Slavey (/ˈsleɪvi/;[5] also Slave, Slavé) is a group of Athabaskan languages and a dialect continuum spoken amongst the Dene peoples of Canada in the Northwest Territories – or central Denendeh – where it also has official status.[6] The languages are primarily written using a modified Latin script, with some using Canadian Aboriginal syllabics. In their own languages, these languages are referred to as: Sahtúgot’įné Yatı̨́ (spoken by the Sahtu Dene), K’ashógot’įne Goxedǝ́ (the Hare Dene dialect) and Shíhgot’įne Yatı̨́ (the Mountain dialect) in the North, and Dené Dháh (primarily by the Dene Tha' in Alberta), Dene Yatıé or Dene Zhatıé in the South.
Slavey | |
---|---|
North: Sahtúgot’įné Yatı̨́ K’ashógot’įne Goxedǝ́ Shíhgot’įne Yatı̨́ South: Dené Dháh, Dene Yatıé or Dene Zhatıé | |
Native to | Denendeh, Canada |
Region | Northwest Territories |
Ethnicity | Slavey, Sahtu |
Native speakers | 2,120, 65% of ethnic population (2016 census)[1] |
Official status | |
Official language in | Northwest Territories, Canada[2] |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-2 | den |
ISO 639-3 | den – inclusive codeIndividual codes: scs – North Slaveyxsl – South Slavey |
Glottolog | slav1253 |
North Slavey is classified as Definitely Endangered by the UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger | |
Dene / (Slavey)[3] "people" / "Awokanak"[4] | |
---|---|
Person | Dene |
People | Got'iné (North) Sahtúgot’įné ("Great Bear Lake") K’ashógot’įne ("Hareskin") Shíhgot’įne ("Mountain") Deneke (South) |
Language | Got'iné Kedé / Got'iné Yatí Sahtúgot’įné Kədǝ́ K’ashógot’įne Xədǝ́ Shíhgot’įne Yatı̨́ Dene Yatié / Dene Zhatié |
Country | Denendeh, Got'iné Néné (North), Sahtúgot’įné Nę́nę́ K’ashógot’įne Nę́né Shıhgot’ıné Nę́nę́ Dene Ndéh (South), Dehchondéh Dene Tha' Ndéh |
North Slavey and South Slavey
editNorth Slavey is spoken by the Sahtu (North Slavey) people in the Mackenzie District along the middle Mackenzie River from Tulita (Fort Norman) north, around Great Bear Lake, and in the Mackenzie Mountains of the Canadian territory of Northwest Territories. The dialect has around 800 speakers.[1]
Northern Slavey is an amalgamation of three separate dialects:
- K’ashógot’įne (ᑲᑊᗱᑯᑎᑊᓀ) Goxedǝ́: Hare, spoken by the Gahwié got’iné - "Rabbitskin People" or K’áshogot’ıne - "Great Hare People", referring to their dependence on the varying hare for food and clothing, also called Peaux de Lièvre or Locheaux
- Sahtúgot’įné (ᓴᑋᕲᒼᑯᑎᑊᓀ) Yatı̨́: Bear Lake, spoken by the Sahtu Dene or Sahtú got’iné - "Bear Lake People", also known as Gens du Lac d'Ours
- Shíhgot’įne (ᗰᑋᑯᑎᑊᓀ) Yatı̨́: Mountain, spoken by the Shıhgot’ıné, Shuhtaot'iné or Shotah Dene - "Mountain People" or Mountain Indians, also called Nahagot’iné, Nahaa or Nahane Dene - "People of the west", so called because they lived in the mountains west of the other Slavey groups, between the Mackenzie Mountains and the Mackenzie River, from the Redstone River to the Mountain River
South Slavey (ᑌᓀ ᒐ Dené Dháh, Dene Yatıé or Dene Zhatıé) is spoken by the Slavey people, who were also known as Dehghaot'ine, Deh Cho, Etchareottine[8] - "People Dwelling in the Shelter", in the region of Great Slave Lake, upper Mackenzie River (Deh Cho - "Big River") and its drainage, in the District of Mackenzie, northeast Alberta, and northwest British Columbia.
Some communities are bilingual, with the children learning Slavey at home and English when they enter school. Still other communities are monolingual in Slavey [9] The dialect has around 1,000 speakers.[1]
Alternative names: Slavi, Slave, Dené, Mackenzian
The division of Slavey dialects is based largely on the way each one pronounces the old Proto-Athapaskan sounds *dz *ts *ts’ *s and *z.
Phonology
editConsonants
editLabial | Alveolar | Post- alveolar |
Dorsal | Glottal | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
plain | sibilant | lateral | ||||||
Plosive/ Affricate |
plain | p | t | ts | tɬ | tʃ | k | ʔ |
aspirated | tʰ | tsʰ | tɬʰ | tʃʰ | kʰ | |||
ejective | tʼ | tsʼ | tɬʼ | tʃʼ | kʼ | |||
Fricative | voiceless | s | ɬ | ʃ | x | h | ||
voiced | z | ɮ | ʒ | ɣ | ||||
Nasal | m | n | ||||||
Approximant | w | j |
The consonant inventories in the dialects of Slavey differ considerably. The table above lists the 30 consonants common to most or all varieties. Hare lacks aspirated affricates (on red background), which have lenited into fricatives, whereas Mountain lacks /w/ (on blue). In addition, for some speakers of Hare, an alveolar flap /ɾ/ has developed into a separate phoneme. Prenasalized stops /ᵐb, ⁿd/ may appear in Slavey proper.
The most pronounced difference is however the realization of a series of consonants that varies greatly in their place of articulation:[10]
Slavey proper | Mountain | Bearlake | Hare | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Plain stop/affricate | t̪θ | p | kʷ | kʷ, p |
Aspirated | t̪θʰ | pʰ | kʷʰ | f |
Ejective | t̪θʼ | pʼ | kʷʼ | ʔw |
Voiceless fricative | θ | f | ʍ | w |
Voiced fricative / semivowel | ð | v | w | w |
In Slavey proper, these are dental affricates and fricatives; comparative Athabaskan work reveals this to be the oldest sound value. Mountain has labials, with the voiceless stop coinciding with pre-existing /p/. Bearlake has labialized velars, but has lenited the voiced fricative to coincide with pre-existing /w/. The most complicated situation is found in Hare, where the plain stop is a labialized velar, the ejective member is replaced by a /ʔw/ sequence, the aspirated affricate has turned into a fricative /f/, and both the voiceless and voiced fricatives have been lenited to /w/.
Phonological processes
editThe following phonological and phonetic statements apply to all four dialects of Slavey.
- Unaspirated obstruents are either voiceless or weakly voiced, e.g.
- /k/ → [k] or [k̬]
- Aspirated obstruents are strongly aspirated.
- Ejectives are strongly ejective.
- When occurring between vowels, ejectives are often voiced, e.g.
- /kʼ/ → [ɡˀ] or [kʼ]
- /t͡sʰ/ is usually strongly velarized, i.e. [tˣ].
- Velar obstruents are palatalized before front vowels, e.g.
- /kɛ/ → [cɛ]
- /xɛ/ → [çɛ]
- /ɣɛ/ → [ʝɛ]
- Velar fricatives may be labialized before round vowels.
- The voiceless fricative is usually labialized, e.g.
- /xo/ → [xʷo]
- The voiced fricative is optionally labialized and may additionally be deaffricated e.g.
- /ɣo/ → [ɣo] or [ɣʷo] or [wo]
- The voiceless fricative is usually labialized, e.g.
- Velar stops are also labialized before round vowels. These labialized velars are not as heavily rounded as labial velars (which occur in Bearlake and Hare), e.g.
- /ko/ → [kʷo]
- /kʷo/ → [k̹ʷwo]
- Lateral affricates are generally alveolar, but sometimes velar, i.e.
- /tɬ/ → [tɬ] or [kɬ]
- /tɬʰ/ → [tɬʰ] or [kɬʰ]
- /tɬʼ/ → [tɬʼ] or [kɬʼ]
- /x/ may be velar or glottal, i.e.
