fbpx
Wikipedia

Nadahup languages

The Nadahup languages, also known as Makú (Macú) or Vaupés–Japurá, form a small language family in Brazil, Colombia, and Venezuela. The name Makú is pejorative, being derived from an Arawakan word meaning "without speech". Nadahup is an acronym of the constituent languages.[1]

Nadahup
Naduhup, Makú
Geographic
distribution
Amazon
Linguistic classificationOne of the world's primary language families
Subdivisions
  • Nadëb–Kuyawi
  • Daw
  • Hupda–Yuhup
  • ? Kakua–Nukak
Glottolognada1235

The Nadahup family should not be confused with several other languages which go by the name Makú. There are proposals linking this unclassified language with Nadahup, but also with other languages.

External relationships edit

Martins (2005: 342–370) groups the Arawakan and Nadahup languages together as part of a proposed Makúan-Arawakan (Nadahup-Arawakan) family,[2] but this proposal has been rejected by Aikhenvald (2006: 237).[3]

Epps and Bolaños (2017) accept the unity of the four Nadahup languages, but do not consider Puinave to be related.[4]

Language contact edit

Jolkesky (2016) notes that there are lexical similarities with the Arawa, Guahibo, and Tupi language families due to contact.[5] A discussion of lexical and phonological correspondences between the Nadahup (Vaupés-Japurá) and Tupi languages can be found in Jolkesky and Cabral (2011).[6] Nadahup languages also have various loanwords from Tucanoan languages[7] and Nheengatu.[8]

Languages edit

Nadahup consists of about four languages, based on mutual intelligibility. Nadeb and Kuyawi, Hup and Yahup, and Nukak and Kakwa, however, share 90% of their vocabulary and are mutually intelligible, and so are separate languages only in a sociolinguistic sense. These four branches are not close: Although the family was first suggested in 1906, only 300 cognates have been found, which include pronouns but no other grammatical forms.

gloss Nadëb Hup Dâw Nïkâk
father ʔɨb ʔip ʔiːp ʔiːp (Kakwa ʔip)
egg tɨb tip tɨp tip (Kakwa)
water mi mĩh mĩʔ mah (Kakwa)
tooth təɡᵑ (Kuyawi) təɡᵑ təɡ
house mõj mɔ͂j mɨ͂

Nadëb may be the most divergent; of the other languages, there is disagreement on the placement of Nïkâk. Martins (1999) propose two classifications, pending further research:

Martins, proposal A
Nadahup 

Nadëb (also known as Kaburi; plus Kuyawi dialect)

 Vaupés 

Nïkâk (also known as Nukak, plus dialect Kakwa)

Dâw (also known as Kuri-Dou, pejorative Kamã)

Hup (also known as Jupdá; plus dialect Yuhup/Yahup)

Martins, proposal B
Nadahup 

Nadëb (with Kuyawi dialect)

 Daw–Hup 

Dâw

Hup (with Yuhup dialect)

Nïkâk (with Kakwa dialect)

However, Epps considers Hup and Yahup to be distinct languages, and maintains that the inclusion of the poorly attested Nukak and Kakwa has not been demonstrated and is in fact highly dubious:[9]

Epps
Nadahup 

Nadëb (with Kuyawi dialect)

 Vaupés 

Jolkesky (2016) edit

Internal classification by Jolkesky (2016):[5]

( = extinct)

This classification is also repeated in Nikulin (2019).[10]

Typology edit

Dâw and Hup—especially Hup—have undergone grammatical restructuring under Tucano influence. They have lost prefixes but acquired suffixes from grammaticalized verb roots. They also have heavily monosyllabic roots, as can be seen by the reduction of Portuguese loan words to their stressed syllable, as in Dâw yẽl’ "money", from Portuguese dinheiro. Nadëb and Nïkâk, on the other hand, have polysyllabic roots. Nïkâk allows a single prefix per word, whereas Nadëb, which lies outside the Vaupés language area, is heavily prefixing and polysynthetic: Up to nine prefixes per word (which is highly unusual for the Amazon), with incorporation of nouns, prepositions, and adverbs.

Genetic relations edit

Rivet (from 1920), Kaufman (1994) and Pozzobon (1997) include Puinave within the family. However, many of the claimed cognate sets are spurious.[11]

Henley, Mattéi-Müller and Reid (1996) present evidence that the Hodï language (also known as Yuwana) is related.

Puinavean forms part of a hypothetical Macro-Puinavean family along with the Arutani–Sape families and the Máku language.

