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Mohegan-Pequot (also known as Mohegan-Pequot-Montauk, Secatogue, and Shinnecock-Poosepatuck; dialects in New England included Mohegan, Pequot, and Niantic; and on Long Island, Montaukett and Shinnecock) is an Algonquian language formerly spoken by Indigenous peoples in southern present-day
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and eastern
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.


Language endangerment and revitalization efforts

As of 2014, there are between 1,400 and 1,700 recorded tribal members (these figures vary by source). The Mohegan language has been dormant for approximately 100 years; the last native speaker, Fidelia Fielding, died in 1908. Fielding, a descendant of Chief Uncas, is deemed the preserver of the language. She left four diaries that are being used in the 21st-century process of restoring the language. She also took part in preserving the traditional culture. She practiced a traditional Mohegan way of life and was the last person to live in the traditional log dwelling. Another important tribal member was Gladys Tantaquidgeon, who was the tribe's medicine woman from 1916 until her death in 2005. She too assisted greatly in maintaining the Mohegan culture, as she collected thousands of tribal documents and artifacts. These documents were of critical importance to supporting the tribe's documentation for its case for federal recognition, which was approved in 1994. As of 2010, the Shinnecock and Unkechaug nations of Long Island, New York, had begun work with the State University of New York at Stony Brook, Southampton Campus, to revive their languages, or dialects of the above. As of 2012, the Mohegan Language Project had created lessons, a dictionary, and other online learning materials to revive their language. The project also has a complete grammar in the works, which has been put together by Stephanie Fielding. The primary goal of the project is for the next generation of Mohegan people to be fluent. Many of the dictionaries circulating are based on John Dyneley Prince and Frank G. Speck's interpretation of testimony by ''Dji's Butnaca'' (Flying Bird), also known as Fidelia Fielding. The Mashantucket Pequot Museum and Research Center collection includes a 1992 menu "which attempts to translate such words as hamburger and hot dog into Mohegan-Pequot." The language was documented as early as the 17th century.
"In 1690, a Pequot vocabulary list was compiled by Rev. James Noyes in Groton. In 1717, Experience Mayhew, a Congregational Minister translated the Lord's Prayer into Mohegan-Pequot. Ezra Stiles, president of
Yale University Yale University is a Private university, private Ivy League research university in New Haven, Connecticut, United States. Founded in 1701, Yale is the List of Colonial Colleges, third-oldest institution of higher education in the United Stat ...
collected Pequot linguistic data in Groton in 1762."
Prayers from the
Baháʼí Faith The Baháʼí Faith is a religion founded in the 19th century that teaches the Baháʼí Faith and the unity of religion, essential worth of all religions and Baháʼí Faith and the unity of humanity, the unity of all people. Established by ...
have been translated into the Mohegan-Pequot language.
"It is a sacred obligation," says the Golden Hill Paugussett Chief, Big Eagle. "Indian people must keep their languages alive. If the language is not spoken, it must be made to live again."


Phonology

is realized as only before . Vowel sounds


Simple vowels

The nasal sound can range to being an oral sound. written with an acute accent () represents a long // sound.


Diphthongs


Orthography

Historically, Mohegan-Pequot has not had a writing system, and its speakers relied on oral transfer of knowledge, as opposed to writing. The only significant historic writings have been produced by European colonizers who interacted with the speakers of Mohegan-Pequot. The dictionaries, grammar books, and other materials that are being developed in recent decades as part of the effort to revitalize Mohegan-Pequot Language, have adopted and used a standardized Latin orthography consisting of twelve consonants and six vowels.


Morphology

NounsFielding, Stephanie (2006), A Modern Mohegan Dictionary 2006 Ed. Nouns in Mohegan have two forms: animate and inanimate. They are further distinguished by number. Animate nouns include people, animals, heavenly bodies (sun, moon, stars, but not clouds), and spirits. There are other items that fall into the category of animate such as certain cultural items and plants, but it is not known why these items are considered animate. It is something that is simply learned and memorized. One way to help identify if a noun is animate or inanimate is to look at its plural form. Plural animate nouns typically end in ''-k'' while plural inanimate nouns end in ''-sh''. Animate nouns have four forms: singular, plural, obviative and locative. The obviate form is used when there are two or more animate third person nouns in a sentence to mark the noun which is less salient (less relevant to the discourse). The unmarked noun is called the proximate, which is more salient/relevant to the discourse. The obviative is also used to mark a third-person possessed noun, with the possessor considered as the proximate, even if the possessed noun is more salient than its possessor. The locative is used to show where something is spatially. There is no obviative form for inanimate nouns, and neither the obviative nor the locative have plural forms (plurality is known through context). Verbs Verbs in Mohegan come in several forms. Independent verbs exist in four forms: inanimate intransitive, animate intransitive, transitive inanimate and transitive animate. There is also the conjunct form which does not carry the affixes (used to clarify person) that the aforementioned hold.


Person, number and gender

Person Mohegan animate intransitive verbs show who the subject is by utilizing affixes. Singular forms have prefixes, but third person (singular and plural) only have suffixes. In the plural forms there are inclusive and exclusive suffixes; the inclusive ''we'' includes the person who is speaking as well as the person he/she is talking to whereas the exclusive ''we'' does not include the person the speaker is talking to. When an animate intransitive verb stem ends in a long vowel (''á, i, o'' or ''ô'') the third person singular does not take a final ''-w'', and in the third person plural these same verbs take ''-k'' as an ending in lieu of ''- wak''. *affixes indicated in bold type *affixes indicated in bold type Numbers


Space

Locative case The locative case is used to show where something is. Mohegan utilizes the suffix ''-uk'' to indicate spatial relationships, which can be compared to the English prepositions ''on'', ''at'', and ''in''. In Mohegan there is no plural form to go with the obviative and the locative: the same form is used for singular and plural with the difference being distinguished by context. Example of the Locative Case Absentative case The absentative case is used to when referencing a person who has died (this includes any property that they left behind). This is accomplished by adding a suffix to either his/her name, title or the property. *suffix indicated by bold type The following example shows the absentative case in use: 'Both of ''my late uncles'' enjoyed cooking.'


