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Apalachee language

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Apalachee
Native toUnited States
RegionFlorida
EthnicityApalachee
Extinctearly 18th century
Muskogean
  • Eastern
    • Apalachee
Language codes
ISO 639-3xap
Glottologapal1237

Apalachee was a Muskogean language of Florida. It was closely related to Koasati and Alabama.[1] Apalachee was found to belong to the same branch of the Muskogean family as Koasati, Alabama, and Hitchiti.[2] Apalachee was originally spoken in western Florida, but is believed to have last been spoken in the nineteenth century by Apalachee people that had been removed to Louisiana.[3]:11

History

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The language is known primarily from one document, a letter written in 1688 to Charles II of Spain. The original version of that letter is lost, but a copy published in 1860 survives. Additional Apalachee texts are said to have existed in archives in Havana but they have never been located.[4]:136

The letter is accompanied by a loose Spanish translation, from which some aspects of Apalachee have been inferred. Related Muskogean languages have also been used to help understand the structure of Apalachee.[4]:136–137[5]:388 Geoffrey Kimball produced a grammatical sketch[4] and a vocabulary of the language[5] based on these resources.

Apalachee is one of only three indigenous languages from its region to have any surviving documentation, alongside Timucua and Calusa.[3]:28

Phonology

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Consonants

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Labial Alveolar Palatal Velar Glottal
Nasal m n
Plosive plain p t k c, g, q
voiced b
Fricative plain f s h
lateral ɬ lz
Approximant w gu, w l j y

Orthography is only shown where it differs from the IPA.

Vowels

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Front Central Back
Close i
Close-mid o
Open a

Vowels may also be elongated.[4]:138

Grammar

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Apalachee relies on fixed word order (subject–object–verb) rather than case marking to specify the subject and object of a sentence. Apalachee does have some case markings, but does not rely on them to the same degree that other Muskogean languages do.[4]:139

There is significant affixation in Apalachee morphology. Possession and pluralization are both marked by affixes on the noun. Objects can be marked on the verbs by prefixes.[4]:140–141,147 Derivational affixes are attested for both nouns and verbs, including distributive and causative markers.[4]:153,156

References

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  1. Broadwell, George A. (1992). Reconstructing Proto-Muskogean Language and Prehistory: Preliminary results. 3, en. 2. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.72.4700.
  2. Haas, Mary R. (April 1949). "The Position of Apalachee in the Muskogean Family". International Journal of American Linguistics. 15 (2). University of Chicago Press: 121–127. doi:10.1086/464031.
  3. 1 2 Goddard, Ives (2005). "The Indigenous Languages of the Southeast". Anthropological Linguistics. 47 (1): 1–60. ISSN 0003-5483. Retrieved May 18, 2026.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Kimball, Geoffrey (April 1987). "A Grammatical Sketch of Apalachee". International Journal of American Linguistics. 53 (2). University of Chicago Press: 136–174. doi:10.1086/466050. JSTOR 1265142.
  5. 1 2 Kimball, Geoffrey (October 1988). "An Apalachee Vocabulary". International Journal of American Linguistics. 54 (4). University of Chicago Press: 387–398. doi:10.1086/466093. JSTOR 1265100.
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