Koasati (also Coushatta) is a
Native American language of
Muskogean
Muskogean ( ; also Muskhogean) is a language family spoken in the Southeastern United States. Members of the family are Indigenous Languages of the Americas. Typologically, Muskogean languages are highly synthetic and agglutinative. One docume ...
origin. The language is spoken by the
Coushatta
The Coushatta () are a Muskogean-speaking Native Americans in the United States, Native American people now living primarily in the United States, U.S. states of Louisiana, Oklahoma, and Texas.
When the Coushatta first encountered Europeans, the ...
people, most of whom live in
Allen Parish north of the town of
Elton, Louisiana, though a smaller number share a
reservation near
Livingston, Texas
Livingston is a town in and the county seat of Polk County, Texas, United States. With a population of 5,640 at the United States Census, 2020, 2020 census, it is the largest city in Polk County. It is located approximately south of Lufk ...
, with the
Alabama
Alabama ( ) is a U.S. state, state in the Southeastern United States, Southeastern and Deep South, Deep Southern regions of the United States. It borders Tennessee to the north, Georgia (U.S. state), Georgia to the east, Florida and the Gu ...
people. In 1991,
linguist
Linguistics is the scientific study of language. The areas of linguistic analysis are syntax (rules governing the structure of sentences), semantics (meaning), Morphology (linguistics), morphology (structure of words), phonetics (speech sounds ...
Geoffrey Kimball estimated the number of speakers of the language at around 400 people, of whom approximately 350 live in Louisiana. The exact number of current speakers is unclear, but Coushatta Tribe officials claim that most tribe members over 20 speak Koasati.
[April 9, 2009. Comments Pertaining to the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 Broadband Initiatives. www.ntia.doc.gov/broadbandgrants/comments/7B49.pdf] In 2007, the
Coushatta Tribe of Louisiana
The Coushatta Tribe of Louisiana (Coushatta: ''Kowassaatiha'') is one of three federally recognized tribes of Koasati people. They are located in Allen and Jefferson Davis Parishes, Louisiana. The tribe hosts an annual pow wow during the sec ...
, in collaboration with
McNeese State University and the
College of William and Mary
The College of William & Mary (abbreviated as W&M) is a public research university in Williamsburg, Virginia, United States. Founded in 1693 under a royal charter issued by King William III and Queen Mary II, it is the second-oldest instit ...
, began the Koasati (Coushatta) Language Project as a part of broader language revitalization efforts with
National Science Foundation
The U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) is an Independent agencies of the United States government#Examples of independent agencies, independent agency of the Federal government of the United States, United States federal government that su ...
grant money under the
Documenting Endangered Languages program.
Koasati is most closely related to the
Alabama language but, though the Coushatta and Alabama have historically lived near each other, their languages are no longer mutually intelligible without extensive exposure. The language is also related to the
Mikasuki language
The Mikasuki, Hitchiti-Mikasuki, or Hitchiti language is a language or a pair of dialects or closely related languages that belong to the Muskogean languages family. , Mikasuki was spoken by around 290 people in southern Florida. Along with the C ...
; some native speakers of Coushatta report they can understand Mikasuki without previous exposure to the language.
Phonology
Vowels
Koasati has three vowels, all of which occur as short and long and can be nasalized. The following chart is based on Kimball's work. Kimball describes what is normally the close-mid back vowel /o/ as "high back" vowel, hence its placement in the chart below. He notes that /o/ sometimes has the allophone
and is raised to
�in closed word-final syllables.
In 2007, the Coushatta Tribe of Louisiana developed and approved its own
orthographic system. In this system, long vowels are written by doubling the vowel (e.g.,
ːas ''aa''), and nasalized vowels are underlined (e.g.,
�or
�as ''o̱'').