Syntax

Possession In Mohegan, there are two types of possession, alienable possession and inalienable possession. Nouns receive different marking depending on the relationship between the possessor and the possessed noun. If the possessed noun is connected (physically or sometimes metaphorically) to the possessed noun it is considered inalienable possession. For example in the phrase "the man's hand", the hand is possessed inalienably because it is inseparable from the man. Inalienable possession can also be metaphorical; for example, in the phrase "the man's mother", the mother is possessed inalienably because of a cultural perception of kinship as a "strong" connection. Inalienable nouns must always receive marking. If the possessor owns the possessed noun, but is not physically attached to it, it is considered alienable possession. In the phrase "the man's house", the house is possessed alienably because the house is not attached to the man. Nouns pertaining to kinship and body parts are always classified as inalienable, but there are some terms that do not fall under either of these umbrellas that must be classified as inalienable, such as the noun ''home''. Various affixes are used to denote inalienability and different affixes are used to differentiate animate/inanimate and singular/plural. Additionally, when a term requires possession but the possessor is unclear or unknown it is marked with a prefix that indicates an indefinite possessor. The locative (''-uk'') and obviate (''-ah'') suffixes are added to the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd person singular forms. Whether the word is singular or plural should be suggested in the content of the sentence. The obviate affixes only go on animate nouns. When a possessed noun is plural it must be shown. With an animate noun then suffix ''-ak'' is combined with the possessive ending (with the exception of third person singular and third person plural, where the plural is the same as the singular). *affixes on all charts are marked by bold type Clause combining In Mohegan grammar verbs that are in a dependent clause are said to be in the conjunct order. Conjunct verbs have the same numbers of persons for each verb, but they do not have prefixes, only suffixes. In turn, all of the person information is at the end of the word. *suffixes on chart marked by bold type Example: Translation: 'It was so bad ''that I am ashamed''.' When in the conjunct form if the first vowel of the word is a short vowel, that is or , it changes to a long . Transitive verbs with inanimate objects take only a suffix as well. The suffix varies based on the ending of the stem. For stems that end in -m- or -n- the suffixes are as follows: 1st person singular: 2nd person singular: 3rd person singular: 1st person plural: 2nd person plural: 3rd person plural: 3rd person plural participle: Indefinite subject (passive): For stems that end in -o- the suffixes are as follows: 1st person singular: 2nd person singular: 3rd person singular: 1st person plural: 2nd person plural: 3rd person plural: 3rd person plural participle: Indefinite subject (passive): For stems that end in -u- the suffixes are as follows: 1st person singular: 2nd person singular: 3rd person singular: 1st person plural: 2nd person plural: 3rd person plural: 3rd person plural participle: Indefinite subject (passive):


See also

* Mohegan people * Pequot * Montaukett * Niantic people * Shinnecock Indian Nation


Notes


References


Mashantucket Pequot Research Library, Pequot and Related Languages, A Bibliography


Articles

* Cowan, William
Pequot from Stiles to Speck
International Journal of American Linguistics. The University of Chicago Press. Vol. 39, No. 3 (Jul., 1973), pp. 164–172 * De Forest, John W. "The Lord's Prayer in the Pequot Tongue." In History of the Indians of Connecticut. 1852. Reprint, Brighton, MI: Native American Book Publishers, 1994. * Michelson, Truman. "The Linguistic Classification of Pequot-Mohegan." American Anthropologist 26 (1924): 295. * Pickering, John, ed. "Doctor Edwards' Observations on the Mohegan Languages." Collections of the Massachusetts Historical Society. Series 2 Volume 10 (1823): 81-160. * Prince, J. Dyneley and Frank G. Speck. "Glossary of the Mohegan-Pequot Language." American Anthropologist 6 (1904): 18-45. * Prince, J. Dyneley and Frank G. Speck. "The Modern Pequots and Their Language." American Anthropologist 5 (1903): 193-212. * Speck, Frank. "A Modern Mohegan-Pequot Text." American Anthropologist 6 (1904): 469-76. * Speck, Frank and Fidelia Fielding.
A Pequot Mohegan Witchcraft Tale
" Journal of American Folklore 16 (1903): 104-6. * Speck, Frank. "Native Tribes and Dialects of Connecticut: A Mohegan-Pequot Diary." Smithsonian Institution Bureau of American Ethnology Annual Report 43 (1903): 199-287. * Speck, Frank. Speck Papers and Photograph Collection. (17 microfilm reels) * Speck, Frank. "Text of the Pequot Sermon." American Anthropologist 5 (1903): 199-212.


External links


Mohegan Language Project
website with assorted Mohegan Language resources
A Modern Mohegan Dictionary (2006 Edition)
��contains Guide to Using the Dictionary, Mohegan Grammar Paradigms, Mohegan to English Dictionary, and English to Mohegan Word Finder
Mohegan-English Dictionary (December 2012 edition by S.Fielding )
— update of the Mohegan to English Dictionary section of above
OLAC resources in and about the Mohegan-Pequot language
{{DEFAULTSORT:Mohegan-Pequot Language Eastern Algonquian languages Languages of the United States Extinct languages of North America Languages extinct in the 1900s Indigenous languages of the North American eastern woodlands Niantic Pequot Native American language revitalization Mohegan