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Awa Pit language

Located in the region of Colombia and Ecuador, the Awa or Awa Pit speaking people is an indigenous group settled between the Andes Mountains and the Western Coast. Awa Pit or otherwise known as Cuaiquer (Coaiquer, Cuayquer, Kwaiker, Kwayquer, etc.), in both group and name, is classified as part of the Barbacoan language.[2] Another term that this group goes by is the "Inkal Awa" or "the mountain people", to distinguish themselves from other indigenous groups within that region.[2] Awa pit is classified by UNESCO as a severely endangered language.[3] The Awa pit language has a subject–object–verb structure and has adopted the Latin script.[4] Grammatically, Awa pit uses a characteristic conjunct/disjunct system of verb suffixes for person-marking which displays similarities with some Tibeto-Burman languages, such as the Newari language of Kathmandu.[2][5][6]

Cuaiquer
Awa Pit
Native toColombia, Ecuador
Ethnicity15,000 Awa-Kwaiker (2007)[1]
Native speakers
13,000 (2008)[1]
Barbacoan
Language codes
ISO 639-3kwi
Glottologawac1239
ELPAwa Pit

Speakers and characteristics edit

The Awa pit language has around 21 thousand speakers, mostly residing on the Colombian Pacific slopes of the Andes, with about a thousand in an adjacent area of Ecuador.[4] The Awa Pit language is spoken less and less each year. In a study done in 2008 there were about 12,000 Awa Pit speakers, but as of 2011 there are about 2,100 speakers left in the provinces of northern Ecuador.[7] Most Awa women are monolingual to the Awa Pit language, while some men can speak both Spanish and Awa Pit and a very few of these Awa Pit speakers can both read and write the language.[2] Literacy among Awa speakers is less than 1% in their native language and under 5% in the secondary Spanish language.[4] The Awa people are mostly farmers. Their crops include plantains, corn, sugarcane, and beans.[2] Many of the Awa do not live near each other, they live in scattered settlements often 2-3 kilometers apart, and often move depending on the planting and harvesting seasons.[2]

Phonology edit

The Awa Pit inventory is as follows:[8][2]

Consonants edit

  • Some dialects can also have phonemic retroflex sounds /ʂ/, //
  • Geminated consonants are noted as [pː, t̪ː, kː].
  • [ɲ] is the main sound of the consonant sequence /nj/
  • In word-final positions, there are two realizations for each stop consonant; unreleased [p̚, t̪̚, k̚], or post nasal [pᵐ, t̪ⁿ̪, kᵑ].
Phoneme Allophone Rules
/p/ [p] [b] C [v] __ [v]
[ɸ] C [fricative] [vl] __ V [v]
[β] V/G [v] __ V/G [v]
[] __ /ɨ/
/t/ [] [] C [v] __ [v]
[θ] C [fricative] [vl] __ V [v]
[ð] C [fricative] [v] __ V [v]
[ɾ̪] V/G [v] __ V/G [v]
/k/ [k] [ɡ] C [v] __ [v]
[x] C [fricative] [vl] __ V [v]
[ɣ] V/G [v] __ V/G [v]
/s/ [s] [ts] #__, C [vl] __, C [v] __ V [vl]
[dz] C [v] __ V [v]
/ʃ/ [ʃ] [] #__, C [vl] __, C [v] __ V [vl]
[] C [v] __ V [v]
/ɬ/ [ɬ] [h] __ /u, u̥/
[ɬ] ~ [h] /i̥, ɨ̥/ __, __ /ɨ̥, i̥/
/l/ [l] [ʎ] ~ [ᵈl] {i j}__
[l] ~ [ᵈl] ~ [d] __ C, __#
[l] ~ [ᵈl] elsewhere
/m/ [m] [] __ /ɨ/
/n/ [n] [ŋ] __ C [velar]
[n] ~ [ɲ] V [high] __ V [high]
/nj/ [ɲ] [ɲ] ~ [] V__ /a/
[ɲ] __ /a/
/j/ [j] [j] ~ [ɟ] V __ V