Vowel length in Koasati can be contrastive. For example, vowel length distinguishes meaning for ''palana'' "bean" and ''palaana'' "plate", as well as ''choba'' "big" and ''chooba'' "horse". Vowel nasalization most often occurs word-finally as a phrase-terminal marker. In Koasati, the end of a phrase is basically marked by either deletion of the final unaccented vowel or the nasalization of the final vowel when deleting it would eliminate phonological information relevant to the phrase's meaning. For example, the final vowel in ''hopoonilaho̱'' "he/she will cook it" is nasalized instead of deleted, and therefore is distinguished from the more emphatic ''hopoonilaha̱'', where the
irrealis future suffix -''laha''- indicates that the action will certainly occur, whereas the irrealis future suffix -''laho''- does not provide such certainty.
Consonants
Koasati has the consonants given in the table below, based on Geoffrey Kimball's work.
IPA transcriptions occur in brackets when different from the orthography provided by Kimball.
Not included in this chart is a glottal glide (marked ''꞉'') that Kimball uses in his own consonant chart, presumably to represent the lengthened vowel sounds of Koasati. In the Tribe's official orthography, the is represented by and the is represented by , with no distinction for aspiration. Additionally, Kimball notes that and are aspirated in initial and medial positions. However, the website for the Koasati Language Project explicitly states that these consonants are never aspirated.
[More on the alphabet. ] The occurs most often before , as in "river", spelled in the official orthography, thereby distinguished from "tail".
Syllable structure
Koasati has both light (CV, VC, V) and heavy (CVC)
syllables
A syllable is a basic unit of organization within a sequence of speech sounds, such as within a word, typically defined by linguists as a ''nucleus'' (most often a vowel) with optional sounds before or after that nucleus (''margins'', which are ...
. Consonant clusters occur across syllables but not within. All monomorphemic Koasati words end in light syllables, while the penultimate syllable can be light but is usually heavy, and it is usually preceded by one or more light syllables, as with the construction CV.CVC.CV as in the word ''holihtá'' "fence". Other shapes, in which one or more heavy syllables precede a heavy penultimate syllable (e.g. CV.CVC.CVC.CV as in ''hacokpalpá'' "butterfly"), or alternate heavy and light syllables (e.g. CVC.CV.CVC.CV. as in ''pa꞉piyá꞉ka'' "bridge"), are usually the result of the compounding of two words or a once-productive rule of
syncope in which the vowel of every second syllable except the final syllable was deleted. Vowel clusters occur in Koasati, unlike in other Muskogean languages where such clusters are made impossible by
metathesis and vowel deletion. These clusters occur in Koasati due to the use of locative prefixes that end in a vowel and class 1A negative transitive verbs since these do not undergo the processes of metathesis and vowel deletion. Clusters beginning with /a꞉/ and /i꞉/ are most frequent, and all clusters are generally spoken with a glottal stop between vowels.
Tone
Koasati has low
` high
´
The acute accent (), ,
is a diacritic used in many modern written languages with alphabets based on the Latin alphabet, Latin, Cyrillic script, Cyrillic, and Greek alphabet, Greek scripts. For the most commonly encountered uses of the accen ...
and high rising–falling
ˇ
A caron or háček ( ), is a diacritic mark () placed over certain letters in the orthography of some languages, to indicate a change of the related letter's pronunciation.
Typographers tend to use the term ''caron'', while linguists prefer ...
pitch accent
A pitch-accent language is a type of language that, when spoken, has certain syllables in words or morphemes that are prominent, as indicated by a distinct contrasting pitch (music), pitch (tone (linguistics), linguistic tone) rather than by vol ...
s, as well as a fourth unmarked mid-level tone. All noun roots must have one high-pitch accented syllable. The location of the accent depends on the properties of the penultimate syllable. With a few exceptions, the accent falls on the final syllable unless the penultimate syllable contains a long vowel. These pitch accents can be contrastive, as with ''sakihpǫ́'' 'It is a mink.' and ''sakíhpǫ'' 'It is not air-dried.'. Pitch placement on verbs is motivated by morphology. Most indicative verbs take the high accent, though a few take the low accent. Intensive verbs take the high rising–falling accent.
