Baniwa of Guainía
Baniwa of Maroa
Native toBrazil, Venezuela
Native speakers
(c. 210 cited 1999)[1]
Arawakan
Dialects
  • Warekena do rio Xié
Language codes
ISO 639-3gae [a]
Glottologguar1293
ELPGuarequena
Warekena is classified as Severely Endangered by the UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger.

Baniwa of Guainía, or Baniwa of Maroa, is an Arawakan language of Brazil and of Maroa Municipality in Venezuela, spoken near the Guainia River. It is one of several languages which go by the generic name Baniwa/Baniva. One of its primary dialects is Warekena (Guarequena), or more precisely Warekena of Xié.

History

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Baniwa of Guainia only recently appeared on the Xie River, displacing the original, or "old" Warekena language. Beginning in the early 20th century, most of the Warekena people migrated into Venezuela from the Xie River in Brazil. They then switched to a dialect of the Baniwa language of Guainía, but preserved their name and the history of their origins. A number of Baniwa of Guainía-speaking Warekena then moved back to the Xie River in the 1920s.[2]

Classification

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Baniwa of Guainía is classified by Alexandra Aikhenvald (1998) as a member of the Içana-Vaupes subgroup of Northern Arawakan, and is closest linguisticaly to Mandawaca, whereas Baniwa of Guainia is closer to Yavitero and Maipure. The two of them are only distantly related to each other and hardly intelligible with one another.[2] Terrence Kaufman (1994) classified it in a Warekena group of Western Nawiki Upper Amazonian,[3] Aikhenvald (1999) in Eastern Nawiki.[1]

Phonology

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Consonants

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Equivalents in the Baniwa of Guainía practical orthography are given below.[4]

Baniwa of Guainía consonants[4]
Labial Dental Alveolar Palatal Velar
med. lat.
Nasal m n
Plosive/
Affricate
voiceless p t ts k
voiced b d dz ɡ
Fricative voiceless ʂ ⟨sr⟩
voiced ʐ ⟨zr⟩
Rhotic tap ɾ ⟨r⟩ ɺ ⟨l⟩
trill r ⟨rr⟩
Approximant w j ⟨y⟩

Unlike its relatives Baré and Baniwa of Içana, Baniwa of Guainía lacks aspirated stops. /g/ is rare and "very unusual" for a Northern Arawakan language.[2]

Vowels

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Front Central Back
High i u
Mid e
Low a

/u/ has an allophone of [o],[4] commonly encountered in rapid speech and also appearing in a number of loanwords. /a/ may also be reduced to [ə] word-finally in syllables after a stressed syllable. Vowel length is phonemic, though has a low functional load, and long vowels are frequently shortened when the stress is shifted in phrases.[2]

Morphology

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Nouns

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Pronouns

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Personal pronouns in Baniwa of Guainia are formed by adding an emphatic suffix -ya to the cross-referencing personal prefixes.[2]

Syntax

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Unmarked constituent order is AVO, VSo, SaV, or SioV.[2]

AVO:

wa-hã

then-PAUS

waʃi

jaguar

yutʃia-hã

kill-PAUS

ema

tapir

wa-hã waʃi yutʃia-hã ema

then-PAUS jaguar kill-PAUS tapir

"Then the jaguar killed the tapir"

VSo:

ʃupe-hẽ

many-PAUS

ʃiani-pe

child-PL

ʃupe-hẽ ʃiani-pe

many-PAUS child-PL

"Children are many"

SaV:

peya

one

nu-yaɺitua

1sg-brother

wiyua

die

peya nu-yaɺitua wiyua

one 1sg-brother die

"One of my brothers dies"

SioV:

nu-yue

1sg-for

mawali

hungry

nu-yue mawali

1sg-for hungry

"I am hungry"

Indirect objects tend to be placed immediately after the predicate.

Notes

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  1. ^ also applies to Warekena Velha

References

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  1. ^ a b Dixon, Robert M. W.; Aĭkhenvalʹd, A. I︠U︡, eds. (1999). The Amazonian languages (PDF). Cambridge language surveys. Cambridge, UK ; New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-57021-3.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Aikhenvald, Alexandra Y. (1998). "Warekena". In Derbyshire, Desmond C.; Pullum, Geoffrey K. (eds.). Handbook of Amazonian Languages. Vol. 4. Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton. pp. 225–439. doi:10.1515/9783110822120.
  3. ^ Moseley, Christopher; Asher, R. E.; Tait, Mary (1994), Atlas of the world's languages, London ; New York: Routledge, ISBN 978-0-415-01925-5
  4. ^ a b c Socorro Sánchez, Marlene (2005). Morfología y sintaxis del Baniva (PhD thesis). Maracaibo: Universidad de los Andes.

📚 Artikel Terkait di Wikipedia

Warekena Velha language

Warekena Velha (Guarequena Antiguo, Old Warekena, Guarequena: Walékhena 'star people'), also Warekena of San Miguel, is an endangered Arawakan language

Baré people

traders. The Baré and Werekena people originally spoke the Baré language and Warekena language, both Arawakan languages, but today speak the Nheengatu language

Warekena language

Warekena language may refer to the following Arawakan languages spoken by the Warekena people: Warekena dialect of Baniwa of Guainía Warekena Velha language

Arawakan languages

Passé Japurá-Colombia division Piapoko, Achagua; Baniwa-Koripako, Tariana; Warekena, Mandawaka; Kabiyari; Yukuna, Wainumá-Mariaté † Kauixana Resígaro Upper

Glottal stop

falada pelos povos Baré, Warekena e Baniwa [Phonology and Grammar of Nheengatú: The general language spoken by the Baré, Warekena and Baniwa peoples] (PDF)

Nheengatu

is spoken throughout the Rio Negro region among the Baniwa, Baré, and Warekena people in the municipality of São Gabriel da Cachoeira, and the state of

Upper Amazon Arawakan languages

Achagua (Achawa) Piapoco Amarizana † Caviyari (Cabiyarí) †? Warekena group Guarequena (Warekena) Mandahuaca (Mandawaka) Río Negro group † Jumana (Yumana)

Languages of Venezuela

revitalization that has been supported by UNICEF. Kurripako (2,019) Arawak (140) Warekena (199) Wayuu (294,000): this is the indigenous language with the most speakers