- /x/ → [x] or [h]
Vowels
editFront | Central | Back | |
---|---|---|---|
Close | i | u | |
Close-mid | e ⟨ə⟩ | o | |
Open-mid | ɛ | ||
Open | a |
- a [a]
- e [ɛ] or [æ] when followed by a back vowel
- ə [e] or [ie]
- i [i] or [ɪ] in syllable onset
- o [o]
- u [u]
- nasal vowels are marked with an ogonek accent, e.g. ⟨ą⟩ [ã]
- Vowel length is distributed as /VV/ in the dialects of Bearlake, Slavey and Mountain.
- South Slavey does not have the ⟨ə⟩ vowel.
Tone
editSlavey has two tones:
- high
- low
In Slavey orthography, high tone is marked with an acute accent, and low tone is unmarked.
Tones are both lexical and grammatical.
Lexical: /ɡáh/ 'along' vs. /ɡàh/ 'rabbit'
Syllable structure
editSlavey morphemes have underlying syllable structures in the stems: CV, CVC, CVnC, V, and VC. The prefixes of the stem occur as Cv, CVC, VC, CV, and C.
Stem structure | Example | English gloss |
---|---|---|
CV | tu | "water" |
CVC | ʔah | "snowshoe" |
CVnC | mį́h | "net" |
V | -e | Postposition |
VC | -éh | "with" |
Prefix structure | Example | English gloss |
---|---|---|
CV | de- | inceptive |
CVC | teh- | "into water" |
V | í- | seriative |
VC | ah- | second-person singular subject |
C | h- | classifier (voice element) |
Writing system
editSlavey alphabet (1973)[11]
a | c | chʼ | d | ddh | dh | dl | dz | e | g | |
/a/ | /tʃʰ/ | /tʃʼ/ | /t/ | /t̪θ/ | /ð/ | /tɬ/ | /ts/ | /e/ | /k/ | |
gh | h | i | j | k | kʼ | l | ł | m | mb | |
/ɣ/ | /h/ | /i/ | /tʃ/ | /kʰ/ | /kʼ/ | /l/ | /ɬ/ | /m/ | /ᵐb/ | |
n | nd | o | r | s | sh | t | th | tł | tłʼ | |
/n/ | /ⁿd/ | /o/ | /ɾ/ | /s/ | /ʃ/ | /tʰ/ | /θ/ | /tɬʰ/ | /tɬʼ/ | |
ts | tsʼ | tth | tthʼ | tʼ | u | w | y | z | zh | ʔ |
/tsʰ/ | /tsʼ/ | /t̪θʰ/ | /t̪θʼ/ | /tʼ/ | /u/ | /w/ | /j/ | /z/ | /ʒ/ | /ʔ/ |
Tone is indicated with an acute accent and the ogonek indicates nasalization.
North Slavey alphabet
- ʔ
- a
- b
- ch
- chʼ
- d
- dl
- dz
- e
- ǝ
- f
- g
- gh
- gw
- h
- ı
- j
- k
- kw
- kʼ
- kwʼ
- l
- ł
- m
- n
- o
- p
- pʼ
- r
- s
- sh
- t
- tʼ
- tł
- tłʼ
- ts
- tsʼ
- u
- v
- w
- wh
- wʼ
- x
- y
- z
- zh
South Slavey alphabet
- ʔ
- a
- b
- ch
- chʼ
- d
- dh
- ddh
- dl
- dz
- e
- f
- g
- gh
- h
- ı
- j
- k
- kʼ
- l
- ł
- m
- mb
- n
- nd
- o
- p
- pʼ
- r
- s
- sh
- t
- tʼ
- th
- tth
- tthʼ
- tł
- tłʼ
- ts
- tsʼ
- u
- v
- w
- x
- y
- z
- zh
Morphology
editSlavey, like many Athabascan languages, has a very specific morpheme order in the verb in which the stem must come last. The morpheme order is shown in the following chart.
