | mem- |
Cahuilla nouns are in one of two states: possessed or absolute. A possessed noun has no absolutive suffix, but always has a possessor prefix, while an absolute noun has no possessor prefix, but almost always has an absolutive suffix.
Many nouns can be used in either state, but there is a substantial group that can only be in the possessed state. These are generally words for things like body parts and kinship terms that are inherently part of or related to someone. There are also words for certain animals that are never in the possessed state: the possessor prefix always goes on a placeholder noun ash, usually translated as pet. Thus one would say 'awal ne'ash (dog my-pet) instead of *ne'awal (my-dog).
The absolutive suffix may have originally been a single form at some time in the past, but now there are several, with no reliable rules to predict which form goes with which noun: -l,-ll, -sh/-ch, and -t. Most of the exceptions are loanwords from other languages, especially from Spanish.
There are also an object ending and a plural ending. Some nouns have a distributive form that can be used instead of a plural, which is formed by reduplication. There are some plurals formed by reduplication, also.
The lemma for nouns is the 3rd-person singular form: either the absolute form, or, if possessed-only, the possessed form with any possessor prefix removed.
A complete headword line should consist of the headword, followed by (in parentheses) the absolute singular and plural (if they exist), the possessed singular and plural with 3rd-person singular possessor prefix, and the designation "possessed-only" if appropriate. Those nouns that place their prefix on the word ash will have ash in their possessed forms: 'áwal hé'ash, 'á'walem hé'achem.
Here are a couple of representative nouns, with their inflection:
néat (Abs. S. néat, Pl.néhtam, Poss. S. néh'a Pl.néam)
Singular | Singular Object | Plural | Plural Object | State | ||
néat | néa'ti | basket | néhtam | néhtami | baskets | Absolute |
nenéh'a | nenéay | my basket | nenéam | nenéami | my baskets | Possessed |
'enéh'a | 'enéay | your(s.) basket | 'enéam | 'enéami | my baskets | Possessed |
néh'a | néay | his/her/its basket | néam | néami | his/her/its baskets | Possessed |
chemnéh'a | chemnéay | our basket | chemnéam | chemnéami | our baskets | Possessed |
'emnéh'a | 'emnéay | your(p.) basket | 'emnéam | 'emnéami | your(p.) baskets | Possessed |
hemnéh'a | hemnéay | their house | hemnéam | hemnéami | their baskets | Possessed |
kísh (Abs. S. kísh, Pl.kísh, Poss. S. héki' Pl.hékim)
Singular | Singular Object | Plural | Plural Object | State | ||
kísh | kí'chi | house | kísh | kishmi | houses | Absolute |
néki' | nékiy | my house | nékim | nékimi | my houses | Possessed |
'éki' | 'ékiy | your(s.) house | 'ékim | 'ékimi | my houses | Possessed |
héki' | hékiy | his/her/its house | hékim | hékimi | his/her/its houses | Possessed |
chémki' | chémkiy | our house | chémkim | chémkimi | our houses | Possessed |
'émki' | 'émkiy | your(p.) house | 'émkim | 'émkimi | your(p.) houses | Possessed |
hémki' | hémkiy | their house | hémkim | hémkimi | their houses | Possessed |