Phonological processes
*/c/ in Kimball's orthography, or /ch/ in the official Tribe orthography, is sometimes realized as
sbefore resonants: cf. ''awó yáhci'' "it is just like grandpa" is realized as
wó yahtsi
*In rare cases, /k/ is labialized to
ʷbefore /o/: cf. ''akkó'' "that" →
kkʷó*/s/ has the palatal allophone
�word-initially before /o/ and intervocalically: cf. ''sopátlit'' "she cleaned it" →
�opátlit*When /s/ occurs both before and after a vowel, the allophone of the first /s/ harmonizes with that of the second. For example, ''sóslit'' ('he skinned them') is not pronounced
�oslitbut
óslit
*Rarely, /s/ can have the allophone
when it occurs word-finally: cf. ''o꞉támmo꞉s'' "it is just sunset" →
꞉támmo꞉r*In the word-final position, /h/ becomes a voiceless continuation of the vowel it follows. This can also occur following vowels in other positions. For example, ''iltóhnot'' "she worked" becomes
ltóónot
*/h/ can be voiced to
� usually before c, as discussed above with
aɦchi
*/l/ is sometimes realized as /n/, as with ''intolihná'' "work" →
ltolihná Rarely, it is realized as
intervocalically.
*The vowel /i/ shifts to
�in all closed syllables, and /o/ shifts to
�when it occurs in closed word-final syllables: cf. ''hókfit'' "she put it on" →
ókfɪt ''íkbot'' "he did not kill it" →
�kbʊt*The vowels /i/ and /o/ also rarely have the allophones
�and
respectively, though the underlying reason is unclear: cf. ''yilahá'' "orange (fruit)" →
ɛlahá ''solitá꞉wa'' "soldier" →
ulitá꞉wa
Morphology
Koasati is a
polysynthetic language
In linguistic typology, polysynthetic languages, formerly holophrastic languages, are highly synthetic languages, i.e., languages in which words are composed of many morphemes (word parts that have independent meaning but may or may not be able t ...
with fairly extensive verbal prefixing and suffixing.
Nouns
Two sets of prefixes mark noun possession in Koasati. The ''am''-set generally identifies
alienable possession and a relatively small set of kinship terms and body parts, while the ''ca''-set identifies inalienable possession and most kinship terms and body parts. These prefixes mark person and number on possessing nouns as follows:
Verbs
Position classes
Kimball identifies the following position classes for prefixes and suffixes that can be added to Koasati verb roots:
*Prefixes
**Position 1: positive and negative subject prefixes
**Position 2: locative prefix ''a-'', or the prefix ''ak-'' which indicates action on the surface of a person (skin) or thing
**Position 3: locative prefixes
**Position 4: pronominal prefixes (''ca-'')
**Position 5: pronominal prefixes (''am-'')
**Position 6: distributive prefix ''ho-/oh-'', iterative prefix ''hoho-/ohoh-''
**Position 7: instrumental prefixes
**Position 8: directional prefixes
**Position 9: indefinite nouns ''na꞉si-/na꞉s-/nas-'' ('something') and ''a꞉ti-/a꞉t-/at-/a-'' ('someone')
*Root
*Suffixes
**Position 1: adverb
**Position 2: diminutive/intensive
**Position 3: habitual
**Position 4: intention
**Position 5: ability
**Position 6: realis/irrealis
**Position 7: deduction
**Position 8: modality
**Position 9: dubiative
**Position 10: hearsay
**Position 11: auditory
**Position 12: tense
**Position 13: consequence
**Position 14: discourse functions
**Position 15: enclitics
=Prefixes
=
Unlike its frequently used cognates in other Muskogean languages, the general locative prefix ''a''- (Position 2) is falling out of use. Positions 4 and 5 relate to the ''am''- and ''ca''- sets discussed above with nouns. They contain the direct and indirect object prefixes respectively and are used to cross-reference the direct and indirect objects of verbs, as well as mark possession on nominalized verbs. For example, the Position 5 prefix ''ac''- is used to mark possession on the root of the nominalized verb meaning "to photograph" in the following way:
A sampling of verbal prefixes, in this case, specific locative prefixes of Position 3, follows:
*''itta''- "action on the ground; action in fire"
*''o꞉''-/''o꞉w''- "action in water"
*''pa꞉''- "action on a raised, artificial, or non-ground surface"
*''on''- "action on a vertical surface or in a vertical plane"
*''itta''- "action in the middle of something"
*''ibi꞉''- "action on the human face"
*''ico꞉''- "action on or in the human mouth"
*''no꞉''- "action on the human neck"
*''nok''- "action in the human throat"
=Suffixes
=
Kimball recorded over seventy suffixes to fill the fifteen suffix positions. All but eleven of these suffixes can technically co-occur with all other suffixes that do not occupy the same position class. Kimball provides the following example as a possibility:
In the first word, all units that follow the root -''ilá''- "arrive" are suffixes filling the various position classes.
A sample of suffixes, in this case, Position 5 suffixes of ability, follows:
*-''bá꞉no''- "regularly, occasionally"
*-''bí꞉no''- "reluctantly, shyly"
*-''halpi꞉sa''- "to be able to"
*-''yáhli''- "be obliged to, really"
Kimball notes that of these, only -''halpi꞉sa''- "to be able to" is used frequently.
Verbal number
Muskogean languages such as Koasati have a three-way number distinction in their verbs, with singular,
dual, and plural forms. Some of these forms are
suppletive
In linguistics and etymology, suppletion is traditionally understood as the use of one word as the inflection, inflected form of another word when the two words are not cognate. For those learning a language, suppletive forms will be seen as "irre ...
. For example,
'To dwell', in the first person, with full suppletion (singular ''aat,'' dual ''asw,'' plural ''is''):
:
(The angle braces, , separate the two parts of the root.)
'To smell' is non-suppletive ''hofn'':
:
'To go about', partially suppletive (SG/DU ''aay,'' PL ''yomahl''):
:
'To run', partially suppletive (SG ''waliik,'' DU/PL ''tołk''):
:
Verb grades
Like other Muskogean languages, Koasati has verb grades, or an
ablaut
In linguistics, the Indo-European ablaut ( , from German ) is a system of apophony (regular vowel variations) in the Proto-Indo-European language (PIE).
An example of ablaut in English is the strong verb ''sing, sang, sung'' and its relate ...
system in which morphological and phonemic changes (in this case infixation and nasalization) can be used to alter the meaning of verb.
=H-grade
=
In Koasati, the h-grade is used to create a polite imperative as well as to indicate a sequence of actions. To form the imperative, ''h'' is inserted before the final syllable of the verb root. For example, the verb ''óntin'' "to come" (singular, dual subject) changes to the imperative ''ónhtįh'' "Come on over!" with the h-grade (in addition to the delayed imperative suffix marked by the vowel nasalization and final ''h''). The use of h-grade to indicate sequence (in addition to the
switch-reference
In linguistics, switch-reference (SR) describes any clause-level morpheme that signals whether certain prominent arguments in 'adjacent' clauses are reference, coreferential. In most cases, it marks whether the subject (grammar), subject of the v ...
marker ''-ok'') can be seen below:
With the sequence h-grade, the last verb in the sequence takes on temporal and aspectual affixes, while the preceding verbs take on the h-grade and the appropriate switch-reference marker.
=N-grade
=
In Koasati, the n-grade is relatively uncommon but is used to add emphasis, roughly meaning "completely" or "to continue" depending on whether the verb used is a verb of state or description or a verb of action. To form the n-grade, the vowel of the verb root's penultimate syllable is nasalized and accented. For example:
Reduplication
Koasati has both punctual and iterative
reduplication
In linguistics, reduplication is a Morphology (linguistics), morphological process in which the Root (linguistics), root or Stem (linguistics), stem of a word, part of that, or the whole word is repeated exactly or with a slight change.
