Moh

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Also Known As: Mohawk,Kanien'kehaka


Description:

Mohawk is a Native American language spoken by the Mohawk nation in the United States and Canada. It is part of the Iroquoian family. In schools of northern New York particularly in Native American Reservations Native American Languages are taught depending on the tribe in the reservation Mohawk has three major dialects: Western (Six Nations and Tyendinaga), Central (Ahkwesáhsne), and Eastern (Kahnawà:ke and Kanehsatà:ke); the differences between them are largely phonological. The pronunciation of /r/ and several consonant clusters may differ in the dialects. The phoneme inventory is as follows (using the International Phonetic Alphabet). Phonological representation (underlying forms) are in /slashes/, and the standard Mohawk orthography is in bold. An interesting feature of Mohawk (and Iroquoian) phonology is that there are no labials, except in a few adoptions from French and English, where [m] and [p] appear (e.g., mátsis matches and aplám Abraham); these sounds are late additions to Mohawk phonology and were introduced after widespread European contact. The word "Mohawk" itself is an exonym. The Central (Ahkwesáhsne) dialect has the following consonant clusters:

All clusters..... full article at Wikipedia

Location of Mohawk Language Speakers

http://llmap.org/languages/moh/static_map.png?width=400&height=300&kilroywashere=.png

Overview

Main Country: Canada
Spoken In:

Regions: Americas

ISO 639-2 Code: moh
ISO 639-3 Code: moh

Classification Taxonomy

All Languages

  Iroquoian Group

    Northern Iroquoian Group

      Five Nations Group

        Mohawk-Oneida Group

          Mohawk Language