Caddo (endonym: Hasí꞉nay, ) was a Caddoan language indigenous to the Southern United States and the traditional language of the Caddo.[The Linguist List] It is dormant, with the last speaker dying in 2025, down from 25 speakers in 1997. Caddo had several mutually-intelligible dialects. The most commonly used dialects was Hasinai and Hainai; others included Kadohadacho, Natchitoches and Yatasi.
Linguistic connections
Caddo was a member of the Caddoan language family; this family includes the Pawnee-Kitsai (Keechi) languages (
Arikara language,
Kitsai language, and
Pawnee language) and the
Wichita language language. Like Caddo, Kitsai and Wichita are now extinct.
Another language, Adai people, is postulated to have been a Caddoan language while it was extant, but because of scarce resources and the language's extinct status, this connection is not conclusive, and Adai is generally considered a language isolate.
Use and language revitalization efforts
The Caddo Nation is making a concentrated effort to save the Caddo language. The Kiwat Hasí꞉nay ('Caddo Home') foundation, located at the tribal home of Binger, Oklahoma, offers regular Caddo language classes, in addition to creating dictionaries, phrase books, and other Caddo language resources. They have also made a long-term project of trying to record and digitally archive Caddoan oral traditions, which are an important part of Caddo culture.
As of 2010, a Caddo app is available for Android phones. As of 2012, the Caddo Nation teaches weekly language classes; language CDs, a coloring book, and an online learning website are also available.
There is a Caddo grammar, published August 2018, and an in-depth examination of the Caddo verb, published in 2004.[
] (2025). 080322088X, University of Nebraska Press. 080322088X
In August 2022 the Caddo Nation Language Preservation Program was launched. The program's goals are to archive resources in the language, share their resources through community events and programs, and develop a curriculum to teach the language.
Phonology
Consonants
Caddo had 19 contrastive
Consonant, a normal-sized consonant inventory. It is somewhat unusual in that it lacks
.
The IPA symbols for the consonants of Caddo are given below:
Caddo also featured contrastive gemination of consonants, which is generally indicated in orthography by a double letter: /nɑ́ttih/ "woman."
Vowels
Caddo had three contrastive
vowel qualities: , and , and two contrastive vowel lengths, long and short.
However, there was a great deal of phonetic variation in the short vowels. The high front vowel was generally realized as its lower counterpart , and the high back vowel was similarly often realized as its lower counterpart . The low central vowel had a wider range of variation, pronounced (most commonly) as when it was followed by any consonant except a semivowel or a laryngeal consonant, as a low central at the end of an open syllable or when followed by a laryngeal consonant, and as before a semivowel.
In general, the long vowels did not feature this kind of variation but are simply lengthened versions of the phonemes that are represented in the chart.
Caddo also had four Diphthong, which can be written a number of different ways; the transcription below shows the typical Caddo Nation orthography (a vowel paired with a glide) and the IPA version, represented with vowels and offglides.
-
ay – like English eye
-
aw – somewhat like British English out
-
iw – like the English interjection ew!
-
uy – somewhat like English b oy
Tone
Caddo had three
tone language: a low tone (e.g. /ù/), unmarked in the orthography ⟨u⟩; a high tone (e.g. /ú/), marked by an acute accent over the vowel ⟨ú⟩; and falling tone, which always occurs on long vowels (e.g. /ûː/) and was marked by a grave accent over the vowel ⟨ù꞉⟩.
Tone occurred both lexically (as a property of the word), non-lexically (as a result of tonological processes), and also as a marker of certain morphological features. For instance, the past tense marker was associated with high tone.
Tonological processes
There were three processes that could create non-lexical high tone within a
syllable nucleus.
See the section below for an explanation of other phonological changes which may occur in the following examples.
-
H-deletion
-
: VhCC → VHighCC
-
:An /h/ before two consonants is deleted and the preceding vowel gains high tone:
-
: /kiʃwɑhn-t-ʔuh/ → kiʃwɑ́nːt'uh "parched corn"
-
Low tone-deletion
-
: VRVLowC → VHighRC
-
:A low tone vowel following a sonorant (sonorant consonant) is deleted, and the preceding vowel gains a high tone.
