Hawaiian language

Hawaiian (‘Ōlelo Hawai‘i)
Spoken in: Hawaii
Total speakers: ~1,000 native
~15,000 total
Ranking: not in top 100
Genetic
classification:
Austronesian

 Malayo-Polynesian
  Central Eastern Malayo-Polynesian
   Eastern Malayo-Polynesian
    Oceanic
     Central-Eastern Oceanic
      Remote Oceanic
       Central Pacific
        East Fijian-Polynesian
         Polynesian
          Nuclear Polynesian
           Eastern Polynesian
            Central Eastern Polynesian
             Marquesic

              Hawaiian

Official status
Official language of: Hawaii (with English)
Regulated by: -
Language codes
ISO 639-1
ISO 639-2haw
SILHWI

Hawaiian is the ancestral language of the indigenous people of the Hawaiian Islands, the Hawaiians, a Polynesian people. Hawaiian, along with English, is an official language of the State of Hawai‘i. It is notable for having a small phoneme inventory (see Hawaiian alphabet, below), like many of its Polynesian cousins. Especially notable is the fact that it originally did not distinguish between /t/ and /k/; few languages do not make that distinction. A /t/ pronunciation of this phoneme was common at the Kaua‘i end of the island chain, and a /k/ pronunciation at the Big Island (island of Hawai'i) end. The /k/ pronunciation won out over the /t/ pronunciation after Kamehameha the Great, who was from the island of Hawai'i, conquered all the islands. However, the /t/ realization remains on Ni'ihau.

Hawaiian is a member of the Austronesian language family, most closely related to Polynesian languages like Marquesan, Tahitian, Sāmoan, Māori, and Rapanui (i.e., the language of Easter Island), as well as to other languages in the Pacific, like Fijian, Indonesian, and the indigenous languages of Taiwan and the Philippines.

Hawaiian is an endangered language. On most of the islands, Hawaiian has been displaced by English and is no longer used as the daily language of communication. An exception is Ni‘ihau, where Hawaiian is still used in daily communications, because it is a privately owned island and visitation by outsiders is strictly controlled. For a variety of reasons starting around 1900, the number of first-language speakers of Hawaiian diminished from 37,000 to 1,000; half of these remaining are now in their seventies or eighties (see Ethnologue report below for citations).

Efforts by Native Hawaiians to revive their ancestral language have increased in recent decades. Hawaiian language "immersion" schools are now open to children whose families want to retain (or reintroduce) Hawaiian language back into the next generation. The local NPR station features a short segment titled "Hawaiian word of the day." Additionally, the Sunday editions of the Honolulu Star-Bulletin, one of Honolulu's two major daily general circulation newspapers, feature a section called Kauakukalahale (http://www.starbulletin.com/kauakukalahale.php/) written entirely in Hawaiian.

Those learning Hawaiian as a second language, without Native Hawaiian speakers as constant models, have a tendency to pronounce Hawaiian words as spelled, with English values for the letters, and to use English word order in sentences. There is also a certain tension between those who would revive a purist Hawaiian, as spoken in the early 19th century, and those who grew up speaking a colloquial Hawaiian shaped by more than one hundred years of contact with English and pidgin.

Hawaiian Pidgin (also known as Hawaiian Creole English) is a local language, based on English but with its own unique syntax. Its vocabulary comes from English, Hawaiian, and Asian languages, predominantly Japanese and Chinese introduced by immigrants hired to work at sugar and pineapple plantations, but Philippine languages have made contributions as well.

The ISO language code for Hawaiian is haw.

Contents

Hawaiian alphabet

The Hawaiian alphabet, called ka pī‘āpā Hawai‘i in Hawaiian, is a variety of the Latin alphabet created in the 19th century and used to write the Hawaiian language. It consists of 12 letters and a symbol, making it one of the shorter alphabets in the world (the Rotokas alphabet has one letter fewer; the Pirahã language, two fewer). Its inventory consists of the consonants /p/, /k/, (glottal stop or ‘okina), /m/, /n/, /w/ (sometimes rendered as /v/), /l/, /h/, and the vowels /a/, /e/, /i/, /o/, and /u/. The macron, called a kahakō in Hawaiian, used with vowels, marks a long vowel, /aː/, /eː/, /iː/, /oː/, and /uː/. Contrary to popular belief, it does not indicate stress, though under the rules for assigning stress in Hawaiian, a syllable with a long vowel will always be stressed. Whether long or short, the pronunciation of the vowels does not change.

The ‘okina is officially written as an opening single quote with the Unicode value ‘ (decimal ‘), which appears either as a left-leaning quote or a quote with greater thickness at the bottom than at the top) or alternatively written as Template:Unicode with the Unicode value ʻ (decimal &#699), which although always having the correct appearance is not supported in some fonts/browsers.

For examples of use of the ‘okina consider the word "Hawaii", in its proper form appearing as Hawai‘i, or "Oahu", which is O‘ahu. The words are actually pronounced (using IPA): and , with a glottal stop where the ‘okina is written.

There are only 162 possible syllables in Hawaiian. Most languages have a much larger syllable repertoire.

See also

References

Schutz, Albert J. 1994. "The Voices of Eden: A History of Hawaiian Language Studies." Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press. ISBN 0824816374

External links

Template:InterWiki

eo:Havaja lingvo li:Hawaiïaans ja:ハワイ語 nl:Hawaïaans pl:Język hawajski sl:havajščina fi:Havaijin kieli sv:Hawaiianska

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