Vowels edit

Vowel phonemes
Front Central Back
Close i     ɨ     ɨː u    
Open a    
Voiceless vowels
Front Central Back
Close ɨ̥
Phoneme Allophone Rules
/i/ [i] [i] ~ [e] __ #
[ɪ] in closed syllables, short or lax
/ɨ/ [ɨ] [ɨ] ~ [e] __ # (words of more than one syllable)
[ɨ̞] in closed syllables, short or lax
/u/ [u] [u] ~ [o] __ #
[ʊ] in closed syllables, short or lax
/a/ [ä] [ɔ] /w/__ C [velar]
[æ] ~ [ɛ] ~ [ə] C [palatal] __, in a closed syllable
[äj] ~ [ä] __ C [fricative, palato-alveolar]
[ɐ] in closed syllables, short or lax

Word Forms edit

Possessive Word Forms edit

Possessive word formations in Awa Pit can be used to decipher or specify a certain kind of function or occurrence. These range from location-object, material-object, whole-parts of something, and definitions very reminiscent of English prepositions. This is partly because of the usage of ‘relational nouns’. Possession seems to be the main connection that these functions have and in the case of Awa Pit, the postposition pa is a known marker or using possessive adjectives is another way. It is also explained that “In some cases, however, there is an alternation between a possessive postposition with pa, a possessive adjective, and a bare noun modifier, where the bare noun acting as a modifier must occur directly before the noun it modifies [...] the alternation between these constructions can be seen to depend on humanness and referentiality”.[2] This means that if a modifying noun is labelled human and referential then a postpositional word form is utilized. A possessive adjective is used instead if the non-head part is considered pronominal.

ex)

Santos=pa

Santos=POSS

pimpul

leg

Santos=pa pimpul

Santos=POSS leg

‘Santos's leg’ [2]: 123 

ex)

ap

my

pimpul

leg

ap pimpul

my leg

‘my leg’ [2]: 123 

ex)

kwizha

dog

pimpul

leg

kwizha pimpul

dog leg

‘the leg of (a/the) dog’ [2]: 123 

ex)

awa=wa

Person=POSS

pit

language/tongue

awa=wa pit

Person=POSS language/tongue

‘(the) person's tongue [most likely]; (the) person's way of speaking [unlikely]’ [2]: 123 

ex)

awa

person

pit

language/tongue

awa pit

person language/tongue

‘the language of the people (Awa Pit) [most likely]; human tongues [unlikely]’ [2]: 123 

“Ideas of alienable possession and kinship relations necessarily involve the use of the postpositional or possessive adjective constructions (with the exception of “plural possessive adjectives”), rather than a bare noun modifier”.[2]

Alienable possession and kinship are basically referencing humans but there are a few cases where possession are fluid enough to contain higher animals therefore treating it like as if it was human (Awa Pit ‘personifies it in question’).

ex)

kwizha=wa

dog=POSS

pelota

ball

kwizha=wa pelota

dog=POSS ball

‘the dog's ball’ [2]: 123 

Plural Possessive Adjectives edit

Singular possessive adjectives happen in the assumed slot and descriptive adjectives happen between the possessive adjective and the main head noun itself:

ex)

ap

my

katsa

big

tɨl

black

kuzhu

pig

ap katsa tɨl kuzhu

my big black pig

‘my big black pig’ [2]: 124 

There are no specific plural possessive adjective constructions because “In order to translate a phrase such as our house, speakers of Awa Pit have two options: the more common option is to simply use the singular possessive adjective:”[2]

ex)

ap

my

yal

house

ap yal

my house

‘my house, our house’ [2]: 124 

There is another option and that is to use the plural subject pronoun (unmalleable) into the bare noun modifier: (no adjectives can get between the pronoun and the subsequent noun)

ex)

au

we

yal

house

au yal

we house

‘our house’ [2]: 124 

Alienable Possession and Kinship Relations edit

Non-head nominal is considered referential and human, and the involvement of pa or a possessive adjective is needed.  Kinship relations are similar to alienable possession but is different when it comes to body-part possession because the non-head noun is not considered human nor referential. Essentially in Awa Pit, there is no difference between alienable and inalienable possession in an NP. That is due to the fact that different forms are reserved for referential human possession no matter the possession's nature.[2]

1)