Macro-Puinavean is included in Joseph Greenberg's larger Macro-Tucanoan stock, but this is universally rejected. Another spurious larger grouping is Morris Swadesh's Macro-Makú.

Vocabulary edit

Loukotka (1968) lists the following basic vocabulary items for the Macú languages.[12]

gloss Querarí Puináve Curicuriaí Dóu Tiquié Húbde Yehúbde Papury Marahan Nadëb Par. Boá-Boá
one bignõũ hätämad méid méẽ taĩyába aihúb koop sét hẽ yavúratíb
two txénõũ kán témid tubm mbeʔé kognáb powoːbe pawóp hẽ magchíg
three bexkámänõũ hepeyad mtaʔneuáp motuáb móneguap moraáb manap tamawoob hẽ hayo
head uaitíbn a-huyád nu deu-nũ nu nux nuuh
tooth mäú mo-lóg táki deu-tógn tágn tagn tagn tang yö-tog tëg yi-tog
woman yádn de ai aːĩa áei amáidn aiyab taei ỹnh maria
water éd néx noː ndé nde nde dex nahöru naëng ugna
fire tekéd ndé behaú behoː ndégnho tegn tegn tenghon tëëg hõõ tahõ
tobacco héb xob hót hũúd hót hod hud hot exuta hũũt
jaguar txamní yotdam yám yampi yám ñaám nyaam yaam awat awad duvád
tapir híuibe yap táx tax ta ta tógö t'ëëng taígn
house me mo táup tob mõi mói móĩ mooi tob tób tóba

Proto-language edit

For a list of selected Proto-Eastern Makú reconstructions by Martins (2005),[8] see the corresponding Portuguese article.

Bibliography edit

  • Campbell, Lyle. (1997). American Indian languages: The historical linguistics of Native America. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-509427-1.
  • Greenberg, Joseph H. (1987). Language in the Americas. Stanford: Stanford University Press.
  • Henley, Paul; Marie-Claude Mattéi-Müller and Howard Reid (1996): "Cultural and linguistic affinities of the foraging people of North Amazonia: a new perspective"; Antropológica 83: 3–37. Caracas.
  • Kaufman, Terrence. (1990). Language history in South America: What we know and how to know more. In D. L. Payne (Ed.), Amazonian linguistics: Studies in lowland South American languages (pp. 13–67). Austin: University of Texas Press. ISBN 0-292-70414-3.
  • Kaufman, Terrence. (1992) Guta
  • Kaufman, Terrence. (1994). The native languages of South America. In C. Mosley & R. E. Asher (Eds.), Atlas of the world's languages (pp. 46–76). London: Routledge.
  • Pozzobon, Jorge (1997). Langue, société et numération chez les Indiens Makú (Haut Rio Negro, Brésil). Journal de la Société de Américanistes de París 83: 159–172. París.
  • Rivet, Paul and Constant Tastevin 1920: "Affinités du Makú et du Puinave"; Journal de la Société des Américanistes de París, n.s. t XII: 69–82. París.
  • Rivet, Paul; P. P. Kok and C. Tastevin 1925: "Nouvele contributión a l'étude de la langue Makú; International Journal of American Linguistics, vol. 3, n. 24, p.p. 129–132. New York.
Lexicons
  • Bolaños, K. (2010). Kakua phonology: first approach. University of Texas at Austin.
  • Conduff, K. W. (2006). Diccionario situacional del idioma Nukak. Bogotá: Iglesia Cristiana Nuevos Horizontes.
  • Erickson, T.; Erickson, C. G. (1993). Vocabulario Jupda-Español-Português. Santafé de Bogotá: Asociación Summer Institute of Linguistics.
  • Maciel, I. (1991). Alguns aspectos fonológicos e morfológicos da língua Máku. Masters dissertation. Brasilia: Universidade de Brasília.
  • Martins, V. (1999). Dicionário Nadëb Português / Português Nadëb. (Manuscript).
  • Martins, V. (2005). Reconstrução Fonológica do Protomaku Oriental. Amsterdam: Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam. (Doctoral dissertation).
  • Ramirez, H. (2006). A Língua dos Hupd'äh do Alto Rio Negro: dicionário e guia de conversação. São Paulo: Associação Saúde Sem Limites.
  • Migliazza, E. C. (1965). Fonología Makú. Boletim do MPEG. Antropología, 25:1-17.
  • Mattei-Müller, M. (n.d.). Vocabulario Comparativo Castellano-Kakwa Vaupes-Guaviare-Hodï. (Manuscript).