-
: /sa-baka-nah-hah/ → sawkɑ́nːhah "does he mean it?"
-
Backwards assimilation
-
: VRVHigh → VHighRVHigh
-
:A vowel preceding a resonant and a high tone vowel gains high tone.
-
: /nanɑ́/ → nɑ́nɑ́ː "that, that one"'
Phonological processes
Vowel syncope
There were two vowel syncope processes in Caddo, which both involve the loss of a low-tone vowel in certain environments.
The first syncope process was described above as low tone-deletion. The second syncope process is described below:
- Interconsonantal syncope
- VCVLowCV → VCCV
- A low-tone vowel in between a vowel-consonant sequence and a consonant-vowel sequence is deleted.
- (Shown with intermediary form): /kak#(ʔi)t'us-jaʔah/ → kahʔit'uʃaʔah → kahʔit'uʃʔah "foam, suds"
Consonant cluster simplification
As a result of the syncope processes described above, several consonant clusters emerge that are then simplified by way of phonological process. At the present stage of research, the processes seem to be unrelated, but they represented a phonetic reduction in consonant clusters; therefore, they are listed below without much further explanation.
-
nw → mm
-
tw → pp
-
tk → kk
-
n → m / __ +labial
-
ʔʔ → ʔ
-
hh → h
-
ʔ+Resonant → Resonant+ʔ / syllable final
Syllable coda simplification
Similar to the consonant cluster simplification process, there were four processes by which a syllable-final consonant is altered:
-
b → w / syllable final
-
d → t / syllable final
-
k → h / syllable final (but not before k)
-
tʃ → ʃ / syllable final
Word boundary processes
There were three word-boundary processes in Caddo, all of which occur word-initially:
-
n → t / # __
-
w → p / # __
-
y → d / # __
- ni-huhn-id-ah/ → tihúndah "she returned"
Such processes were generally not applicable in the case of (morphemes that behave like an affix and are phonologically dependent on the morpheme to which they are attached). An example is the English articles.
Glottalization
Caddo had a
glottalization process by which any
Plosive or
affricate (except p) becomes an ejective when it is followed by a
glottal stop.
- Glottalization
- -sonorant, → +constricted / ___ +constricted
- A voiceless stop or affricate (except p) becomes an ejective when it is followed by a glottal stop.
- /sik-ʔuh/ → sik'uh "rock"
Palatalization
Caddo had a palatalization process that affects certain consonants when they are followed by /j/, with simultaneous loss of the /j/.
- Palatalization
-
/kj/ → tʃ
-
/sj/ → ʃ
- /kak#ʔa-k'as-jaʔah/ → kahʔak'a " one's leg"
(Melnar includes a third palatization process, /tj/ → ts. However, /ts/ is not a palatal affricate so it has not been included here. Nevertheless, the third process probably occurs.)
Lengthening
Caddo had three processes by which a syllable nucleus (vowel) may be lengthened:
- Syllable Lengthening Process One
- VHigh(Resonant)CVC# → VHigh(Resonant)ːCVC#
- When the second-to-last syllable in a word has a nucleus consisting of a high tone vowel (and, optionally, a resonant), and the last syllable has the form CVC, the high tone nucleus is then lengthened.
- /bak-'ʔawɑ́waʔ/ → bahʔwɑ́ːwaʔ "they said"
- Syllable Lengthening Process Two
- V(Resonant)ʔ → V(Resonant) ː / in any prepenultimate syllable
- In any syllable before the penultimate, a glottal stop coda is deleted, and the remaining nucleus is lengthened.
- /hɑ́k#ci-(ʔi)bíhn-saʔ/ → hɑ́hciːbíːsaʔ " I have it on my back"
- Syllable Lengthening Process Three
-
ij → iː
-
uw →uː
- Any syllable nucleus with ij or uw must convert to a long vowel.
Influence
The Caddo word táy:sha’ (), meaning 'ally' or 'friend', is the ultimate origin of the place name
Texas.
Citations
External links