Santos=pa

Santos=POSS

kuzhu

pig

Santos=pa kuzhu

Santos=POSS pig

‘Santos's pig’ [2]: 125 

2)

Carmen=pa

Carmen=POSS

ayshpihsh

sister

Carmen=pa ayshpihsh

Carmen=POSS sister

‘Carmen's sister’ [2]: 125 

3)

paynya

his

cuchillo

knife

paynya cuchillo

his knife

‘his knife’ [2]: 125 

4)

ap

my

akkwa

mother

ap akkwa

my mother

‘my mother’ [2]: 125 

Whole-Part edit

Part whole relations are incorporated in the same fashion as possession in Awa Pit. In this case, the whole acts as a modifier while the part acts as the head noun. The modifier whole could be a referential human and that means that the formation with pa or a possessive adjective are utilized. Non-referential human or non-humans traced with bare-nouns are likely to be used as well. It is also worth mentioning that Awa Pit is a Barbacoa language that specializes in placing part-whole relationships with a bare noun or a ‘genitive marker’.[2]

1)

Santos=pa

Santos=POSS

sayl

arm

Santos=pa sayl

Santos=POSS arm

‘Santos's arm’ [2]: 126 

2)

ap

my

pimpul

leg

ap pimpul

my leg

‘Santos's arm’ [2]: 126 

3)

awa

person

kɨzpu

head

awa kɨzpu

person head

‘a human's head’ [2]: 126 

4)

tree

aya

skin

tɨ aya

tree skin

‘(tree) bark’ [2]: 126 

Inflections edit

In terms of tense inflections, there are formal markers when referring to the past and the future in Awa Pit, and there is also an extra subtle category that helps express the present. Basically, if a marker for the past or future does not display itself in a sentence, then the string of inflections most likely represents the present. It is worth saying that the present is marked by a zero morpheme in a ‘pure structuralist form’, since tense markers happen after mood suffixes just before any person markers can appear.[2]

1)

ku-mtu-ata-w

eat-IMPF-PAST-LOCUT:SUBJ

ku-mtu-ata-w

eat-IMPF-PAST-LOCUT:SUBJ

'I was eating.' [2]: 176 

2)

ku-mtu-anɨ-s

eat-IMPF-FUT-LOCUT

ku-mtu-anɨ-s

eat-IMPF-FUT-LOCUT

'I will be eating.' [2]: 176 

3)

ku-mtu-s

eat-IMPF-LOCUT

ku-mtu-s

eat-IMPF-LOCUT

'I am eating.' [2]: 176 

There are also mood inflections that display a variety of meanings and discover a less cooperative group than the rest in semantically and syntactically manners. The mood marker na is only utilized for past counterfactual clauses such as before tense marking and after person marking. An s would be used for Locutor while an unmarked form would go for the Non-Locutor. Negation and interrogation inflections are only used for content question forms or by going through auxiliary verbs. The inflectional marker ma is considered both a negative inflectional marker and a ‘homophonous interrogative marker’ at the same time.[2]

Sentence Structure edit

Parts of Speech: noun, pronoun, adjective, verbs, post-positions, adverbs, interjections, discourse particles

AOV/SV organization

Constituent order edit

Subject Temporal Adjuncts Locational Adjuncts Circumstantial Adjuncts Non-subject Complements Manner Adverbials Verb
  • Temporal adjuncts: when, how long, or how frequent the action happened
  • Locational adjuncts: where the action happened
  • Circumstantial adjuncts: adds information about the action
  • Non-subject complements:
  • Manner adverbials: tell how something happens (happily, tragically, simply, gently, etc.)[2]

Noun Phrase Construction edit

Either:
  • Possessive adjective
  • Demonstrative adjective
  • Postpositional phrase
Quantifier Descriptive Adjective Noun

[2]

Word Classes edit

Discourse particles [2]: 100 
=na Topic marker
=miŋ Restrictive marker
=kas Additive marker
=ma Interrogative marker
=ma Temporal marker
=ka Emphasis marker