References edit

  1. ^ Epps. P. A Grammar of Hup. Mouton de Gruyter. 2008. ISBN 978-3-11-019588-0.
  2. ^ Martins, Valteir. 2005. Reconstruçâo fonológica do protomaku oriental. Utrecht: Landelijke Onderzoekschool Taalwetenschap.
  3. ^ Aikhenvald, Alexandra Y. 2006. Semantics and pragmatics of grammatical relations in the Vaupés linguistic area. In: Alexandra Y. Aikhenvald and R. M. W. Dixon (eds.), Grammars in Contact: A Cross-linguistics Typology, 237–266. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  4. ^ Epps, Patience; Katherine Bolaños. Reconsidering the “Makú” Language Family of Northwest Amazonia. International Journal of American Linguistics, Chicago, v. 83, n. 3, 467–507, Jul. 2017.
  5. ^ a b Jolkesky, Marcelo Pinho De Valhery. 2016. Estudo arqueo-ecolinguístico das terras tropicais sul-americanas. Ph.D. dissertation, University of Brasília.
  6. ^ Jolkesky, Marcelo; Ana Suelly Arruda Câmara Cabral. 2011. Desvendando as relações entre Tupí e Vaupés-Japurá. Encontro Internacional: Arqueologia e Linguística Histórica das Línguas Indígenas Sul-Americanas. Brasília, 24-28 October 2011.
  7. ^ Epps, Patience. 2006. The Vaupes Melting Pot: Tucanoan Influence on Hup.
  8. ^ a b Martins, Valteir. 2005. Reconstrução Fonológica do Protomaku Oriental. LOT Dissertation Series. 104. Utrecht: LOT Netherlands Graduate School of Linguistics. (Doctoral dissertation, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam).
  9. ^ Patience Epps, The Vaupés Melting Pot: Tucanoan Influence on Hup. In Aikhenvald & Dixon, Grammars in contact: a cross-linguistic typology, 2006:130
  10. ^ Nikulin, Andrey V. 2019. The classification of the languages of the South American Lowlands: State-of-the-art and challenges / Классификация языков востока Южной Америки. Illič-Svityč (Nostratic) Seminar / Ностратический семинар, Higher School of Economics, October 17, 2019.
  11. ^ Patience Epps, 2008. A Grammar of Hup. Mouton de Gruyter.
  12. ^ Loukotka, Čestmír (1968). Classification of South American Indian languages. Los Angeles: UCLA Latin American Center.

External links edit

  • Hup Vocabulary List (from the World Loanword Database)

