Hokan
Proper noun 1. A proposed language family: "Hokan" refers to a hypothesized grouping of several Native American language families and isolates, primarily spoken historically in parts of California, Arizona, and Mexico. 2. A member of a people speaking a Hokan language: "Hokan" can also refer to a person belonging to a tribe whose traditional language is classified within the proposed Hokan language family.
- Proper noun (Language family):
- The Hokan hypothesis links languages like Yana and Pomo.
- Linguists have debated the validity of the Hokan grouping for decades.
- Proper noun (People):
- The Hokan peoples of California had diverse cultures.
- She studied the traditions of the Hokan.
- "Hokan languages": This is the standard term to refer to the languages within this proposed family.
- The grammar of Hokan languages often features complex verb structures.
- "Hokan-speaking": Used as an adjective to describe peoples or tribes.
- Hokan-speaking tribes inhabited the region for millennia.
- Hokanist (noun): A linguist who specializes in the study of Hokan languages.
- Proto-Hokan (proper noun): The reconstructed hypothetical ancestor language of the Hokan family.
- Hokan stock: An alternative term for the Hokan language family proposal.
- Hokan peoples: A collective term for the groups speaking these languages.
The term "Hokan" is primarily a linguistic classification used in academic circles. It is not a term for a single, unified tribe or nation but rather a scholarly construct grouping diverse peoples based on proposed linguistic similarities. The existence of the Hokan family as a proven genetic unit remains a subject of research and debate among linguists.
- a member of a North American Indian people speaking one of the Hokan languages
- a family of Amerindian languages spoken in California