Noun Phrase edit

an

this

DemAdj

kɨh

leaf

N

an kɨh

this leaf

DemAdj N

“This leaf.” [2]: 118 

Noun Phrase edit

katsa

big

ADJ

yal

house

N

katsa yal

big house

ADJ N

“A large house” [2]: 91 

Noun Phrase (past) edit

wakata

cattle

ii-tɨ-zi

die-PAST-NONLOCUT

wakata ii-tɨ-zi

cattle die-PAST-NONLOCUT

“The cow died” [2]: 120 

Plural Possessive adjectives edit

au

we

yal

house

au yal

we house

“Our house.” [2]: 124 

-a speaker can use singular form or the plural subject pronoun[2]

Noun Phrase edit

The next two examples shows Unmarked nature of S and A, and the division of O between referential human (accusatory) and other (unmarked)

Demetrio

Demetrio

A

na-wa

1SG-ACC

O (ref. human)

pyan-tɨ-tɨ-s

hit-TERM-PAST-LOCUT:UNDER

V

Demetrio na-wa pyan-tɨ-tɨ-s

Demetrio 1SG-ACC hit-TERM-PAST-LOCUT:UNDER

A {O (ref. human)} V

“Demetrio hit me.” [2]: 65 

Demetrio

Demetrio

A

kuzhu

pig

O (not ref. human)

pay-t

buy-SV

V

kway-zi

DROP-NONLOCUT

 

Demetrio kuzhu pay-t kway-zi

Demetrio pig buy-SV DROP-NONLOCUT

A {O (not ref. human)} V {}

“Demetrio bought a pig.” [2]: 65 

Transitive Verbs edit

na=na

1SG.(NOM)=TOP

SUBJ

Santos=ta

Santos=ACC

OBJ

namna-mtu-s

follow/catch:up-IMPF-LOCUT

V

na=na Santos=ta namna-mtu-s

1SG.(NOM)=TOP Santos=ACC follow/catch:up-IMPF-LOCUT

SUBJ OBJ V

“I am following Santos.” [2]: 100 

Ditransitive Verbs edit

Camilo=na

Camilo=TOP

SUBJ

na-wa

1SG-ACC

OBJ(1‍)

pala

plantain

OBJ(2‍)

kwin-tɨ-s

give-PAST-LOCUT:UNDER

V

Camilo=na na-wa pala kwin-tɨ-s

Camilo=TOP 1SG-ACC plantain give-PAST-LOCUT:UNDER

SUBJ OBJ(1‍) OBJ(2‍) V

“Camilo gave me a plantain.” [2]: 102 

Postpositional Phrase edit

[mesa=ta

[table=in

LOC.PP

libro]

book]

Noun

kwin-zha

give-IMP.1OBJ

 

[mesa=ta libro] kwin-zha

[table=in book] give-IMP.1OBJ

LOC.PP Noun {}

“Give me the book on the table.” [2]: 118 

Causative edit

tɨnta

strong

awa

person

uk

stone

man

move(1‍)

ki-nin-tu

move((2‍)-CAUS-IMPFPART

tɨnta awa uk man ki-nin-tu

strong person stone move(1‍) move((2‍)-CAUS-IMPFPART

“The strong man moved the stone (caused the stone to move).” [2]: 165 

Semblative postposition edit

shitshu=kana

bird=like

kwiyan-tu=na

cry-IMPFPART=TOP

shitshu=kana kwiyan-tu=na

bird=like cry-IMPFPART=TOP

“She cries like a bird.” [2]: 144 

References edit

  1. ^ a b Cuaiquer at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw Curnow 1997.
  3. ^ Moseley, Christopher, ed. (2010). Atlas of the World’s Languages in Danger (3 ed.). Paris: UNESCO Publishing. p. 16-17. ISBN 978-92-3-104096-2.
  4. ^ a b c Awa–Cuaiquer, per SIL, Ethnologue, 1986 and 1991. Retrieved 23 April 2012.
  5. ^ Curnow 2002.
  6. ^ Cysouw, Michael (2003). The Paradigmatic Structure of Person Marking. Oxford University Press. p. 43–44. ISBN 9780199554263.
  7. ^ "Awa Pit / Cuaiquer alphabet, pronunciation and language". omniglot.com. Retrieved 2020-12-11.
  8. ^ Curnow & Liddicoat 1998.
  • Curnow, Timothy Jowan (August 1997). (PDF) (PhD thesis). Canberra: Australian National University. Archived from the original on Aug 30, 2021.
  • Curnow, Timothy Jowan; Liddicoat, Anthony J. (1998). "The Barbacoan Languages of Colombia and Ecuador". Anthropological Linguistics. 40 (3): 384–408. JSTOR 30028647.
  • Curnow, Timothy Jowan (2002). "Conjunct/disjunct marking in Awa Pit". Linguistics - An Interdisciplinary Journal of the Language Sciences. 40 (3): 611–627. doi:10.1515/ling.2002.025.