The cla ...
for verbs, in which part of the root is repeated to indicate that an action is repeated. With punctual reduplication, the verb's initial consonant and vowel (or consonant and ''o'' if no vowel is present) are copied and inserted before the final syllable of the root. For example, ''míslin'' "to blink" becomes ''mismíhlin'' "to flutter the eyelids". With iterative reduplication, the consonant and vowel of the penultimate syllable of the root are copied and inserted before the final syllable of the root. For example, ''molápkan'' "to gleam" becomes ''molalápkan'' "to flash". The iterative can also be formed using the Position 6 iterative prefixes ''ohoh''- and ''hoho''-.
The glottal stop
The glottal stop
�is used to form the interrogative by infixing
�before a verb's penultimate syllable. Doing so replaces preceding vowel length (if present) and adds a high pitch accent to the syllables preceding and following the glottal stop. For example, /ishí꞉c/ "you see it" changes to the question /ishíʔcá/ "Do you see it?".
Syntax
Word order
Koasati sentences generally follow a subject, object, verb (SOV) pattern. If an indirect object is present, the order is typically subject, indirect object, verb (SIoV). For sentences with both a direct and indirect object, the order is typically subject, object, verb, indirect object (SOVIo), though SIoOV also occurs. Any locatives tend to follow the verb. Because Koasati uses the nominative case, these orders are not rigid - elements can be moved within the sentence for emphasis. Examples of some basic orders follow:
*SOV
*SOVIo
Case marking
Koasati is an
active–stative language. It has seven cases that can be used across five classes of nouns:
The five noun classes contain the following types of nouns, followed by examples:
*Class I: nouns for animate objects (''ifá'', "dog")
*Class II: nouns to or in which action can occur (''ó꞉la'', "town")
*Class III: nouns within or among which action can occur (''í꞉sa'', "house")
*Class IV: nouns describing an area where action can occur (''caffá'', "field")
*Class V: personal names, kinship terms (''awó'', "grandfather")
Switch-reference
Koasati has
switch-reference
In linguistics, switch-reference (SR) describes any clause-level morpheme that signals whether certain prominent arguments in 'adjacent' clauses are reference, coreferential. In most cases, it marks whether the subject (grammar), subject of the v ...
marking, in which suffixes indicate whether the subjects of two verbs are co-referent. The suffix ''–k'' indicates that the subject of the verb that follows is the same as that of the previous verb, while ''–n'' indicates that the subject is different than that of the previous verb. The suffixes ''–ok'' and ''–on'' can also be used in the same way for extra emphasis or "focus". The switch-reference marker ''–p'' indicates the introduction of a new topic. An example of each suffix follows:
*''nó꞉ra-k ɫabósli-h bánna-k hí꞉ca-t á꞉ta-toho-꞉li-k akkámmi-tik labósl-á꞉ha-k sam, kí,꞉c-o-t'' — "Nora tried to extinguish it, and she kept on watching it, but this being so, she was unable to extinguish it."
*''athómma-k yomáhli-n calakkí ho-ká꞉ha-hco-k'' — "They called the wandering Indians Cherokees."
*''skólka im-alo, kí, st-o-n mí꞉ta-k im-alósti-tika-p'' — "They were not interested in school; however, others were interested in it."
Notes
References
*
*
External links
Sovereign Nation of The Coushatta Tribe of LouisianaKoasati (Coushatta) Language ProjectHow to count in Koasati
{{DEFAULTSORT:Koasati Language
Agglutinative languages
Koasati
Muskogean languages
Subject–object–verb languages
Indigenous languages of the North American Southeast
Indigenous languages of Oklahoma
Indigenous languages of Texas
Endangered languages of the United States
Endangered Indigenous languages of the Americas
Languages of Louisiana