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Northern Jê languages

The Northern Jê[1]: 6  or Core Jê[2] languages (Portuguese: Jê Setentrionais) are a branch of the Jê languages constituted by the Timbira dialect continuum (which includes Canela, Krahô, Pykobjê, Krikati, Parkatêjê, and Kỳikatêjê) and a number of languages spoken to the west of the Tocantins River, the Trans-Tocantins languages Apinajé, Mẽbêngôkre, Kĩsêdjê, and Tapayúna. Together with Panará (and its predecessor, Southern Kayapó), they form the Goyaz branch of the family.

The term Northern Jê has been sometimes used to refer to a broader group of languages, which also includes Panará and Southern Kayapó.[3]: 547 [2] In this article, the label Northern Jê is used in the narrow sense (that is, excluding Panará and Southern Kayapó).

Phonology edit

The Northern Jê languages have been noted for their outstanding relation between the nasality vs. orality of the nuclei and the allophonic realization of the adjacent nasal consonants. In Apinajé[4] and Kĩsêdjê,[5]: 127–8  for instance, underlying nasal consonants surface as partially oral (for example, /m/ [mb]) if the nucleus of the syllable is oral; this allophony pattern has been characterized by Wetzels and Nevins (2018) as nasal shielding.[6]: 860 

All Northern Jê languages have similar phonotactic restrictions. Typically, the maximal syllable is CRWVC, where C stands for a consonant, R for a rhotic (typically /ɾ/), W for a glide (/w j/), and V for a vowel. Several additional co-occurrence restrictions apply: only /p m k ŋ/ may form a complex onset with a rhotic, /j/ never follows coronals (i.e., clusters such as ˣ/nj/, ˣ/cj/ or ˣ/pɾj/ are not permitted; */tj/ is reconstructed for Proto-Northern Jê but is not preserved in any contemporary language), and /w/ never follows labials (i.e., */pw pɾw mw bw ww/ are ruled out). In specific languages, some of these restrictions have been altered due to sound change. For example, Kĩsêdjê has lost Proto-Northern Jê */pɾ/ for hr [hɺ] through debuccalization. In Apinajé, the fricatives /v z/ replaced the earlier glides */w j/, resulting in the inversion of the order of the elements in the triconsonantal clusters from CRW to CWR (e.g. */kɾw/ > /kvɾ/), which has been attributed to the different treatment of glides and fricatives by the Sonority Sequencing Principle.[4]: 54  The Timbira varieties only have CRVC and CWVC, but not *CRWVC.

Consonants edit

Onsets edit

The inventory of Proto-Northern Jê onsets (including complex onsets) is reconstructed as follows.[7]: Appendix A  Note that underlying nasals acquired an oral phrase preceding an oral nucleus (this is preserved in all Northern Jê languages with the exception of Mẽbêngôkre, which no longer has the postoralized allophones of the underlying nasal stops). Conversely, the underlying voiced stops */ĵ/ and */g/ were nasalized to *[ɲ] and *[ŋ] preceding nasal nuclei.

labial labial + rhotic dentialveolar palatal velar velar + rhotic
voiceless stops */p/ *[p] */pɾ/ *[pɾ] */t/ *[t] */c/ *[c] */k/ *[k] */kɾ/ *[kɾ]
voiced stops */b/ *[b] (*/d/ *[d]) */ɟ/ (nasal *[ɲ],
oral & stressed *[ɟ],
oral & unstressed *[j])
*/g/ (nasal *[ŋ],
oral *[g])
nasal stops */m/
(nasal *[m],
oral *[mb])
*/mɾ/
(nasal *[mɾ],
oral *[mbɾ])
*/n/
(nasal *[n],
oral *[nd])
*/ɲ/
(nasal —,
oral *[ɲɟ])
*/ŋ/
(nasal *[ŋ],
oral *[ŋg])
*/ŋɾ/
(nasal *[ŋɾ],
oral *[ŋgɾ])
sonorants */w/ *[w] */ɾ/ *[ɾ] */j/ *[j]

Specific Northern Jê languages innovated in multiple ways with respect to the reconstructed inventory. For example, the Timbira languages, Apinajé and the Tapajós languages coincide in no longer employing the feature [voice] (in most cases, however, the oppositions present in Proto-Northern Jê have been preserved by introducing contrastive aspirated consonants). In the Tapajós languages, the palatal stops were dentalized, whereas the original dentialveolar consonants acquired considerable retraction. In addition, Tapayúna got rid of all labial consonants.[7]: 559–61 

The following table shows the usual reflexes of the Proto-Northern Jê onsets in the individual languages. The reconstructions are cited after Nikulin & Salanova (2019)[7]: Appendix A  in the Macro-Jê alphabet, whereas for the reflexes in the contemporary languages the official orthographies in use by the respective language communities are preferred. The underlying representations are given in the International Phonetic Alphabet.

Northern Jê onsets
Proto-Northern Jê Mẽbêngôkre Kĩsêdjê Tapayúna Apinajé Parkatêjê Canela, Krahô, Pykobjê Krikati
*p */p/ p /p/ hw /hʷ/, h /h/, w /w/ hw /hʷ/, h /h/, w /w/ p /p/ p /p/
*mb */m/ m /m/ mb /m/ w /w̃/ m /m/ mp /mp/, p /p/
*m */m/ m /m/ m /m/ w /w̃/ m /m/ m /m/
*pr */pɾ/ pr /pɾ/ hr /hɺ/ hr /hɾ/ pr /pɾ/ pr /pɾ/
*mbr */mɾ/ mr /mɾ/ mbr /mɺ/ nr /ɾ̃/ mr /mɾ/ mpr /mpɾ/, pr /pɾ/
*mr */mɾ/ mr /mɾ/ mr /mɺ/ nr /ɾ̃/ mr /mɾ/ mr /mɾ/
*b */b/ b /b/ p /p/, w /w/ w /w/ p /p/ p /p/
*w */w/ w /w/ w /w/ w /w/ w /v/ w /w/
*t */t/ t /t/ th /t̠ʰ/ th /t̠ʰ/ t /t/ t /t/
*nd */n/ n /n/ nd /n/ nd ~ n /n/ n /n/ nt /nt/, t /t/
*n */n/ n /n/ n /n/ n /n/ n /n/ n /n/
*d */d/ ∅ /∅/ r /ɺ/, nd /n/, t /t̪/ r /ɾ/, t /t̪/ ∅ /∅/, t /t/ t /t/
*r */ɾ/ r /ɾ/ r /ɺ/ r /ɾ/ r /ɾ/ r /ɾ/
*c */c/ ∅ /∅/ s /s/ t /t̪/ ∅ /∅/ h /h/, ∅ /∅/
*nĵ */ɲ/ nh /ɲ/ j /ɲ/ nt ~ nd /ⁿt/ nh /ɲ/ nx /ntʃ/ (C, Pb, Kk, Pt), /nts/ (Kh); x /tʃ/ (C, Pb, Kk, Pt), /ts/ (Kh)
*ñ */ɟ/ nh /ɲ/ nh /ɲ/ nh /ɲ/ nh /ɲ/ j /j/
*ĵ */ɟ/ dj /dʒ/ t /t̪/ t /t̪/ x /tʃ/ x /tʃ/ (C, Pb, Kk, Pt), /ts/ (Kh)
*j */ɟ/, */j/ j /j/ j /ɲ/ j /j/ j /z/ j /j/
*k */k/ k /k/ kh /kʰ/ kh /kʰ/ k /k/ k /k/ c/qu (C, Kh), k (Pb) /kʰ/ c/qu /kʰ/
*ŋg */ŋ/ ng /ŋ/ ng /ŋ/ ng /ŋ/ ng /ŋ/ nk /nk/ nc/nqu /nk/, c/qu /k/
*ŋ */ŋ/, */g/ ng /ŋ/ ng /ŋ/ ng /ŋ/ ng /ŋ/ h /h/ g /ŋ/ h /h/
*kr */kɾ/ kr /kɾ/ khr /kʰɺ/, kh /kʰ/ khr /kʰɾ/, kh /kʰ/ kr /kɾ/ kr /kʰɾ/ kr /kʰɾ/
*ŋgr */ŋɾ/ ngr /ŋɾ/ ngr /ŋɺ/ nghr /ŋɾ/ ngr /ŋɾ/ nkr /nkɾ/ ncr /nkɾ/, cr /kɾ/
*ŋr */ŋɾ/ ngr /ŋɾ/ ngr /ŋɺ/ nghr /ŋɾ/ ngr /ŋɾ/ r /ɾ/
*g */g/ g /g/ k /k/ k /k/ k /k/ k /k/ c/qu /k/

Codas edit

In all Northern Jê languages, the syllables may be either open or closed. The maximum number of consonants in the coda position is one (that is, only simplex codas are allowed). The nasal codas which follow oral nuclei may be subject to nasal shielding in some languages, whereby the initial phase of the nasal consonant is oralized, as in Apinajé /om/ [ˈobm] ‘its powder’.[4]: 40 

In most (if not all) Northern Jê languages, codas may be followed by epenthetic vowels called echo vowels. Most commonly, the echo vowels are exact copies of the nuclei, but some nuclei (especially /a/) may trigger height dissimilation of the echo vowels; in addition, codas may influence the quality of the echo vowels (details vary from language to language).[8]: 168–9  In the Tapajós languages Kĩsêdjê and Tapayúna, the echo vowels are represented orthographically; in Mẽbêngôkre, the echo vowels are written out only after r, whereas in the remaining languages the echo vowels are not reflected in writing.

The inventory of Proto-Northern Jê codas comprised nine phonemes, whose reflexes in the daughter languages are shown below.[7]: Appendix A  The character V stands for the echo vowels whose quality is a precise copy of the respective nucleus. For the Tapajós languages Kĩsêdjê and Tapayúna, which represent the echo vowels orthographically, both possibilities (without and with the echo vowel) are given, separated by a slash.

Northern Jê codas
Proto-Northern Jê Mẽbêngôkre Kĩsêdjê Tapayúna Apinajé Parkatêjê, Canela, Krahô, Krikati Pykobjê
V_ Ṽ_
*p */p/ p p / wV
p / wy
(after /a/)
m / mV p / wV p p
*m */m/ m ~ p m / my m / mV p / wV m m
*t */t/ t t / rV
t / ri
(after /a/)
n / nV t / rV t t
*n */n/ n ~ t n / ni n / nV t / rV n n
*r */ɾ/ rV
ri
(after a;
in nouns also after o, à)
rV
j / ji
(after /a/;
in nouns also after o, á)
rV rV
j
(after /a/;
in nouns also after o, à)
r r
*c */c/ x ~ j t / rV
t / ri
(after a, e)
nV / rV
n / ni
(after )
t / rV
t / ri
(after e)
x j x
*ñ */ɲ/ nh ~ j n / ni nV / rV
n / ni
(after )
j nh n
*j */j/ j j / ji j j j
*k */k/ k k / kV
k / ky
(after /a/)
k / kV k k (Pt), c (C, Kh, Kk, P) /k/

Nuclei edit

The inventory of Proto-Northern Jê monophthongs is reconstructed as follows.[7]: Appendix A 

oral nasal
*i */i/ *y */ɨ/ *u */u/ *ĩ */ĩ/ *ỹ */ɨ̃/ ( */ũ/)
*ê */e/ *ə̂ */ɘ/ *ô */o/
*e */ɛ/ *ə */ɜ/ *o */ɔ/ * */ɛ̃/ *ə̃ */ɜ̃/ *õ */ɔ̃/
*a */a/ ( */ã/)

In addition, six complex nuclei can be reconstructed, of which three are falling (*/ɨwă/, */uwă/, */ijă/, represented by Nikulin & Salanova (2019) as , , [7]: 534 ) and three are raising (*/wa/, */ja/, */je/).

The following table shows the usual reflexes of the Proto-Northern Jê nuclei in the individual languages. The reconstructions are cited after Nikulin & Salanova (2019)[7]: Appendix A  in the Macro-Jê alphabet as well as in the International Phonetic Alphabet. For the reflexes in the contemporary languages, the official orthographies in use by the respective language communities have been preferred.

Northern Jê nuclei
Proto-Northern Jê Mẽbêngôkre Kĩsêdjê Tapayúna Apinajé Parkatêjê Canela, Krahô Pykobjê, Krikati
*a */a/ a a a a a a a
*ə */ɜ/ à á à à à à
*ə̂ */ɘ/ â â y
*y */ɨ/ y y y y y y ỳh
*ŷ */ɨwă/ y yp / ywy yp / ywy yw uw, ow uw, ow ohw, ow
*o */ɔ/ o o o o o o o
*ô */o/ ô ô ô, (w)â ô, (w)â ô ô u
*u */u/ u u u u u u oh
*û */uwă/ uwa ? uwa uw ~ ur uw, ow uw, ow ohw, ow
*wa */wa/ wa wa wa wa wa wa wa
*wə̂ */wɘ/ wỳ wỳ wỳ wỳ wy
*e */ɛ/ e e e e e e e
*ê */e/ ê ê ê ê ê ê i
*i */i/ i i i i i i eh
*î */ijă/ ija ija ija ij ~ ir ij ij ehj
*jê */je/ ji
*ã */ã/ ã ~ a ã ã ã ã ~ a ã ~ a ã
*ə̃ */ɜ̃/ ã ã ã ã ã ã
*ỹ */ɨ̃/ ỹh
*õ */ɔ̃/ õ õ õ õ õ õ õ
*ũ */ũ/ ũ ũ ũ ũ ũ ũ õh
*ẽ */ɛ̃/
*ĩ */ĩ/ ĩ ĩ ĩ ĩ ĩ ĩ ẽh

Morphology edit

Finiteness morphology edit

In all Northern Jê languages verbs inflect for finiteness and thus have a basic opposition between a finite form and a nonfinite form. Finite forms are used in matrix clauses only, whereas nonfinite forms are used in all types of subordinate clauses as well as in some matrix clauses (at least in some languages). Nonfinite forms are most often formed via suffixation and/or prefix substitution.[7] Some verbs (including all descriptives with the exception of *kato ‘to exit’, whose nonfinite form is *kator) lack an overt finiteness distinction.

For the protolanguage, five nonfinite suffixes have been reconstructed: *-r (the most common option, found in many transitive and intransitive verbs), *-ñ (found in some transitive verbs), as well as *-k, *-m, and *-c (found in a handful of intransitive verbs which take a nominative subject when finite).[7]: 543 

Nonfinite suffixes
in Proto-Northern Jê
finite nonfinite gloss
suffix *-r
*mõ *mõr to go (plural)
*bĩ *bĩr to kill (singular)
*krẽ *krẽr to eat (singular)
*karê *karêr to weed
*japrô *japrôr to take away
suffix *-ñ
*põ *põñ to rub
*kê *kêñ to grate
*kwỹr *kwỹñ to break
*kumbə *kumbəñ to gnaw
*kaĵô *kaĵôñ to tear
suffix *-k
*ty *tyk to die
*rû *rwə̂k to descend
suffix *-m
*tẽ *tẽm to go (singular)
*ijkõ *kõm to drink
*ĵa *ĵãm to stand (singular)
suffix *-c
*aŋgî *ŋgjêc to enter (plural)

In a handful of verbs, all of which end in an underlying stop, the nonfinite form does not receive any overt suffixes, but it is nevertheless distinct from the finite form because the latter lenites the stem-final consonant (*-t, *-c, *-k*-r, *-j, *-r).[7]: 544 

Nonfinite suffixes
in Proto-Northern Jê
finite nonfinite gloss
*tjêr *tjêt to burn
*ŋõr *ñõt to sleep
*bôj *bôc to arrive
*do=pôj *do=pôc to extract (plural)
*kar *kak to cough
*pôr *pôk to burn, to ignite
*jarkjêr *jarkjêk to yawn

Palatalizing prefix edit

A small set of verbs form their nonfinite forms by employing one of the aforementioned processes and a morphophonological process whereby the onset of the stressed syllable becomes palatal, and the nucleus of the stressed syllable is raised (if possible); this has been attributed to the influence of an underlying palatalizing nonfinite prefix.[7]

Palatalizing prefix in Proto-Northern Jê
finite nonfinite gloss
*kaba *kaĵər to extract (singular)
*ga *ĵər to roast (singular)
*kuto (pl. jato) *kuñ (pl. jañ) to ignite
*twə̂
*kaˀtwə̂
*k
*kaˀk
to grind, to pound
to grind, to pound, to press against a surface
*kaˀte *kaˀk to break into pieces
*kujate *kujak to push, to move away
*ŋõr *ñõt to sleep
*ŋõ *ñõr to give
*-ˀtĩ *-ˀk to plait, to braid
*aˀtĩ *jəˀk to sneeze
*(krə̃)ˀta *(krə̃)ˀcyr to cut off (singular)
*c-anẽ *c-añỹr to do so, to say so

Prefix substitution or loss edit

In addition to the aforementioned processes, the finiteness inflection may involve prefix substitution or loss. For example, the valency-reducing prefixes are *a(j)- (anticausative) and *a(p)- (antipassive) in finite verb forms, but *bi(t)- and *jə-/*ju-, respectively, in the nonfinite forms.[7]: 541, 544  In addition, some verbs which denote physiological activities or movement have a prefix (*ij- and *a-, respectively) in their finite forms but not in the nonfinite form.

Finiteness and prefix alternations
in Proto-Northern Jê
finite nonfinite gloss
anticausatives
*ajkaˀte *bikaˀcêk to break (anticausative)
*ajkamẽ *bikamẽñ to move away
*akndo *bikndor to disappear
antipassives
*apjarẽ *jujarẽñ to narrate
*aˀcû *ˀcwə̂r to beg
physiological verbs
*ij *kõm to drink
*ijtu *tur to urinate
*ij *kwə̂r to defecate
*ij *pêk to fart
movement verbs
*ajêt *jêt to hang (singular)
*aĵə *ĵər to enter (singular)
*aŋgî *ŋgjêc to enter (plural)

Person inflection and case edit

In all Northern Jê languages verbs, postpositions, and relational nouns inflect for person of their internal argument by taking absolutive ("internal") or accusative person prefixes. The accusative series is required by a subclass of transitive verbs (in finite clauses only) as well as by some postpositions; the absolutive series is the default one and is found with most transitive and all intransitive verbs in finite clauses, with all verbs in nonfinite clauses, with all relational nouns, and with some postpositions.[7] External arguments of verbs are not indexed by person prefixes but are rather encoded by nominative/agentive (unmarked) noun phrases (including personal pronouns) in finite clauses, or by ergative phrases in nonfinite clauses.

In the table below, the label class II refers to a subclass of vowel-initial stems which take the thematic consonant */ĵ-/ in the basic (uninflected) form as well as in some inflected forms (e.g. *∅-j-arkwa ‘my mouth’, *ba-j-arkwa ‘our mouths’, *rop j-arkwa ‘the jaguar's mouth’) but not in others (*g-arkwa ‘your mouth’, *c-arkwa ‘his/her/its mouth’). The archaic allomorphs *∅-/ĵ-/ (first person, class II) and *g- (second person, class II) are only marginally preserved across Northern Jê: the former is preserved in Pykobjê (as in j-apackre ‘my ear’),[9]: 47, 97  whereas the reflexes of the latter have been found in Kĩsêdjê, Canela, Pykobjê[1]: 213–4  and in the triadic kinship terms of Mẽbêngôkre.[1]: 217–8 

Pronouns and person prefixes
person nominative/agentive
pronoun
absolutive accusative
1 *ba *ij- (class II: *∅-/ĵ-/)
2 *ga *a- (class II: *g-)
1+2 *gu *ba-/ĵ-/
3 (*gê) *c- *ku-

Voice edit

Two valency-reducing operations are encoded by prefixes in Northern Jê: the anticausative voice (finite *a(j)-, nonfinite *bi(t)-) and the antipassive voice (finite *a(p)-, nonfinite *jə-/*ju-).[7]: 541, 544 

Voice alternations in Proto-Northern Jê
transitive intransitivized gloss
anticausatives
*kaˀte *ajkaˀte / *bikaˀcêk to break (transitive) → to break (anticausative)
*kamẽ *ajkamẽ / *bikamẽñ to push → to move away
*kundo *akndo / *bikndor to lose → to disappear
antipassives
*jarẽ *apjarẽ / *jujarẽñ to say → to narrate
*cû *aˀcû / *ˀcwə̂r to ask → to beg

Nominal number edit

In most Northern Jê languages, nouns which denote human beings may receive an overt collective plural suffix (Proto-Northern Jê -jê). Its reflexes have been attested in Kĩsêdjê (-jê), Tapayúna (-jê),[10] Parkatêjê (-jê), Pykobjê (-ji), Canela (-jê), among others. In fact, this suffix is part of many names of Northern Jê peoples, as in Kĩsêd, Parkatê, Pykob (self-denomination Pyhcopji), Apànkra, and is the ultimate origin of the term itself.