External links edit

  • "Cuaiquer Indian Language (Awa Pit, Awa-Cuaiquer)". native-languages.org.
  • "Gramática pedagógica del Awapit" (A learner's grammar of Awapit) –  direct download link to Microsoft Word document in Spanish, available from here (via )

OBJ: object SUBJ: subject A: transitive subject O: transitive object N: noun V: verb DROP: perfective serial verb "kway-" IMP: imperative IMPF: imperfective aspect IMPFPART: imperfective participle LOC: locative postposition LOCUT: locutor person marker NONLOCUT: non-locutor person marker POSS: possessive postposition PP: postpositional phrase SV: serial verb marker TERM: terminative aspect UNDER: undergoer

language, located, region, colombia, ecuador, speaking, people, indigenous, group, settled, between, andes, mountains, western, coast, otherwise, known, cuaiquer, coaiquer, cuayquer, kwaiker, kwayquer, both, group, name, classified, part, barbacoan, language, . Located in the region of Colombia and Ecuador the Awa or Awa Pit speaking people is an indigenous group settled between the Andes Mountains and the Western Coast Awa Pit or otherwise known as Cuaiquer Coaiquer Cuayquer Kwaiker Kwayquer etc in both group and name is classified as part of the Barbacoan language 2 Another term that this group goes by is the Inkal Awa or the mountain people to distinguish themselves from other indigenous groups within that region 2 Awa pit is classified by UNESCO as a severely endangered language 3 The Awa pit language has a subject object verb structure and has adopted the Latin script 4 Grammatically Awa pit uses a characteristic conjunct disjunct system of verb suffixes for person marking which displays similarities with some Tibeto Burman languages such as the Newari language of Kathmandu 2 5 6 CuaiquerAwa PitNative toColombia EcuadorEthnicity15 000 Awa Kwaiker 2007 1 Native speakers13 000 2008 1 Language familyBarbacoan AwanCuaiquerLanguage codesISO 639 3 a href https iso639 3 sil org code kwi class extiw title iso639 3 kwi kwi a Glottologawac1239ELPAwa Pit Contents 1 Speakers and characteristics 2 Phonology 2 1 Consonants 2 2 Vowels 3 Word Forms 3 1 Possessive Word Forms 3 2 Plural Possessive Adjectives 3 3 Alienable Possession and Kinship Relations 3 4 Whole Part 3 5 Inflections 4 Sentence Structure 4 1 Constituent order 4 2 Noun Phrase Construction 4 3 Word Classes 4 4 Noun Phrase 4 5 Noun Phrase 4 6 Noun Phrase past 4 7 Plural Possessive adjectives 4 8 Noun Phrase 4 9 Transitive Verbs 4 10 Ditransitive Verbs 4 11 Postpositional Phrase 4 12 Causative 4 13 Semblative postposition 5 References 6 External linksSpeakers and characteristics editThe Awa pit language has around 21 thousand speakers mostly residing on the Colombian Pacific slopes of the Andes with about a thousand in an adjacent area of Ecuador 4 The Awa Pit language is spoken less and less each year In a study done in 2008 there were about 12 000 Awa Pit speakers but as of 2011 there are about 2 100 speakers left in the provinces of northern Ecuador 7 Most Awa women are monolingual to the Awa Pit language while some men can speak both Spanish and Awa Pit and a very few of these Awa Pit speakers can both read and write the language 2 Literacy among Awa speakers is less than 1 in their native language and under 5 in the secondary Spanish language 4 The Awa people are mostly farmers Their crops include plantains corn sugarcane and beans 2 Many of the Awa do not live near each other they live in scattered settlements often 2 3 kilometers apart and often move depending on the planting and harvesting seasons 2 Phonology editThis article should specify the language of its non English content using lang transliteration for transliterated languages and IPA for phonetic transcriptions with an appropriate ISO 639 code Wikipedia s multilingual support templates may also be used See why September 2020 The Awa Pit inventory is as follows 8 2 Consonants edit Consonant phonemes Bilabial Dental