Position | Description |
---|---|
Position 000 | Adverb |
Position 00 | Object of incorporated postposition |
Position 0 | Incorporated postposition |
Position 1 | Adverbial |
Position 2 | Distributive (yá-) |
Position 3 | Customary (na-) |
Position 4 | Incorporated stem |
Position 5 | Number |
Position 6 | Direct Object |
Position 7 | Deictic |
Position 8 | Theme/derivation |
Position 9 | Aspect/derivation |
Position 10 | Conjugation |
Position 11 | Mode |
Position 12 | Subject |
Position 13 | Classifier |
Position 14 | Stem |
A Slavey verb must minimally have positions 13 and 14 to be proper. Here are some examples:[9]
xayadedhtí | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Morphemes | xa | ya | de | d | h | tí |
Position | 1 | 1 | 9 | 13 | 13 | 14 |
Translation | 'S/he prayed' |
godee | |||
---|---|---|---|
Morphemes | go | ∅ | deeh |
Position | 6 | 13 | 14 |
Translation | 'S/he talks' |
dagodee | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Morphemes | da | go | ∅ | dee |
Position | 4 | 6 | 13 | 14 |
Translation | 'S/he stutters' |
Person, number and gender
editGender
editSlavey marks gender by means of prefixation on the verb theme. There are three different genders, one of which is unmarked; the other two are marked by prefixes [go-] and [de-]. However, only certain verb themes allow gender prefixes.[9]
[go-] is used for nouns which mark location in either time or space. Some examples of these areal nouns are house (ko̜̒e̒), land (de̒h), river (deh), and winder (xay).[9] The gender pronoun can be a direct object, an oblique object or a possessor.[9]
kú̜e̒
house
godetl’e̒h
3SG.paints.area
'S/he is painting the house.'
ko̜̒e̒
house
gocha
area.in
shelter
'in the shelter of the house'
ko̜̒e̒
house
godeshįte̒ee
area.floor
'floor of the house'
[de-] marks wood, leaves and branches. This gender is optional: some speakers use it and others do not.[9]
tse
wood
de̜la
'wood is located'
ʔo̜̒k’ay
bird
t’oge
nest
de̒ʔo̜
wooden
O
is
located
'A bird’s nest is located'
tse
wood
ts’edehdla̒
3SG.split.wood
'S/he is splitting wood.'
Number
editSlavey marks number in the subject prefixes in position 12. The dual is marked by the prefix łe̒h- (Sl)/łe- (Bl)/le- (Hr).
- ni̒łe̒gehtthe
- 'They two got stuck in a narrow passage.'
The plural is marked with the prefix go-.
- Dahgogehthe
- 'They dance.'
- ʔeha̒goni̒dhe
- 'We go for meat.'
Person
editSlavey has first, second, third, and fourth person. When in position 12, acting as a subject, first-person singular is /h-/, second-person singular is /ne-/, first-person dual/plural is /i̒d-/, and second person plural is marked by /ah-/. Third person is not marked in this position. When occurring as a direct or indirect object, the pronoun prefixes change and fourth person becomes relevant.
- First-person singular takes se-.
- Second-person singular takes ne-
- Third person is marked by be-/me-
- Fourth person is marked by ye-[9]
Classification
editLike most Athabaskan languages, Slavey has a multitude of classifications. There are five basic categories that describe the nature of an object. Some of these categories are broken up further.[9]
Class | Description | Locative prefix | Active Prefix | Examples |
---|---|---|---|---|
1a | One dimensional slender, rigid and elongated objects | Ø-to | ∅-tí͔,-tǫ, -tǫ́ | gun, canoe, pencil |
1b | One directions flexible objects, ropelike; plurals | ∅-ɫa | ∅-ɫee, -ɫa, -ɫee | thread, snowshoes, rope |
2a | two dimensional flexible | h-chú | h-chuh, -chú, -chu | open blanket, open tent, paper |
2b | Two dimensional rigid objects | N/A | N/A | no specific lexical item |
3 | Solid roundish objects; chunky objects | ∅-ʔǫ | ∅-ʔáh, -ʔǫ, -ʔá | ball, rock, stove, loaf of bread |
4a | Small containerful | ∅-kǫ | ∅-káh, -kǫ, -kah | pot of coffee, puppies in a basket, cup of tea |
4b | Large containerful | h-tǫ | h-tí͔h, -tǫ, tǫ́ | full gas tank, bucket of water, bag of flour |
5 | Animate | ∅-tí͔ | ∅-téh, -tí͔, -té, h-téh, -tį | Any living thing |
Tense and aspect
editTense
editSlavey has only one structural tense: future. Other tenses can be indicated periphrastically.[9]
An immediate future can be formed by the de- inceptive (position 9) plus y-.