Derivational morphology edit

Productive affixes edit

All Northern Jê languages make use of at least one diminutive suffix (Proto-Northern Jê *-re) and of an augmentative suffix (*-ti), which may occur in nouns and descriptives.[11]: 257–9 [9]: 36–7 [10]: 69, 79–81 [12]: 52  These are widely used in the names of animal and plant species.

For most Northern Jê languages, nominalization suffixes or clitics of two kinds have been described: instrumental/locative nominalizations (Proto-Northern Jê *-ĵə)[13]: 111 [9]: 47 [10]: 81  and agent nominalizations (Proto-Northern Jê *-ĵwə̂ñ[13]: 111  or *-kandê[12]: 53–4 [10]: 82 ). Note that both attach to the nonfinite (nominal) form of the verb. The latter fact has been used as an argument for a nominal interpretation of the reflexes of *-ĵə and *-ĵwə̂ñ in Mẽbêngôkre, where djà and djwỳj have been claimed to be relational nouns meaning ‘container’ and ‘master’, respectively:[14]: 88 

In the literature on other Jê languages <...>, these have been considered to be an instrument and an agent nominalizer, respectively. Our contention is that what the "nominalizers" attach to is already nominal <...>, and they themselves are no more than the semantically bleached nouns dʒʌ ‘container’ and dʒwɤj ‘master’.

Non-productive affixes edit

In Northern Jê languages, many predicates appear to contain fossilized prefixes of different shapes (such as Proto-Northern Jê *ka-, *ñõ-, *ku-, *py-/*pu-, *ja-, *ju-, *ñĩ-), whose semantic contribution is not always straightforward. These have been variously referred to as formatives[13]: 116–28  or transitivity prefixes.[7]: 539–40 

Syntax edit

All Northern Jê languages are head-final.

Morphosyntactic alignment edit

Prototypically, finite matrix clauses in Northern Jê languages have a split-S alignment pattern, whereby the agents of transitive verbs (A) and the sole arguments of a subclass of intransitive verbs (SA) receive the nominative case (also called agentive case[1]), whereas the patients of transitive verbs (P) and the sole arguments of the remaining intransitive predicates (SP) receive the absolutive case (also called internal case[1]).[15] In addition, transitive verbs are subdivided into two classes according to whether the third person patient is indexed as absolutive (Proto-Northern Jê *c-) or accusative (Proto-Northern Jê *ku-),[7]: 538–9  which has been described as an instance of a split-P alignment.[1]: 272  There are only several dozen of transitive verbs which take an accusative patient, all of which are monosyllabic[13]: 181, 219  and have distinct finite and nonfinite forms.[5]: 13, 133  It has been suggested that all transitive verbs which satisfy both conditions (monosyllabicity and a formal finiteness distinction), and only them, select for accusative patients,[7]: 538  while all remaining transitive verbs take absolutive patients in Northern Jê.

Nonfinite clauses (including all subordinate clauses) are headed by nonfinite verbs and are ergatively organized: the agents of transitive verbs (A) are encoded by ergative postpositional phrases, whereas the patients of transitive verbs (P) and the sole arguments of all intransitive predicates (S) receive the absolutive case (also called internal case[1]).[15] The ergative-absolutive alignment in subordinate clauses is found in all Northern Jê languages and is reconstructed by Castro Alves (2010) for Proto-Northern Jê.[15]

In addition, in some Northern Jê languages former biclausal constructions (with an ergatively organized subordinate clause and a split-S matrix clause) have been reanalyzed as monoclausal, resulting in some cases in constructions with a nominative-absolutive alignment pattern.[15][16]

Classes of predicates edit

The following table summarizes the proposed classes of predicates in Northern Jê languages.[7]

argument structure in finite clauses type examples
ANOM PACC transitive verb (*ku-class) *krẽ ‘to eat’ (singular)'
ANOM PABS transitive verb (default) *côk ‘to paint’
SNOM (active) intransitive verb *tẽ ‘to go’ (singular)
SABS descriptive *ŋgryk ‘to be angry’
ExpDAT monovalent verbum sentiendi *prə̃m ‘to be hungry’
ExpDAT StimulusABS bivalent verbum sentiendi *kĩñ ‘to like’

Transitive verbs edit

In the Northern Jê languages, transitive verbs take accusative or absolutive patients in finite clauses, depending on the verb class. In nonfinite clauses, all transitive verbs take absolutive patients. Note that nouns do not receive any overt marking either in the accusative or in the absolutive case; the difference between these two cases is seen in the third person index, which is reconstructed as *ku- in the accusative case and as *c- in the absolutive case.

The transitive verbs which index their patient in the accusative case (in finite clauses) are known as *ku-verbs. All *ku-verbs are monosyllabic[13]: 181, 219  and have distinct finite and nonfinite forms.[5]: 13, 133  The remaining transitive verbs index their patient in the absolutive case. All verbs that belong to this class satisfy at least one of the following conditions:

  • they contain at least two syllables (for example, *pumbu ‘to see’, *kacô ‘to suck’, *kuˀcõ ‘to wash (solid objects)’),
  • their finite and nonfinite forms are identical (for example, *côk ‘to paint’, *kre ‘to plant’, *ĵũn ‘to insult’).

Finite *ku- verbs further differ from all other transitive verbs in that under certain circumstances they index their agent (rather than patient) on the verb. This happens when a second-person agent acts over a third-person patient. The phenomenon has been attested in Mẽbêngôkre,[17]: 55–6  Apinajé,[18]: 178 [19]: 4–5  and Canela.[12]: 104–5 

Canonical (active) intransitive verbs edit

Descriptives edit

All Northern Jê languages have intransitive predicates which take absolutive (rather than nominative) subjects, known as descriptives. They have been variously described as verbs[11][13][15] or nouns.[14] An example of a reconstructed Proto-Northern Jê clause headed by a descriptive is *ij-ŋgryk ‘I am angry’ (literally 1SGABS-be.angry).

Verba sentiendi and dative subjects edit

Verba sentiendi with dative subjects have been described for a variety of Northern Jê languages, such as Canela,[20][12]: 56  Apinajé,[13]: 233–7  and Kĩsêdjê.[5]: 31–3 

Monovalent verba sentiendi take only one argument (experiencer), which is encoded by a dative postpositional phrase, as in the following reconstructed example: Proto-Northern Jê *ij-mə̃ prə̃m ‘I am hungry’[7]: 537  (literally 1SGACC-DAT hunger).

Bivalent verba sentiendi take two arguments. The experiencer is encoded by a dative postpositional phrase, and the theme receives the absolutive case, as in the following reconstructed example: Proto-Northern Jê *ij-mə̃ a-kĩñ ‘I like you’[7]: 537  (literally 1SGACC-DAT 2ABS-fun).