Alveolar Palatal Velarplain lateralNasal m n ɲ ŋPlosive p t kFricative voiceless s ɬ ʃvoiced z ʒApproximant l j wSome dialects can also have phonemic retroflex sounds ʂ tʂ Geminated consonants are noted as pː t ː kː ɲ is the main sound of the consonant sequence nj In word final positions there are two realizations for each stop consonant unreleased p t k or post nasal pᵐ t ⁿ kᵑ Phoneme Allophone Rules p p b C v v ɸ C fricative vl V v b V G v V G v pʷ ɨ t t d C v v 8 C fricative vl V v d C fricative v V v ɾ V G v V G v k k ɡ C v v x C fricative vl V v ɣ V G v V G v s s ts C vl C v V vl dz C v V v ʃ ʃ tʃ C vl C v V vl dʒ C v V v ɬ ɬ h u u ɬ h i ɨ ɨ i l l ʎ ᵈl i j l ᵈl d C l ᵈl elsewhere m m mʷ ɨ n n ŋ C velar n ɲ V high V high nj ɲ ɲ j V a ɲ a j j j ɟ V VVowels edit Vowel phonemes Front Central BackClose i iː ɨ ɨː u uːOpen a aːVoiceless vowels Front Central BackClose i ɨ u Phoneme Allophone Rules i i i e ɪ in closed syllables short or lax ɨ ɨ ɨ e words of more than one syllable ɨ in closed syllables short or lax u u u o ʊ in closed syllables short or lax a a ɔ w C velar ae ɛ e C palatal in a closed syllable aj a C fricative palato alveolar ɐ in closed syllables short or laxWord Forms editPossessive Word Forms edit Possessive word formations in Awa Pit can be used to decipher or specify a certain kind of function or occurrence These range from location object material object whole parts of something and definitions very reminiscent of English prepositions This is partly because of the usage of relational nouns Possession seems to be the main connection that these functions have and in the case of Awa Pit the postposition pa is a known marker or using possessive adjectives is another way It is also explained that In some cases however there is an alternation between a possessive postposition with pa a possessive adjective and a bare noun modifier where the bare noun acting as a modifier must occur directly before the noun it modifies the alternation between these constructions can be seen to depend on humanness and referentiality 2 This means that if a modifying noun is labelled human and referential then a postpositional word form is utilized A possessive adjective is used instead if the non head part is considered pronominal ex Santos paSantos POSSpimpullegSantos pa pimpulSantos POSS leg Santos s leg 2 123 ex apmypimpullegap pimpulmy leg my leg 2 123 ex kwizhadogpimpullegkwizha pimpuldog leg the leg of a the dog 2 123 ex awa waPerson POSSpitlanguage tongueawa wa pitPerson POSS language tongue the person s tongue most likely the person s way of speaking unlikely 2 123 ex awapersonpitlanguage tongueawa pitperson language tongue the language of the people Awa Pit most likely human tongues unlikely 2 123 Ideas of alienable possession and kinship relations necessarily involve the use of the postpositional or possessive adjective constructions with the exception of plural possessive adjectives rather than a bare noun modifier 2 Alienable possession and kinship are basically referencing humans but there are a few cases where possession are fluid enough to contain higher animals therefore treating it like as if it was human Awa Pit personifies it in question ex kwizha wadog POSSpelotaballkwizha wa pelotadog POSS ball the dog s ball 2 123 Plural Possessive Adjectives edit Singular possessive adjectives happen in the assumed slot and descriptive adjectives happen between the possessive adjective and the main head noun itself ex apmykatsabigtɨlblackkuzhupigap katsa tɨl kuzhumy big black pig my big black pig 2 124 There are no specific plural possessive adjective constructions because In order to translate a phrase such as our house speakers of Awa Pit have two options the more common option is to simply use the singular possessive adjective 2 ex apmyyalhouseap yalmy house my house our house 2 124 There is another option and that is to use the plural subject pronoun unmalleable into the bare noun modifier