dałe
3.FUT.start out
'S/he is just ready to go.'
nadedajéh
3.FUT.start to heal
'It is just starting to heal.'
Aspect
editSlavey has two semantic aspects: perfective and imperfective.
The perfective is represented in position 11:
déhtla
3SG.PFV.start off
'S/he started off.'
whá
long
goyįdee
3SG.PFV.talk
'S/he talked for a long time.'
The perfective can also be used with a past tense marker to indicate that at the point of reference, which is sometime in the past, the event was completed [9]
kǫ́e
house
gohtsį
3SG.PFV.build
area
PAST
'He had built a house.'
The imperfective indicates that the reference time precedes the end of the event time:
hejį
3
IPFV.sing
'S/he sing, s/he is singing.'
kǫ́e
house
gohtsį
3
begháyeyidá
IPFV.build
area
1SG.PFV.see
3
'I saw him building a house.'
Word order
editSlavey is a verb-final language. The basic word order is SOV.[9]
Dene
man
?elá
boat
thehtsį̒
3SG.made
'The man made the boat.'
tlį
dog
ts’ǫ̀dani
child
káyį̒ta
3SG.bit
'The dog bit the child.'
Oblique objects precede the direct object.[9]
T’eere
girl
denǫ
mother
gha
for
?erákee?ee
parka
wihsį
made
'The girl made a parka for her mother.'
Case
editSlavey has no case markings. To differentiate between subject, direct object, and oblique objects, word order is used. The subject will be the first noun phrase, and the direct object will occur right before the verb. The oblique objects are controlled by postpositions.[9]
Possessives
editPossessive pronoun prefixes are found in Slavey. These pronouns have the same forms as the direct and oblique object pronouns. The prefixes are listed below with examples.
se- first-person singular
edit- bá 'mitts'
- sebáré 'my mitts'
- mbeh 'knife'
- sembehé 'my knife'
ne- second-person singular
edit- ts'ah 'hat'
- net'saré 'your (SG) hat'
- tl'uh 'rope'
- netl'ulé 'your (SG) rope'
be-/me- third-person singular
editmelįé
3.POSS.dog
nátla
3SG.is.fast
'His/her dog is fast.'
bekée
3SG.POSS.slippers
whihtsį
1SG.made
'I made his/her slippers.'
ye- fourth person
edityekée
4.POSS.slippers
whehtsį
3SG.made
'S/he made his/her slippers.'
ʔe- unspecified possessor
edit- ʔelįé 'someone's dog'
naxe-/raxe- first-person plural, second-person plural.
edit- ts'éré 'blanket'
- naxets'éré 'our blanket, your (PL) blanket'
ku-/ki-/go- third-person plural
editkulí̜é
3PL.POSS.dog
rała
3SG.is.fast
'Their dog is fast.'
goyúé
3PL.POSS.clothes
k'enáʔeniihtse
1SG.washed
'I washed their clothes.'
Clauses
editConjunctions
editThere are both coordinating and subordinating conjunctions in Slavey.
Coordinating
editgots'éh "and, and then"
edittse
wood
tádiihtth
1SG.cut
į
and
gots'ę
area.in
goyíi
1SG.warmed
naehddhí
'I cut some wood and then I warmed myself up inside.'
dene
people
ʔéhdá
some
jíye
berry
kanįwę
3SG.picks
gots'ę
and
ʔéhdá
some
daʔuʔa
3.OPT.fish
'Some people will pick berries and some will fish.'
kúlú, kólí, kúú, kóó, ékóó, góa "but"
editʔekó͔
there
náohtlah
1SG.opt.go
nehthę
1SG.want
góa
but
nehji
1SG.be.afraid
'I want to go there but I'm afraid.'
sine
1SG.child
ts'ó͔dane
1SG.saw
gogháiidá
3PL.but
kúlú
3SG.instead
dedine
3.became
gołį
ʔajá
"I was supposed to watch the children, but he did it instead."
