Shasta language

The Shasta language is an extinct Shastan language formerly spoken from northern California into southwestern Oregon. It was spoken in a number of dialects, possibly including Okwanuchu. By 1980, only two first language speakers, both elderly, were alive. Today, all ethnic Shasta people speak English as their first language. According to Golla, there were four distinct dialects of Shasta:


 * Ikirakácˑu (Oregon Shasta)
 * Iruhikwáˑcˑu (Klamath River Shasta)
 * Uwáˑtuhúcˑu (Scott Valley Shasta)
 * Ahútˑireˀeˑcˑu (Shasta Valley Shasta)

Consonants
The length of a consonant distinguishes meaning in Shasta words. All stops, fricatives and nasals can occur as long or short in Shasta, but approximants /r j w/ only occur as short consonants. Minimal pairs and near minimal pairs are shown below:


 * /t͡ʃákàráx/ a gnat vs. /t͡sàkːírʔ/ a board
 * /ʔátʼùʔ/ nothing vs. /ʔátʼːùʔ/ wild sunflower
 * /ʔìsíkʼːàʔ/ a person vs. /ʔìsːíkʼ/ cold

Vowels
Shasta has four vowels,, with contrastive length, and two tones: high and low.

Orthography
Silver (1966) devised a spelling system for distinguishing consonants and vowels in Shasta. Long phonemes are represented with the symbol ⟨ˑ⟩ following the character (e.g. ⟨cˑ⟩ and ⟨eˑ⟩ for/ t͡sː/ and /eː/, respectively); ejectives are indicated by an apostrophe written over the character (e.g. ⟨p̓⟩ for /pʼ/). The phoneme is represented by $⟨y⟩$, and the glottal stop /ʔ/ is represented by the superscript IPA symbol ⟨ˀ⟩. The letters ⟨b d f g j l q v z⟩ are not used to represent Shasta sounds.

Tones
Shasta vowels can have low or high tones. High tones are marked by an acute accent ⟨′⟩ in the orthography devised by Silver (1966), whereas low tones are left unmarked. Examples for the vowel /u/ are given below: