Ahtna Alphabet
Chart created by Chickaloon Village, 2004, Artwork created by artist and Tribal Citizen, Dimi Macheras.
Ahtna Athabaskan has 38 Ahtna letters in the alphabet.
The letters are grouped into three sections, as Professor Siri Tuttle refers to in her book, Ahtna Athabaskan Grammar Reference, Upper Ahtna Edition, pg. 2-3. This is done to understand how the letters relate and differ from the English language.
b, d, g: say bad, dog, and geese
t, c: say toe and case
s, h: say so and hoe
l, z, and y: say low, zoo, and you
m, n, and ng: say mow, no, and song
The second group is letters that are found in English but are read differently in Ahtna. There are 10 vowels in Ahtna, and they represent the short and long sounds: a, aa, o, oo, u, uu, i, ii, e, ae.
a, aa: say u in bun, and a in father
o, oo: say o in no and oa in road
u, uu: say oo in loot, and u in rule
i, ii: say i in bit, and ee in beet
e, ae: say e in bet, and a in and
The third group consists of consonants that only occur in Ahtna, not in English.
': This is sound in the middle of English like unh unh. To make this sound, you close off the air from your lungs at the throat.
gg, k: think g in goose, k in mark, and let your tongue touch the back roof of your mouth. Dr. Kari calls them "back velars."
gh, x: think of gh in Agh!, and the way people say the name of the composer Bach as if they had a fishbone in their throat.
Dr. Kari calls these "uvular fricatives."
dl, tl: think of puddle and Atlas. Dr. Kari calls these "lateral affricates."
dz, ts: think of Ed's or edge for dz, and cats or catch for ts. Dr. Kari calls these "affricates."
ł: is a voiceless l-like sound that does not occur in English, but it could be kind of heard in the word athlete.
The next consonants are what Dr. Kari would call "stops and affricates." These are words written with an apostrophe also called ejectives.
t': say 'it is', very emphatically, over and over, until it starts to sound like one word.
tl': say, "it'll eat to get to itl'eat.
ts': say "it's over" to get it "it's over".
k': say 'turn the cake off.' You might get to cak'off.
The letters are grouped into three sections, as Professor Siri Tuttle refers to in her book, Ahtna Athabaskan Grammar Reference, Upper Ahtna Edition, pg. 2-3. This is done to understand how the letters relate and differ from the English language.
- Sounds that are similar to English.
- Sounds used in both English and Ahtna, but are pronounced differently: vowels.
- Sounds that are not used in English are only in the Ahtna language.
b, d, g: say bad, dog, and geese
t, c: say toe and case
s, h: say so and hoe
l, z, and y: say low, zoo, and you
m, n, and ng: say mow, no, and song
The second group is letters that are found in English but are read differently in Ahtna. There are 10 vowels in Ahtna, and they represent the short and long sounds: a, aa, o, oo, u, uu, i, ii, e, ae.
a, aa: say u in bun, and a in father
o, oo: say o in no and oa in road
u, uu: say oo in loot, and u in rule
i, ii: say i in bit, and ee in beet
e, ae: say e in bet, and a in and
The third group consists of consonants that only occur in Ahtna, not in English.
': This is sound in the middle of English like unh unh. To make this sound, you close off the air from your lungs at the throat.
gg, k: think g in goose, k in mark, and let your tongue touch the back roof of your mouth. Dr. Kari calls them "back velars."
gh, x: think of gh in Agh!, and the way people say the name of the composer Bach as if they had a fishbone in their throat.
Dr. Kari calls these "uvular fricatives."
dl, tl: think of puddle and Atlas. Dr. Kari calls these "lateral affricates."
dz, ts: think of Ed's or edge for dz, and cats or catch for ts. Dr. Kari calls these "affricates."
ł: is a voiceless l-like sound that does not occur in English, but it could be kind of heard in the word athlete.
The next consonants are what Dr. Kari would call "stops and affricates." These are words written with an apostrophe also called ejectives.
t': say 'it is', very emphatically, over and over, until it starts to sound like one word.
tl': say, "it'll eat to get to itl'eat.
ts': say "it's over" to get it "it's over".
k': say 'turn the cake off.' You might get to cak'off.
Ahtna Sound System
The diagram in Figure 1 depicts the locations within the oral cavity where consonant sounds are produced. These sounds are initiated at the front of the mouth and progress towards the back of the throat. In contrast, Figure 2 illustrates the precise positions in the oral cavity where vowel sounds are formed. Both figures were developed and illustrated by Dr. Siri Tuttle.
It is noteworthy that the auditory experience of sounds being made in the oral cavity can be felt in the same places as indicated in Table 1, and the sequence of sounds from left to right, top to bottom: b, d, dl, dz, g, gg, and so on, corresponds with the locations of sounds in Figures 1 and 2.
By following the sequence of sounds, one can accurately determine the locations in the oral cavity where the sounds are produced. These findings have significant implications for the phonetics and linguistics communities.
It is noteworthy that the auditory experience of sounds being made in the oral cavity can be felt in the same places as indicated in Table 1, and the sequence of sounds from left to right, top to bottom: b, d, dl, dz, g, gg, and so on, corresponds with the locations of sounds in Figures 1 and 2.
By following the sequence of sounds, one can accurately determine the locations in the oral cavity where the sounds are produced. These findings have significant implications for the phonetics and linguistics communities.
The Ahtna Sound System, as portrayed by Jim Kari's 1990 Ahtna Athabaskan Dictionary, can be visualized in Table 1. This table offers an alternative approach to understanding sound articulation in the Ahtna language, providing accurate terms for the manner of articulation that enable identification of the various sounds' types. The table classifies letters as stops, fricatives, or nasals, and also indicates the vowels' long and short sounds, as well as the letters' placement in the mouth's front or back. This detailed visualization of the Ahtna Sound System can serve as a valuable resource for linguistic research and analysis.
Here are three YouTube videos on Ahtna Sound System for the vowels, stops, nasals and fricatives.
|
|
|
|