Lexicon edit

Predicate number edit

The Northern Jê languages commonly employ different lexemes for the so-called singular and plural predicates. As Nikulin and Salanova (2019) put it,

Archetypally, certain verbs have distinct forms according to the number of the absolutive argument (if the argument in question is not human, number is not marked independently on it but rather only on the verb). In addition, verbal number can indicate repeated action, even if all participants are singular. Further nuances of the plural include a more prolonged or sluggish carrying out of an action, incomplete or ineffective carrying out of the action, and perhaps even indirect evidence for the action.[7]: 540 

There are several dozen pairs of predicates which contrast in number. Plural predicates are not regularly derived from their singular counterparts but are rather expressed by unrelated lexemes (in a handful of verbs, it is possible to the fossilized prefix *ja- encoding plural). Some examples of Proto-Northern Jê verbs which differ in number include:[7]: 541 

Verbal number
in Proto-Northern Jê
singular plural gloss
*ga *bô to roast
*krẽ *ku to eat
*mẽ *rẽ to throw
*tẽ *mõ to go
*nĵô *janĵô to hang
*mbə̂ *jambə̂ to grab, to carry
*kuto *jato to ignite
*ñõpôk *japôk to pierce

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Nikulin, Andrey (2020). Proto-Macro-Jê: um estudo reconstrutivo (PDF) (Ph.D. dissertation). Brasília: Universidade de Brasília.
  2. ^ a b Nikulin, Andrey (1 January 2017). "A phonological reconstruction of Proto-Cerrado (Jê family)". Journal of Language Relationship. 15 (3–4): 147–180. doi:10.31826/jlr-2018-153-404.
  3. ^ Ribeiro, Eduardo Rivail (October 2010). "Nimuendajú was right: The inclusion of the Jabutí language family in the Macro-Jê stock". International Journal of American Linguistics. 76 (4): 517–570. doi:10.1086/658056.
  4. ^ a b c Salanova, Andrés Pablo (May 2001). A nasalidade em Mebengokre e Apinayé: O limite do vozeamento soante (PDF) (MA thesis). Campinas: Universidade Estadual de Campinas.
  5. ^ a b c d Nonato, Rafael (February 2014). Clause Chaining, Switch Reference and Coordination (PDF) (Ph.D. dissertation). Cambridge, MA: Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
  6. ^ Wetzels, W. Leo; Nevins, Andrew (2018). "Prenasalized and postoralized consonants: The diverse functions of enhancement". Language. 94 (4): 834–866. doi:10.1353/lan.2018.0055. hdl:1871.1/47588b0b-fa5c-41af-804b-77bebb120cb8.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Nikulin, Andrey; Salanova, Andrés Pablo (October 2019). "Northern Jê Verb Morphology and the Reconstruction of Finiteness Alternations". International Journal of American Linguistics. 85 (4): 533–567. doi:10.1086/704565.
  8. ^ Nikulin, Andrey (2016). "Historical phonology of Proto-Northern Jê". Journal of Language Relationship. 14 (3–4): 165–186. doi:10.31826/jlr-2017-143-405.
  9. ^ a b c Sá Amado, Rosane de (2004). Aspectos morfofonológicos do Gavião-Pykobjê (PDF) (Ph.D. dissertation). São Paulo: Universidade de São Paulo.
  10. ^ a b c d Camargo, Nayara da Silva (2015). Tapayuna (Jê): aspectos morfossintáticos, históricos e sociolinguísticos (PDF) (Ph.D. dissertation). Campinas: Universidade Estadual de Campinas.
  11. ^ a b Cunha de Oliveira, Christiane (July 2003). "Lexical Categories and The Status of Descriptives in Apinajé". International Journal of American Linguistics. 69 (3): 243–274. doi:10.1086/381336.
  12. ^ a b c d Castro Alves, Flávia de (2004). O Timbira falado pelos Canela Apãniekrá: uma contribuição aos estudos da morfossintaxe de uma língua Jê (PDF) (Ph.D. dissertation). Campinas: Universidade Estadual de Campinas.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g Oliveira, Christiane Cunha de (February 2014). The Language of the Apinajé People of Central Brazil (PDF) (Ph.D. dissertation). Eugene, OR: University of Oregon.
  14. ^ a b Salanova, Andrés Pablo (September 2007). Nominalizations and Aspect (PDF) (Ph.D. dissertation). Cambridge, MA: Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
  15. ^ a b c d e Castro Alves, Flávia de (October 2010). "Evolution of Alignment in Timbira". International Journal of American Linguistics. 76 (4): 439–475. doi:10.1086/658054.
  16. ^ Gildea, Spike; Castro Alves, Flávia de (2020). "Reconstructing the Source of Nominative-Absolutive Alignment in Two Amazonian Language Families". In Barðdal, Jóhanna; Gildea, Spike; Luján, Eugenio R. (eds.). Reconstructing Syntax. Brill. pp. 47–107. doi:10.1163/9789004392007_003. ISBN 978-90-04-39199-4.
  17. ^ Reis Silva, Maria Amélia (2001). Pronomes, ordem e ergatividade em Mebengokre (MA thesis). Campinas: Universidade Estadual de Campinas.
  18. ^ Callow, John Campbell (1962). The Apinayé language: phonology and grammar (Ph.D. dissertation). London: University of London.
  19. ^ Ham, Patricia; Waller, Helen; Koopman, Linda (1979). Aspectos da Língua Apinayé (PDF). Cuiabá: Sociedade Internacional de Lingüística (SIL).
  20. ^ Alves, Flávia de Castro (August 2018). "Sujeito dativo em Canela". Boletim do Museu Paraense Emílio Goeldi. Ciências Humanas. 13 (2): 377–403. doi:10.1590/1981.81222018000200007.

northern, languages, this, article, about, group, closely, related, languages, which, includes, timbira, apinajé, mẽbêngôkre, kĩsêdjê, tapayúna, broader, group, which, also, comprises, panará, southern, kayapó, goyaz, languages, northern, core, languages, port. This article is about the group of closely related languages which includes Timbira Apinaje Mẽbengokre Kĩsedje and Tapayuna For the broader group which also comprises Panara and Southern Kayapo see Goyaz Je languages The Northern Je 1 6 or Core Je 2 languages Portuguese Je Setentrionais are a branch of the Je languages constituted by the Timbira dialect continuum which includes Canela Kraho Pykobje Krikati Parkateje and Kỳikateje and a number of languages spoken to the west of the Tocantins River the Trans Tocantins languages Apinaje Mẽbengokre Kĩsedje and Tapayuna Together with Panara and its predecessor Southern Kayapo they form the Goyaz branch of the Je family Northern JeGeographicdistributionMato Grosso Tocantins Para MaranhaoLinguistic classificationMacro JeJeCerradoJe of GoyazNorthern JeSubdivisionsTimbira Canela Kraho Pykobje Krikati Parkateje Kỳikateje Trans Tocantins Apinaje Mẽbengokre Kĩsedje Tapayuna Glottologcore1264The term Northern Je has been sometimes used to refer to a broader group of languages which also includes Panara and Southern Kayapo 3 547 2 In this article the label Northern Je is used in the narrow sense that is excluding Panara and Southern Kayapo Contents 1 Phonology 1 1 Consonants 1 1 1 Onsets 1 1 2 Codas 1 2 Nuclei 2 Morphology 2 1 Finiteness morphology 2 1 1 Palatalizing prefix 2 1 2 Prefix substitution or loss 2 2 Person inflection and case 2 3 Voice 2 4 Nominal number 2 5 Derivational morphology 2 5 1 Productive affixes 2 5 2 Non productive affixes 3 Syntax 3 1 Morphosyntactic alignment 3 2 Classes of predicates 3 2 1 Transitive verbs 3 2 2 Canonical active intransitive verbs 3 2 3 Descriptives 3 2 4 Verba sentiendi and dative subjects 4 Lexicon 4 1 Predicate number 5 ReferencesPhonology editThis article or section 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 2021 The Northern Je languages have been noted for their outstanding relation between the nasality vs orality of the nuclei and the allophonic realization of the adjacent nasal consonants In Apinaje 4 and Kĩsedje 5 127 8 for instance underlying nasal consonants surface as partially oral for example m mb if the nucleus of the syllable is oral this allophony pattern has been characterized by Wetzels and Nevins 2018 as nasal shielding 6 860 All Northern Je languages have similar phonotactic restrictions Typically the maximal syllable is CRWVC where C stands for a consonant R for a rhotic typically ɾ W for a glide w j and V for a vowel Several additional co occurrence restrictions apply only p m k ŋ may form a complex onset with a rhotic j never follows coronals i e clusters such as ˣ nj ˣ cj or ˣ pɾj are not permitted tj is reconstructed for Proto Northern Je but is not preserved in any contemporary language and w never follows labials i e pw pɾw mw bw ww are ruled out In specific languages some of these restrictions have been altered due to sound change For example Kĩsedje has lost Proto Northern Je pɾ for hr hɺ through debuccalization In Apinaje the fricatives v z replaced the earlier glides w j resulting in the inversion of the order of the elements in the triconsonantal clusters from CRW to CWR e g kɾw gt kvɾ which has been attributed to the different treatment of glides and fricatives by the Sonority Sequencing Principle 4 54 The Timbira varieties only have CRVC and CWVC but not CRWVC Consonants edit Onsets edit The inventory of Proto Northern Je onsets including complex onsets is reconstructed as follows 7 Appendix A Note that underlying nasals acquired an oral phrase preceding an oral nucleus this is preserved in all Northern Je languages with the exception of Mẽbengokre which no longer has the postoralized allophones of the underlying nasal stops Conversely the underlying voiced stops ĵ and g were nasalized to ɲ and ŋ preceding nasal nuclei labial labial rhotic dentialveolar palatal velar velar rhoticvoiceless stops p p pɾ pɾ t t c c k k kɾ kɾ voiced stops b b d d ɟ nasal ɲ oral amp stressed ɟ oral amp unstressed j g nasal ŋ oral g nasal stops m nasal m oral mb mɾ nasal mɾ oral mbɾ n nasal n oral nd ɲ nasal oral ɲɟ ŋ nasal ŋ oral ŋg ŋɾ nasal ŋɾ oral ŋgɾ sonorants w w ɾ ɾ j j Specific Northern Je languages innovated in multiple ways with respect to the reconstructed inventory For example the Timbira languages Apinaje and the Tapajos languages coincide in no longer employing the feature voice in most cases however the oppositions present in Proto Northern Je have been preserved by introducing contrastive aspirated consonants In the Tapajos languages the palatal stops were dentalized whereas the original dentialveolar consonants acquired considerable retraction In addition Tapayuna got rid of all labial consonants 7 559 61 The following table shows the usual reflexes of the Proto Northern Je onsets in the individual languages The reconstructions are cited after Nikulin amp Salanova 2019 7 Appendix A in the Macro Je alphabet whereas for the reflexes in the contemporary languages the official orthographies in use by the respective language communities are preferred The underlying representations are given in the International Phonetic Alphabet Northern Je onsets Proto Northern Je Mẽbengokre Kĩsedje Tapayuna Apinaje Parkateje Canela Kraho Pykobje Krikati p p p p hw hʷ h h w w hw hʷ h h w w p p p p mb m m m mb m w w m m mp mp p p m m m m m m w w m m m m pr pɾ pr pɾ hr hɺ hr hɾ pr pɾ pr pɾ mbr mɾ mr mɾ mbr mɺ nr ɾ mr mɾ mpr mpɾ pr pɾ mr mɾ mr mɾ mr mɺ nr ɾ mr mɾ mr mɾ b b b b p p w w w w p p p p w w w w w w w w w v w w t t t t th t ʰ th t ʰ t t t t nd n n n nd n nd n n n n nt nt t t n n n n n n n n n n n n d d r ɺ nd n t t r ɾ t t t t t t r ɾ r ɾ r ɺ r ɾ r ɾ r ɾ c c s s t t h h nĵ ɲ nh ɲ j ɲ nt nd ⁿt nh ɲ nx ntʃ C Pb Kk Pt nts Kh x tʃ C Pb Kk Pt ts Kh n ɟ nh ɲ nh ɲ nh ɲ nh ɲ j j ĵ ɟ dj dʒ t t t t x tʃ x tʃ C Pb Kk Pt ts Kh j ɟ j j j j ɲ j j j z j j k k k k kh kʰ kh kʰ k k k k c qu C Kh k Pb kʰ c qu kʰ ŋg ŋ ng ŋ ng ŋ ng ŋ ng ŋ nk nk nc nqu nk c qu k ŋ ŋ g ng ŋ ng ŋ ng ŋ ng ŋ h h g ŋ h h kr kɾ kr kɾ khr kʰɺ kh kʰ khr kʰɾ kh kʰ kr kɾ kr kʰɾ kr kʰɾ ŋgr ŋɾ ngr ŋɾ ngr ŋɺ nghr ŋɾ ngr ŋɾ nkr nkɾ ncr nkɾ cr kɾ ŋr ŋɾ ngr ŋɾ ngr ŋɺ nghr ŋɾ ngr ŋɾ r ɾ g g g g k k k k k k k k c qu k Codas edit In all Northern Je languages the syllables may be either open or closed The maximum number of consonants in the coda position is one that is only simplex codas are allowed The nasal codas which follow oral nuclei may be subject to nasal shielding in some languages whereby the initial phase of the nasal consonant is oralized as in Apinaje om ˈobm its powder 4 40 In most if not all Northern Je languages codas may be followed by epenthetic vowels called echo vowels Most commonly the echo vowels are exact copies of the nuclei but some nuclei especially a may trigger height dissimilation of the echo vowels in addition codas may influence the quality of the echo vowels details vary from language to language 8 168 9 In the Tapajos languages Kĩsedje and Tapayuna the echo vowels are represented orthographically in Mẽbengokre the echo vowels are written out only after r whereas in the remaining languages the echo vowels are not reflected in writing The inventory