Subordinating conjunctions
editʔenįdé, nįdé, ndé, néh "if, when, whenever"
editʔįts'é
moose
gehk'é
3PL.shoot
nįdé
if
segha
1SG.for
máhsi
thanks
'If they shoot a moose, I'll be grateful.'
dora
3.head
bekwí
1SG.OPT.comb
ohts'í
3SG.wants
nįwę
of
nįdé
3SG.combs
yehts'í
4
'Whenever Dora wants to comb my hair, she combs it.' Unknown glossing abbreviation(s) (help);
-were "before"
editshuruhté
1SG.OPT.go
were
to
selejée
sleep
daderéʔ
before
o͔
woodbox
ʔagúlá
3.is.full
1SG.made.area
'Before I went to bed, I filled to woodbox.'
-ts'ę "since, from"
editsegó͔łį
1SG.was.born
gots'ę
area.from
jo͔
here
deneilé
1SG.lived
'I lived here since I was born.'
-hé "because, so"
editse
wood
wehse
3.is.wet
yihé
because
godihk'o͔
1SG.make.fire
yíle2
NEG
'Because the wood is wet, I can't make fire.'
Relative clauses
editThere are three important parts to a relative clause. There is the head, which is the noun that is modified or delimited. The second part is the restricting sentence. The sentence modifies the head noun. The last part is the complementizer.[9]
ʔeyi
the
[dene]
[man]
goyidee
1SG.talked
i
COMP
híshá
3SG.is.tall
'The man whom I talked to is tall.'
lį
dog
gah
rabbit
hedéhfe
3SG.chased
I
COMP
gháyeyidá
1SG.saw
'I saw the dog that chased the rabbit.'
Status
editNorth and South Slavey are recognized as official languages of the Northwest Territories; they may be used in court and in debates and proceedings of the Northwest Territories legislature. However, unlike English and French, the government only publishes laws and documents in North and South Slavey if the legislature requests it, and these documents are not authoritative.[12]
In 2015, a Slavey woman named Andrea Heron challenged the territorial government over its refusal to permit the ʔ character, representing the Slavey glottal stop, in her daughter's name, Sakaeʔah, despite Slavey languages being official in the NWT. The territory argued that territorial and federal identity documents were unable to accommodate the character. Heron had registered the name with a hyphen instead of the ʔ when her daughter was born, but when Sakaeʔah was 6, Ms. Heron joined a challenge by a Chipewyan woman named Shene Catholique-Valpy regarding the same character in her own daughter's name, Sahaiʔa.[13]
Also in 2015, the University of Victoria launched a language revitalization program in the NWT, pairing learners of indigenous languages including Slavey with fluent speakers. The program requires 100 hours of conversation with the mentor with no English allowed, as well as sessions with instructors in Fort Providence.[14]
In popular culture
editSlavey was the native language spoken by the fictional band in the Canadian television series North of 60. Nick Sibbeston, a former Premier of the Northwest Territories, was a Slavey language and culture consultant for the show.
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b c Canada, Government of Canada, Statistics (2 August 2017). "Language Highlight Tables, 2016 Census - Aboriginal mother tongue, Aboriginal language spoken most often at home and Other Aboriginal language(s) spoken regularly at home for the population excluding institutional residents of Canada, provinces and territories, 2016 Census – 100% Data". www12.statcan.gc.ca. Retrieved 2017-11-17.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ Official Languages of the Northwest Territories Archived 2012-03-23 at the Wayback Machine (map)
- ^ Mandeville, Curtis (21 June 2016). "Goodbye Great Slave Lake? Movement to decolonize N.W.T. maps is growing". CBC. Retrieved 7 November 2023.