nadahup, languages, confused, with, maku, language, also, known, makú, macú, vaupés, japurá, form, small, language, family, brazil, colombia, venezuela, name, makú, pejorative, being, derived, from, arawakan, word, meaning, without, speech, nadahup, acronym, c. Not to be confused with Maku language The Nadahup languages also known as Maku Macu or Vaupes Japura form a small language family in Brazil Colombia and Venezuela The name Maku is pejorative being derived from an Arawakan word meaning without speech Nadahup is an acronym of the constituent languages 1 NadahupNaduhup MakuGeographicdistributionAmazonLinguistic classificationOne of the world s primary language familiesSubdivisionsNadeb Kuyawi Daw Hupda Yuhup Kakua NukakGlottolognada1235The Nadahup family should not be confused with several other languages which go by the name Maku There are proposals linking this unclassified language with Nadahup but also with other languages Contents 1 External relationships 2 Language contact 3 Languages 3 1 Jolkesky 2016 4 Typology 5 Genetic relations 6 Vocabulary 7 Proto language 8 Bibliography 9 References 10 External linksExternal relationships editMartins 2005 342 370 groups the Arawakan and Nadahup languages together as part of a proposed Makuan Arawakan Nadahup Arawakan family 2 but this proposal has been rejected by Aikhenvald 2006 237 3 Epps and Bolanos 2017 accept the unity of the four Nadahup languages but do not consider Puinave to be related 4 Language contact editJolkesky 2016 notes that there are lexical similarities with the Arawa Guahibo and Tupi language families due to contact 5 A discussion of lexical and phonological correspondences between the Nadahup Vaupes Japura and Tupi languages can be found in Jolkesky and Cabral 2011 6 Nadahup languages also have various loanwords from Tucanoan languages 7 and Nheengatu 8 Languages editNadahup consists of about four languages based on mutual intelligibility Nadeb and Kuyawi Hup and Yahup and Nukak and Kakwa however share 90 of their vocabulary and are mutually intelligible and so are separate languages only in a sociolinguistic sense These four branches are not close Although the family was first suggested in 1906 only 300 cognates have been found which include pronouns but no other grammatical forms gloss Nadeb Hup Daw Nikakfather ʔɨb ʔip ʔiːp ʔiːp Kakwa ʔip egg tɨb tip tɨp tip Kakwa water mi mĩh mĩʔ mah Kakwa tooth teɡᵑ Kuyawi teɡᵑ teɡ house moj mɔ j mɨ Nadeb may be the most divergent of the other languages there is disagreement on the placement of Nikak Martins 1999 propose two classifications pending further research Martins proposal ANadahup Nadeb also known as Kaburi plus Kuyawi dialect Vaupes Nikak also known as Nukak plus dialect Kakwa Daw also known as Kuri Dou pejorative Kama Hup also known as Jupda plus dialect Yuhup Yahup Martins proposal BNadahup Nadeb with Kuyawi dialect Daw Hup DawHup with Yuhup dialect Nikak with Kakwa dialect However Epps considers Hup and Yahup to be distinct languages and maintains that the inclusion of the poorly attested Nukak and Kakwa has not been demonstrated and is in fact highly dubious 9 EppsNadahup Nadeb with Kuyawi dialect Vaupes DawHupYuhup Jolkesky 2016 edit Internal classification by Jolkesky 2016 5 extinct Puinave Nadahup Nadahup Nadeb Nadeb do Rio Negro Nadeb do Rocado Hup Daw Daw Hup Hupda Yuhup Puinave Kak Puinave Wansohot Kak Kakwa Nukak This classification is also repeated in Nikulin 2019 10 Typology editDaw and Hup especially Hup have undergone grammatical restructuring under Tucano influence They have lost prefixes but acquired suffixes from grammaticalized verb roots They also have heavily monosyllabic roots as can be seen by the reduction of Portuguese loan words to their stressed syllable as in Daw yẽl money from Portuguese dinheiro Nadeb and Nikak on the other hand have polysyllabic roots Nikak allows a single prefix per word whereas Nadeb which lies outside the Vaupes language area is heavily prefixing and polysynthetic Up to nine prefixes per word which is highly unusual for the Amazon with incorporation of nouns prepositions and adverbs Genetic relations editRivet from 1920 Kaufman 1994 and Pozzobon 1997 include Puinave within the family However many of the claimed cognate sets are spurious 11 Henley Mattei Muller and Reid 1996 present evidence that the Hodi language also known as Yuwana is related Puinavean forms part of a hypothetical Macro Puinavean family along with the Arutani Sape families and the Maku language Macro Puinavean is included in Joseph Greenberg s larger Macro Tucanoan stock but this is universally rejected Another spurious larger grouping is Morris Swadesh s Macro Maku Vocabulary editLoukotka 1968 lists the following basic vocabulary items for the Macu languages 12 gloss Querari Puinave Curicuriai Dou Tiquie Hubde Yehubde Papury Marahan Nadeb Par Boa Boaone bignoũ hatamad meid meẽ taĩyaba aihub koop set hẽ yavuratibtwo txenoũ kan temid tubm mbeʔe kognab powoːbe pawop hẽ magchigthree bexkamanoũ hepeyad mtaʔneuap motuab moneguap moraab manap tamawoob hẽ hayohead uaitibn a huyad nu deu nũ nu nu nũ nux nuuhtooth mau mo log taki deu togn tagn tagn tagn tang yo tog teg yi togwoman yadn de ai aːĩa aei amaidn aiyab taei ỹnh mariawater ma ed nex noː nde nde nde dex nahoru naeng ugnafire teked nde behau behoː ndegnho tegn tegn tenghon teeg hoo tahotobacco heb xob hot hũud hot hod hud hot exuta hũũtjaguar txamni yotdam yam yampi yam naam nyaam yaam awat awad duvadtapir hiuibe yap tax tax da ta ta togo t eeng taignhouse me mo taup tob moi moi moĩ mooi tob tob tobaProto language editFor a list of selected Proto Eastern Maku reconstructions by Martins 2005 8 see the corresponding Portuguese article Bibliography editCampbell Lyle 1997 American Indian languages The historical linguistics of Native America New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 509427 1 Greenberg Joseph H 1987 Language in the Americas Stanford Stanford University Press Henley Paul Marie Claude Mattei Muller and Howard Reid 1996 Cultural and linguistic affinities of the foraging people of North Amazonia a new perspective Antropologica83 3 37 Caracas Kaufman Terrence 1990 Language history in South America What we know and how to know more In D L Payne Ed Amazonian linguistics Studies in lowland South American languages pp 13 67 Austin University of Texas Press ISBN 0 292 70414 3 Kaufman Terrence 1992 Guta Kaufman Terrence 1994 The native languages of South America In C Mosley amp R E Asher Eds Atlas of the world s languages pp 46 76 London Routledge Pozzobon Jorge 1997 Langue societe et numeration chez les Indiens Maku Haut Rio Negro Bresil Journal de la Societe de Americanistes de Paris 83 159 172 Paris Rivet Paul and Constant Tastevin 1920 Affinites du Maku et du Puinave Journal de la Societe des Americanistes de Paris n s t XII 69 82 Paris Rivet Paul P P Kok and C Tastevin 1925 Nouvele contribution a l etude de la langue Maku International Journal of American Linguistics vol 3 n 24 p p 129 132 New York LexiconsBolanos K 2010 Kakua phonology first approach University of Texas at Austin Conduff K W 2006 Diccionario situacional del idioma Nukak Bogota Iglesia Cristiana Nuevos Horizontes Erickson T Erickson C G 1993 Vocabulario Jupda Espanol Portugues Santafe de Bogota Asociacion Summer Institute of Linguistics Maciel I 1991 Alguns aspectos fonologicos e morfologicos da lingua Maku Masters dissertation Brasilia Universidade de Brasilia Martins V 1999 Dicionario Nadeb Portugues Portugues Nadeb Manuscript Martins V 2005 Reconstrucao Fonologica do Protomaku Oriental Amsterdam Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam Doctoral dissertation Ramirez H 2006 A Lingua dos Hupd ah do Alto Rio Negro dicionario e guia de conversacao Sao Paulo Associacao Saude Sem Limites Migliazza E C 1965 Fonologia Maku Boletim do MPEG Antropologia 25 1 17 Mattei Muller M n d Vocabulario Comparativo Castellano Kakwa Vaupes Guaviare Hodi Manuscript References edit Epps P A Grammar of Hup Mouton de Gruyter 2008 ISBN 978 3 11 019588 0 Martins Valteir 2005 Reconstrucao fonologica do protomaku oriental Utrecht Landelijke Onderzoekschool Taalwetenschap Aikhenvald Alexandra Y 2006 Semantics and pragmatics of grammatical relations in the Vaupes linguistic area In Alexandra Y Aikhenvald and R M W Dixon eds Grammars in Contact A Cross linguistics Typology 237 266 Oxford Oxford University Press Epps Patience Katherine Bolanos Reconsidering the Maku Language Family of Northwest Amazonia International Journal of American Linguistics Chicago v 83 n 3 467 507 Jul 2017 a b Jolkesky Marcelo Pinho De Valhery 2016 Estudo arqueo ecolinguistico das terras tropicais sul americanas Ph D dissertation University of Brasilia Jolkesky Marcelo Ana Suelly Arruda Camara Cabral 2011 Desvendando as relacoes entre Tupi e Vaupes Japura Encontro Internacional Arqueologia e Linguistica Historica das Linguas Indigenas Sul Americanas Brasilia 24 28 October 2011 Epps Patience 2006 The Vaupes Melting Pot Tucanoan Influence on Hup a b Martins Valteir 2005 Reconstrucao Fonologica do Protomaku Oriental LOT Dissertation Series 104 Utrecht LOT Netherlands Graduate School of Linguistics Doctoral dissertation Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam Patience Epps The Vaupes Melting Pot Tucanoan Influence on Hup In Aikhenvald amp Dixon Grammars in contact a cross linguistic typology 2006 130 Nikulin Andrey V 2019 The classification of the languages of the South American Lowlands State of the art and challenges Klassifikaciya yazykov vostoka Yuzhnoj Ameriki Illic Svityc Nostratic Seminar Nostraticheskij seminar Higher School of Economics October 17 2019 Patience Epps 2008 A Grammar of Hup Mouton de Gruyter Loukotka Cestmir 1968 Classification of South American Indian languages Los Angeles UCLA Latin American Center External links edit nbsp Wiktionary has a list of reconstructed forms at Appendix Proto Maku reconstructions Hup Vocabulary List from the World Loanword Database Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nadahup languages amp oldid 1190780927, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.