of Proto Northern Je codas comprised nine phonemes whose reflexes in the daughter languages are shown below 7 Appendix A The character V stands for the echo vowels whose quality is a precise copy of the respective nucleus For the Tapajos languages Kĩsedje and Tapayuna which represent the echo vowels orthographically both possibilities without and with the echo vowel are given separated by a slash Northern Je codas Proto Northern Je Mẽbengokre Kĩsedje Tapayuna Apinaje Parkateje Canela Kraho Krikati PykobjeV Ṽ p p p p wVp wy after a m mV p wV p p m m m p m my m mV p wV m m t t t t rVt ri after a n nV t rV t t n n n t n ni n nV t rV n n r ɾ rVri after a in nouns also after o a rVj ji after a in nouns also after o a rV rVj after a in nouns also after o a r r c c x j t rVt ri after a e nV rVn ni after ẽ t rVt ri after e x j x n ɲ nh j n ni nV rVn ni after ẽ j nh n j j j j ji j j j k k k k kVk ky after a k kV k k Pt c C Kh Kk P k Nuclei edit The inventory of Proto Northern Je monophthongs is reconstructed as follows 7 Appendix A oral nasal i i y ɨ u u ĩ ĩ ỹ ɨ ũ ũ e e e ɘ o o e ɛ e ɜ o ɔ ẽ ɛ e ɜ o ɔ a a a a In addition six complex nuclei can be reconstructed of which three are falling ɨwă uwă ijă represented by Nikulin amp Salanova 2019 as ŷ u i 7 534 and three are raising wa ja je The following table shows the usual reflexes of the Proto Northern Je nuclei in the individual languages The reconstructions are cited after Nikulin amp Salanova 2019 7 Appendix A in the Macro Je alphabet as well as in the International Phonetic Alphabet For the reflexes in the contemporary languages the official orthographies in use by the respective language communities have been preferred Northern Je nuclei Proto Northern Je Mẽbengokre Kĩsedje Tapayuna Apinaje Parkateje Canela Kraho Pykobje Krikati a a a a a a a a a e ɜ a a a a a a ỳ e ɘ ỳ a a ỳ ỳ ỳ y y ɨ y y y y y y ỳh ŷ ɨwă y yp ywy yp ywy yw uw ow uw ow ohw ow o ɔ o o o o o o o o o o o o w a o w a o o u u u u u u u u u oh u uwă uwa uwa uw ur uw ow uw ow ohw ow wa wa wa wa wa wa wa wa wa we wɘ wỳ wa wa wỳ wỳ wỳ wy e ɛ e e e e e e e e e e e e e e e i i i i i i i i i eh i ijă ija ija ija ij ir ij ij ehj je je je je je je je je ji a a a a a a a a a a a a e ɜ a a a a a a ỹ ỹ ɨ ỹ ỹ ỹ ỹ ỹ ỹ ỹh o ɔ o o o o o o o ũ ũ ũ ũ ũ ũ ũ ũ oh ẽ ɛ ẽ ẽ ẽ ẽ ẽ ẽ ẽ ĩ ĩ ĩ ĩ ĩ ĩ ĩ ĩ ẽhMorphology editFiniteness morphology edit In all Northern Je languages verbs inflect for finiteness and thus have a basic opposition between a finite form and a nonfinite form Finite forms are used in matrix clauses only whereas nonfinite forms are used in all types of subordinate clauses as well as in some matrix clauses at least in some languages Nonfinite forms are most often formed via suffixation and or prefix substitution 7 Some verbs including all descriptives with the exception of kato to exit whose nonfinite form is kator lack an overt finiteness distinction For the protolanguage five nonfinite suffixes have been reconstructed r the most common option found in many transitive and intransitive verbs n found in some transitive verbs as well as k m and c found in a handful of intransitive verbs which take a nominative subject when finite 7 543 Nonfinite suffixesin Proto Northern Je finite nonfinite glosssuffix r mo mor to go plural bĩ bĩr to kill singular krẽ krẽr to eat singular kare karer to weed japro japror to take awaysuffix n po pon to rub ke ken to grate kwỹr kwỹn to break kumbe kumben to gnaw kaĵo kaĵon to tearsuffix k ty tyk to die ru rwe k to descendsuffix m tẽ tẽm to go singular ijko kom to drink ĵa ĵam to stand singular suffix c aŋgi ŋgjec to enter plural In a handful of verbs all of which end in an underlying stop the nonfinite form does not receive any overt suffixes but it is nevertheless distinct from the finite form because the latter lenites the stem final consonant t c k r j r 7 544 Nonfinite suffixesin Proto Northern Je finite nonfinite gloss tjer tjet to burn ŋor not to sleep boj boc to arrive do poj do poc to extract plural kar kak to cough por pok to burn to ignite jarkjer jarkjek to yawnPalatalizing prefix edit A small set of verbs form their nonfinite forms by employing one of the aforementioned processes and a morphophonological process whereby the onset of the stressed syllable becomes palatal and the nucleus of the stressed syllable is raised if possible this has been attributed to the influence of an underlying palatalizing nonfinite prefix 7 Palatalizing prefix in Proto Northern Je finite nonfinite gloss kaba kaĵer to extract singular ga ĵer to roast singular kuto pl jato kucon pl jacon to ignite twe kaˀtwe cuk kaˀcuk to grind to poundto grind to pound to press against a surface kaˀte kaˀcek to break into pieces kujate kujacek to push to move away ŋor not to sleep ŋo nor to give ˀtĩ ˀcĩk to plait to braid aˀtĩ jeˀcĩk to sneeze kre ˀta kre ˀcyr to cut off singular c anẽ c anỹr to do so to say soPrefix substitution or loss edit In addition to the aforementioned processes the finiteness inflection may involve prefix substitution or loss For example the valency reducing prefixes are a j anticausative and a p antipassive in finite verb forms but bi t and je ju respectively in the nonfinite forms 7 541 544 In addition some verbs which denote physiological activities or movement have a prefix ij and a respectively in their finite forms but not in the nonfinite form Finiteness and prefix alternationsin Proto Northern Je finite nonfinite glossanticausatives ajkaˀte bikaˀcek to break anticausative ajkamẽ bikamẽn to move away akndo bikndor to disappearantipassives apjarẽ jujarẽn to narrate aˀcu jeˀcwe r to begphysiological verbs ijko kom to drink ijtu tur to urinate ijku kwe r to defecate ijpe pek to fartmovement verbs ajet jet to hang singular aĵe ĵer to enter singular aŋgi ŋgjec to enter plural Person inflection and case edit In all Northern Je languages verbs postpositions and relational nouns inflect for person of their internal argument by taking absolutive internal or accusative person prefixes The accusative series is required by a subclass of transitive verbs in finite clauses only as well as by some postpositions the absolutive series is the default one and is found with most transitive and all intransitive verbs in finite clauses with all verbs in nonfinite clauses with all relational nouns and with some postpositions 7 External arguments of verbs are not indexed by person prefixes but are rather encoded by nominative agentive unmarked noun phrases including personal pronouns in finite clauses or by ergative phrases in nonfinite clauses In the table below the label class II refers to a subclass of vowel initial stems which take the thematic consonant ĵ in the basic uninflected form as well as in some inflected forms e g j arkwa my mouth ba j arkwa our mouths rop j arkwa the jaguar s mouth but not in others g arkwa your mouth c arkwa his her its mouth The archaic allomorphs ĵ first person class II and g second person class II are only marginally preserved across Northern Je the former is preserved in Pykobje as in j apackre my ear 9 47 97 whereas the reflexes of the latter have been found in Kĩsedje Canela Pykobje 1 213 4 and in the triadic kinship terms of Mẽbengokre 1 217 8 Pronouns and person prefixes person nominative agentivepronoun absolutive accusative1 ba ij class II ĵ 2 ga a class II g 1 2 gu ba ĵ 3 ge c ku Voice edit Two valency reducing operations are