no adjectives can get between the pronoun and the subsequent noun ex auweyalhouseau yalwe house our house 2 124 Alienable Possession and Kinship Relations edit Non head nominal is considered referential and human and the involvement of pa or a possessive adjective is needed Kinship relations are similar to alienable possession but is different when it comes to body part possession because the non head noun is not considered human nor referential Essentially in Awa Pit there is no difference between alienable and inalienable possession in an NP That is due to the fact that different forms are reserved for referential human possession no matter the possession s nature 2 1 Santos paSantos POSSkuzhupigSantos pa kuzhuSantos POSS pig Santos s pig 2 125 2 Carmen paCarmen POSSayshpihshsisterCarmen pa ayshpihshCarmen POSS sister Carmen s sister 2 125 3 paynyahiscuchilloknifepaynya cuchillohis knife his knife 2 125 4 apmyakkwamotherap akkwamy mother my mother 2 125 Whole Part edit Part whole relations are incorporated in the same fashion as possession in Awa Pit In this case the whole acts as a modifier while the part acts as the head noun The modifier whole could be a referential human and that means that the formation with pa or a possessive adjective are utilized Non referential human or non humans traced with bare nouns are likely to be used as well It is also worth mentioning that Awa Pit is a Barbacoa language that specializes in placing part whole relationships with a bare noun or a genitive marker 2 1 Santos paSantos POSSsaylarmSantos pa saylSantos POSS arm Santos s arm 2 126 2 apmypimpullegap pimpulmy leg Santos s arm 2 126 3 awapersonkɨzpuheadawa kɨzpuperson head a human s head 2 126 4 tɨtreeayaskintɨ ayatree skin tree bark 2 126 Inflections edit In terms of tense inflections there are formal markers when referring to the past and the future in Awa Pit and there is also an extra subtle category that helps express the present Basically if a marker for the past or future does not display itself in a sentence then the string of inflections most likely represents the present It is worth saying that the present is marked by a zero morpheme in a pure structuralist form since tense markers happen after mood suffixes just before any person markers can appear 2 1 ku mtu ata weat IMPF PAST LOCUT SUBJku mtu ata weat IMPF PAST LOCUT SUBJ I was eating 2 176 2 ku mtu anɨ seat IMPF FUT LOCUTku mtu anɨ seat IMPF FUT LOCUT I will be eating 2 176 3 ku mtu seat IMPF LOCUTku mtu seat IMPF LOCUT I am eating 2 176 There are also mood inflections that display a variety of meanings and discover a less cooperative group than the rest in semantically and syntactically manners The mood marker na is only utilized for past counterfactual clauses such as before tense marking and after person marking An s would be used for Locutor while an unmarked form would go for the Non Locutor Negation and interrogation inflections are only used for content question forms or by going through auxiliary verbs The inflectional marker ma is considered both a negative inflectional marker and a homophonous interrogative marker at the same time 2 Sentence Structure editParts of Speech noun pronoun adjective verbs post positions adverbs interjections discourse particlesAOV SV organization Constituent order edit Subject Temporal Adjuncts Locational Adjuncts Circumstantial Adjuncts Non subject Complements Manner Adverbials VerbTemporal adjuncts when how long or how frequent the action happened Locational adjuncts where the action happened Circumstantial adjuncts adds information about the action Non subject complements Manner adverbials tell how something happens happily tragically simply gently etc 2 Noun Phrase Construction edit Either Possessive adjective Demonstrative adjective Postpositional phrase Quantifier Descriptive Adjective Noun 2 Word Classes edit Discourse particles 2 100 na Topic marker miŋ Restrictive marker kas Additive marker