Chinook Jargon
Noun: A historical pidgin language that incorporated vocabulary primarily from Chinookan languages, French, and English. It served as a lingua franca for trade and communication among diverse Indigenous communities and European settlers in the Pacific Northwest region of North America (particularly areas that are now Oregon, Washington, British Columbia, and Alaska).
Chinook Jargon is used as a proper noun to refer to this specific contact language. It is discussed in historical, linguistic, and anthropological contexts. * The traders used Chinook Jargon to negotiate with the local tribes. * Chinook Jargon was essential for communication in the 19th-century fur trade. * Several place names in the Pacific Northwest derive from Chinook Jargon.
- Chinook Jargon is also known as "Chinuk Wawa" (from the Jargon itself, meaning 'Chinook talk') or simply "the Jargon" in historical texts.
- While it functioned as a pidgin, some communities developed it into a creole, using it as a first language.
- Chinuk Wawa: The modern, preferred name for the language, especially among revitalization efforts. It emphasizes the language's continuity and status beyond a historical "jargon."
- Lingua franca: A language used for communication between groups of people who speak different native languages.
- Pidgin: A simplified language that develops as a means of communication between two or more groups that do not have a language in common.
- Chinuk Wawa
- The Jargon (historical term)
This term refers specifically to the historical contact language of the Pacific Northwest. It is not used for: * The Chinookan language family (e.g., Kathlamet, Clackamas), which are distinct, complex Indigenous languages. * The Chinook wind, a warm wind in North America. * General, confusing speech or technical "jargon."
As a proper noun for a language, Chinook Jargon itself is not typically used in idiomatic phrases. However, many words from it entered local English usage. * "Potlatch" (from Chinook Jargon potlatch, meaning 'to give'): A ceremonial feast among Indigenous peoples of the Pacific Northwest. * "Skookum" (from Chinook Jargon skookum, meaning 'strong, powerful'): Used in regional English to mean excellent or reliable (e.g., "a skookum piece of gear").
- a pidgin incorporating Chinook and French and English words; formerly used as a lingua franca in northwestern North America