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Gros Ventre language

Gros Ventre
Native to United States
Region Montana
Ethnicity Gros Ventre
Extinct 1981
Algic
Language codes
ISO 639-3
Glottolog gros1243

Atsina, or Gros Ventre (also known as Ananin, Ahahnelin, Ahe and A’ani), is the extinct ancestral language of the Gros Ventre people of Montana. The last fluent speaker died in 1981.

Atsina is the name applied by specialists in Algonquian linguistics. Arapaho and Atsina are dialects of a common language usually designated by scholars as "Arapaho-Atsina". Historically, this language had five dialects, and on occasion specialists add a third dialect name to the label, resulting in the designation, "Arapaho-Atsina-Nawathinehena". Compared with Arapaho proper, Gros Ventre had three additional phonemes /tʲ/, /ts/, //, and /bʲ/, and lacked the velar fricative /x/.

Theresa Lamebull taught the language at Fort Belknap College, and helped develop a dictionary using the Phraselator when she was 109.

As of 2012, the White Clay Immersion School at Fort Belknap College was teaching the language to 26 students, up from 11 students in 2006.

Consonants

Vowels

There are three diphthongs in Gros Ventre; /ei/, /oe/, and /ou/. They are pronounced as: /ej/, /aj/, and /ow/.



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