Yu compiles dictionary of dying language (fwd)

phil cash cash cashcash at EMAIL.ARIZONA.EDU
Sat Oct 6 09:37:22 UTC 2007


Yu compiles dictionary of dying language

By Rachel-Cromidas
Friday, October 5th, 2007

Alan Yu, an assistant professor of linguistics at the University, is
currently recording and cataloguing the nearly extinct Native American
language “Washo” in an online dictionary to be completed in 2009.

At present, only about 20 tribespeople speak the language, which springs
from a region bordering California and Nevada, according to Yu.

Yu, who has been working on this project with graduate and undergraduate
students at the University since 2004 after receiving a grant from the
National Endowment for the Humanities, is pessimistic about the survival of
Washo. He characterizes Washo as a “moribund language”—one that elders are
no longer actively teaching to children.

“The fact is that [Washo] is an endangered language,” Yu said. “The people
who are speaking it right now are probably going to be the last group of
speakers in all likelihood, unless the [native speakers] start speaking to
their kids in Washo daily.”

Nonetheless, Yu says his primary goal is to create a full record of the
language that can be used for both humanistic and scientific purposes.
Washo has no written tradition, so Yu says the online dictionary will
emphasize its audio component.

Yu spends his summers and vacations in California interviewing tribe members
fluent in the language. To create this “oral dictionary,” he is compiling
audio recordings of words and syllables. Yu has completed 3,000 audio
entries to date, but says he hopes to reach 5,000 by 2009.

“The purpose of having an oral medium transmitted and preserved, Yu said,
“is so that, should a Washo in the future want to learn the language, they
can hear an elder speaking the language in the flesh, so to speak.”

Yu equates studying a language like Washo to discovering a new species of
animal, because “you never know what you’re going to learn or what you’re
missing out on until you fully describe it and understand it.”

Linguists have found no relation between Washo and the languages of
neighboring tribes, Yu said, so these mysteries make the language
particularly interesting to study.

“There are so many languages in the world on the verge of extinction, and
it’s our job as linguists to study them before they go away forever.”

His online dictionary can be accessed at washo.uchicago.edu.

Permanent URL:
http://maroon.uchicago.edu/online_edition/news/2007/10/05/yu-compiles-dictionary-of-dying-language/



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