KARANKAWA LANGUAGE
HTML-код
- Опубликовано: 16 окт 2024
- Welcome to my channel! This is Andy from I love languages. Let's learn different languages/dialects together.
Special Thanks to García Priego George Michael
Please feel free to subscribe to see more of this.
I hope you have a great day! Stay happy!
Please support me on Patreon!
www.patreon.co....
Please support me on Ko-fi
ko-fi.com/otip...
Karankawa is the extinct, unclassified language of the Texas coast, where the Karankawa people migrated between the mainland and the barrier islands. It was not closely related to other known languages in the area, many of which are also poorly attested, and may have been a language isolate. A couple of hundred words are preserved, collected in 1698, 1720, and 1828; in the 1880s, three lists were collected from non-Karankawa who knew some words. Karankawa has sometimes been included with neighboring languages in a Coahuiltecan family, but that is now thought to be spurious. The meaning of the term Karankawa is not known, it is believed that could have meant something like “breeders of dogs”, a likelihood hypothesis, since they are known that the Karankawas possessed canids. This language was mainly attested by French explorers, like the brothers Pierre and Jean-Baptiste Talon, who called this language “clamcoche”, and Albert Gatschet, who interviewed the last speakers of Karankawa in Texas, from 1836 to 1884.
If you are interested to see your native language/dialect be featured here.
Submit your recordings to otipeps24@gmail.com.
Looking forward to hearing from you!
The more extinct native American languages I learn about, the more I want to cry 😢
I am the linguist for our tribe. Today we’re known as Karankawa Kadla. I wish people would do their research before continuing to spread falsehoods of our people. Is this yet another attempt to take the only remnants of our culture? Yes, our language and culture were dissolved out of our need to survive cancel culture of the time but we are still here and reconnecting with one another. ‘Karankawa Kadla - mixed tongue’ is the title of my book about this topic. Na emnata he’h Alexander ‘StrongWind’ Perez. Please read my book for clarification.
As a texan I have always been really interested in this im not karankawa in any way but I read cabeza de vaca’s journal and have always been fascinated about and interested in the karankawa I hope that it may be possible one day to reconstruct keles into a usable language
I too am Karankawa
@@Thebestman-f1j How many of you are there? in wikipedia it is written that the karankawas are extinct.
@@kutaykalender2321 like maybe a thousand or more
Thank you for your work in documenting the languages of the world
It's such a shame that this beautiful language has gone extinct 😢
Let’s thank the white people for that. 😢
And so Hungarian & Japanese had their American-born child called Karankawa. LOL
I like how thos language sounds like Nawat from Mexico.
dis trayb bin olmec bin bi nohtan fambul dem fo di aztek, dis trayb bin de pan gud tehm wit di red en yelo skin, sioux en apaches, navajos, hailanders en aztek.
Dɛn bin dɔnawe wit am wit di Spanish, Frɛnch ɛn Inglish invayshɔn dɛn na Tɛksas.
Dɛn langwej bin gɛt sɔntin fɔ du wit di Aztek langwej dɛn we de na di nɔt pat na Mɛksiko ɛn di sawt pat na Amɛrika.
Is this English?
I think not, but something else Germanic close to English
I remember that such that language exists.
First and can you do Colonia Tovar dialect
Does Awil come from Awilix, goddess of the moon?
I am really intrigued by Karankawa numerals: how did nāt'sa (one) and haikia (two) yield haikia nāt'sa (seven)? What's the logic behind this? Also it's really interesting that some numerals contain the word béhema meaning father, what kind of semantic switch must've occured with this word?
It looks like the language took a 5-basis, just like the fingers in one hand. If this is correct, I think it was a very intuitive counting system.
@@hwmaldonado that's also what I thought
One + two + One + Two + One = 7 It's a binary system.
Notice Behema in numbers 5. & 8 and Bèhema means father.
Can you do Wichita?
Sade we have lost this culture.😢😢
The flag is a skull,
Make the Burushaski(Hunza)pls
I need a volunteer! :D
Yoruba pls
1:58 בהמה
pagsasadula ayon sa imbestigasyon ng pulis
pagsasadula ayon sa imbestigasyon ng pulis
Please make video about Aussie accent🥲🥲