[T]he name Slavey is a colonial term that was imposed on the Dehcho Dene[, Nakehk'o said;] "It is a very terrible and horrible name."
- ^ Waldman, Carl (2006). Facts on File Library of American History - Encyclopedia of Native American tribes. Infobase Publishing. p. 275. ISBN 9781438110103. The name given to Dene by the Cree "who sometimes raided and enslaved their less aggressive northern neighbors".
- ^ Laurie Bauer, 2007, The Linguistics Student’s Handbook, Edinburgh
- ^ Northwest Territories Official Languages Act, 1988 Archived 2005-04-08 at the Wayback Machine (as amended 1988, 1991-1992, 2003)
- ^ Clark, Patricia Roberts (21 October 2009). Tribal Names of the Americas: Spelling Variants and Alternative Forms, Cross-Referenced. McFarland. p. 11. ISBN 978-0-7864-5169-2.
- ^ Or A-cha-o-tin-ne, Achaotinne, Acheotenne, A-che-to-e-ten-ni, Achetoetenni, Acheto-e-Tinne, Achetoetinne, Acheto-tena, Achetotinna, Ache-to-tin'neh, Acheto-tinneh, Achetotinneh, Achoto-e-tenni, Achotoetenni.[7]
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Rice, Keren (1989). A Grammar of Slave. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter & Co. ISBN 3110107791.
- ^ Krauss, Michael E. & Golla, Victor K. (1981) Northern Athapaskan Languages. Handbook of North American Indians, p. 79.
- ^ "Slavey alphabet". SIL International. 15 September 2022.
- ^ Nitah, S. (2002). One land - many voices: report of the NWT Special Committee on the Review of the Official Languages Act. Canadian Parliamentary Review 25(3), 4-8.
- ^ Browne, Rachel (12 March 2015). "What's in a name? A Chipewyan's battle over her native tongue". Maclean's. Retrieved 5 April 2015.
- ^ Erin Brohman; Garrett Hinchey (16 March 2015). "UVic program aims to revitalize South Slavey language in N.W.T." CBC News. Retrieved 5 April 2015.
Further reading
edit- Howard, Philip G. 1990. A Dictionary of the Verbs of South Slavey. Yellowknife: Dept. of Culture and Communications, Govt. of the Northwest Territories, ISBN 0-7708-3868-5
- Isaiah, Stanley, et al. 1974. Golqah Gondie = Animal Stories - in Slavey. Yellowknife: Programme Development Division, Government of the Northwest Territories, .
- Mithun, Marianne. 1999. The Languages of Native North America. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-23228-7 (hbk); ISBN 0-521-29875-X.
- Monus, Vic, and Isaiah, Stanley. 1977. Slavey Topical Dictionary: A Topical List of Words and Phrases Reflecting the Dialect of the Slavey Language Spoken in the Fort Simpson Area. [Yellowknife: Government of the Northwest Territories, Canada?].
- Northwest Territories. 1993. South Slavey Legal Terminology. [Yellowknife, N.W.T.]: Dept. of Justice, Govt. of the Northwest Territories.
- Northwest Territories. 1981. Alphabet Posters in the Wrigley Dialect of the Slavey Language. [Yellowknife?]: Dept. of Education, Programs and Evaluation Branch.
- Tatti, Fibbie, and Howard, Philip G.. 1978. A Slavey Language Pre-Primer in the Speech of Fort Franklin. [Yellowknife]: Linguistic Programmes Division, Dept. of Education, Northwest Territories.
- Anand, Pranav and Nevins, Andrew. Shifty Operators in Changing Contexts. Massachusetts Institute of Technology. https://web.archive.org/web/20050517022822/http://www.fas.harvard.edu/~lingdept/IndexicalityWorkshop/anandnevins04.pdf
- Rice, Keren. 1989. A Grammar of Slave. Mouton Grammar Library (No. 5). Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. ISBN 3-11-010779-1.
- Sabourin, Margaret. 1975. Readers: Slavey Language. Yellowknife: Dept. of Education, Programme Development Division.