ma Interrogative marker ma Temporal marker ka Emphasis markerNoun Phrase edit anthisDemAdjkɨhleafNan kɨhthis leafDemAdj N This leaf 2 118 Noun Phrase edit katsabigADJyalhouseNkatsa yalbig houseADJ N A large house 2 91 Noun Phrase past edit wakatacattleii tɨ zidie PAST NONLOCUTwakata ii tɨ zicattle die PAST NONLOCUT The cow died 2 120 Plural Possessive adjectives edit auweyalhouseau yalwe house Our house 2 124 a speaker can use singular form or the plural subject pronoun 2 Noun Phrase edit The next two examples shows Unmarked nature of S and A and the division of O between referential human accusatory and other unmarked DemetrioDemetrioAna wa1SG ACCO ref human pyan tɨ tɨ shit TERM PAST LOCUT UNDERVDemetrio na wa pyan tɨ tɨ sDemetrio 1SG ACC hit TERM PAST LOCUT UNDERA O ref human V Demetrio hit me 2 65 DemetrioDemetrioAkuzhupigO not ref human pay tbuy SVVkway ziDROP NONLOCUT Demetrio kuzhu pay t kway ziDemetrio pig buy SV DROP NONLOCUTA O not ref human V Demetrio bought a pig 2 65 Transitive Verbs edit na na1SG NOM TOPSUBJSantos taSantos ACCOBJnamna mtu sfollow catch up IMPF LOCUTVna na Santos ta namna mtu s1SG NOM TOP Santos ACC follow catch up IMPF LOCUTSUBJ OBJ V I am following Santos 2 100 Ditransitive Verbs edit Camilo naCamilo TOPSUBJna wa1SG ACCOBJ 1 palaplantainOBJ 2 kwin tɨ sgive PAST LOCUT UNDERVCamilo na na wa pala kwin tɨ sCamilo TOP 1SG ACC plantain give PAST LOCUT UNDERSUBJ OBJ 1 OBJ 2 V Camilo gave me a plantain 2 102 Postpositional Phrase edit mesa ta table inLOC PPlibro book Nounkwin zhagive IMP 1OBJ mesa ta libro kwin zha table in book give IMP 1OBJLOC PP Noun Give me the book on the table 2 118 Causative edit tɨntastrongawapersonukstonemanmove 1 ki nin tumove 2 CAUS IMPFPARTtɨnta awa uk man ki nin tustrong person stone move 1 move 2 CAUS IMPFPART The strong man moved the stone caused the stone to move 2 165 Semblative postposition edit shitshu kanabird likekwiyan tu nacry IMPFPART TOPshitshu kana kwiyan tu nabird like cry IMPFPART TOP She cries like a bird 2 144 References edit a b Cuaiquer at Ethnologue 18th ed 2015 subscription required a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw Curnow 1997 Moseley Christopher ed 2010 Atlas of the World s Languages in Danger 3 ed Paris UNESCO Publishing p 16 17 ISBN 978 92 3 104096 2 a b c Awa Cuaiquer per SIL Ethnologue 1986 and 1991 Retrieved 23 April 2012 Curnow 2002 Cysouw Michael 2003 The Paradigmatic Structure of Person Marking Oxford University Press p 43 44 ISBN 9780199554263 Awa Pit Cuaiquer alphabet pronunciation and language omniglot com Retrieved 2020 12 11 Curnow amp Liddicoat 1998 Curnow Timothy Jowan August 1997 A Grammar of Awa Pit Cuaiquer An indigenous language of south western Colombia PDF PhD thesis Canberra Australian National University Archived from the original on Aug 30 2021 Curnow Timothy Jowan Liddicoat Anthony J 1998 The Barbacoan Languages of Colombia and Ecuador Anthropological Linguistics 40 3 384 408 JSTOR 30028647 Curnow Timothy Jowan 2002 Conjunct disjunct marking in Awa Pit Linguistics An Interdisciplinary Journal of the Language Sciences 40 3 611 627 doi 10 1515 ling 2002 025 External links edit Cuaiquer Indian Language Awa Pit Awa Cuaiquer native languages org Gramatica pedagogica del Awapit A learner s grammar of Awapit direct download link to Microsoft Word document in Spanish available from here via Sasiku Project OBJ object SUBJ subject A transitive subject O transitive object N noun V verb DROP perfective serial verb kway IMP imperative IMPF imperfective aspect IMPFPART imperfective participle LOC locative postposition LOCUT locutor person marker NONLOCUT non locutor person marker POSS possessive postposition PP postpositional phrase SV serial verb marker TERM terminative aspect UNDER undergoer Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Awa Pit language amp oldid 1215040750, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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