encoded by prefixes in Northern Je the anticausative voice finite a j nonfinite bi t and the antipassive voice finite a p nonfinite je ju 7 541 544 Voice alternations in Proto Northern Je transitive intransitivized glossanticausatives kaˀte ajkaˀte bikaˀcek to break transitive to break anticausative kamẽ ajkamẽ bikamẽn to push to move away kundo akndo bikndor to lose to disappearantipassives jarẽ apjarẽ jujarẽn to say to narrate cu aˀcu jeˀcwe r to ask to begNominal number edit In most Northern Je languages nouns which denote human beings may receive an overt collective plural suffix Proto Northern Je je Its reflexes have been attested in Kĩsedje je Tapayuna je 10 Parkateje je Pykobje ji Canela je among others In fact this suffix is part of many names of Northern Je peoples as in Kĩsedje Parkateje Pykobje self denomination Pyhcopji Apanjekra and is the ultimate origin of the term Je itself Derivational morphology edit Productive affixes edit All Northern Je languages make use of at least one diminutive suffix Proto Northern Je re and of an augmentative suffix ti which may occur in nouns and descriptives 11 257 9 9 36 7 10 69 79 81 12 52 These are widely used in the names of animal and plant species For most Northern Je languages nominalization suffixes or clitics of two kinds have been described instrumental locative nominalizations Proto Northern Je ĵe 13 111 9 47 10 81 and agent nominalizations Proto Northern Je ĵwe n 13 111 or kande 12 53 4 10 82 Note that both attach to the nonfinite nominal form of the verb The latter fact has been used as an argument for a nominal interpretation of the reflexes of ĵe and ĵwe n in Mẽbengokre where dja and djwỳj have been claimed to be relational nouns meaning container and master respectively 14 88 In the literature on other Je languages lt gt these have been considered to be an instrument and an agent nominalizer respectively Our contention is that what the nominalizers attach to is already nominal lt gt and they themselves are no more than the semantically bleached nouns dʒʌ container and dʒwɤj master Non productive affixes edit In Northern Je languages many predicates appear to contain fossilized prefixes of different shapes such as Proto Northern Je ka no ku py pu ja ju nĩ whose semantic contribution is not always straightforward These have been variously referred to as formatives 13 116 28 or transitivity prefixes 7 539 40 Syntax editAll Northern Je languages are head final Morphosyntactic alignment edit Prototypically finite matrix clauses in Northern Je languages have a split S alignment pattern whereby the agents of transitive verbs A and the sole arguments of a subclass of intransitive verbs SA receive the nominative case also called agentive case 1 whereas the patients of transitive verbs P and the sole arguments of the remaining intransitive predicates SP receive the absolutive case also called internal case 1 15 In addition transitive verbs are subdivided into two classes according to whether the third person patient is indexed as absolutive Proto Northern Je c or accusative Proto Northern Je ku 7 538 9 which has been described as an instance of a split P alignment 1 272 There are only several dozen of transitive verbs which take an accusative patient all of which are monosyllabic 13 181 219 and have distinct finite and nonfinite forms 5 13 133 It has been suggested that all transitive verbs which satisfy both conditions monosyllabicity and a formal finiteness distinction and only them select for accusative patients 7 538 while all remaining transitive verbs take absolutive patients in Northern Je Nonfinite clauses including all subordinate clauses are headed by nonfinite verbs and are ergatively organized the agents of transitive verbs A are encoded by ergative postpositional phrases whereas the patients of transitive verbs P and the sole arguments of all intransitive predicates S receive the absolutive case also called internal case 1 15 The ergative absolutive alignment in subordinate clauses is found in all Northern Je languages and is reconstructed by Castro Alves 2010 for Proto Northern Je 15 In addition in some Northern Je languages former biclausal constructions with an ergatively organized subordinate clause and a split S matrix clause have been reanalyzed as monoclausal resulting in some cases in constructions with a nominative absolutive alignment pattern 15 16 Classes of predicates edit The following table summarizes the proposed classes of predicates in Northern Je languages 7 argument structure in finite clauses type examplesANOM PACC transitive verb ku class krẽ to eat singular ANOM PABS transitive verb default cok to paint SNOM active intransitive verb tẽ to go singular SABS descriptive ŋgryk to be angry ExpDAT monovalent verbum sentiendi pre m to be hungry ExpDAT StimulusABS bivalent verbum sentiendi kĩn to like Transitive verbs edit In the Northern Je languages transitive verbs take accusative or absolutive patients in finite clauses depending on the verb class In nonfinite clauses all transitive verbs take absolutive patients Note that nouns do not receive any overt marking either in the accusative or in the absolutive case the difference between these two cases is seen in the third person index which is reconstructed as ku in the accusative case and as c in the absolutive case The transitive verbs which index their patient in the accusative case in finite clauses are known as ku verbs All ku verbs are monosyllabic 13 181 219 and have distinct finite and nonfinite forms 5 13 133 The remaining transitive verbs index their patient in the absolutive case All verbs that belong to this class satisfy at least one of the following conditions they contain at least two syllables for example pumbu to see kaco to suck kuˀco to wash solid objects their finite and nonfinite forms are identical for example cok to paint kre to plant ĵũn to insult Finite ku verbs further differ from all other transitive verbs in that under certain circumstances they index their agent rather than patient on the verb This happens when a second person agent acts over a third person patient The phenomenon has been attested in Mẽbengokre 17 55 6 Apinaje 18 178 19 4 5 and Canela 12 104 5 Canonical active intransitive verbs edit This section is empty You can help by adding to it August 2020 Descriptives edit All Northern Je languages have intransitive predicates which take absolutive rather than nominative subjects known as descriptives They have been variously described as verbs 11 13 15 or nouns 14 An example of a reconstructed Proto Northern Je clause headed by a descriptive is ij ŋgryk I am angry literally 1SGABS be angry Verba sentiendi and dative subjects edit Verba sentiendi with dative subjects have been described for a variety of Northern Je languages such as Canela 20 12 56 Apinaje 13 233 7 and Kĩsedje 5 31 3 Monovalent verba sentiendi take only one argument experiencer which is encoded by a dative postpositional phrase as in the following reconstructed example Proto Northern Je ij me pre m I am hungry 7 537 literally 1SGACC DAT hunger Bivalent verba sentiendi take two arguments The experiencer is encoded by a dative postpositional phrase and the theme receives the absolutive case as in the following reconstructed example Proto Northern Je ij me a kĩn I like you 7 537 literally 1SGACC DAT 2ABS fun Lexicon editPredicate number edit The Northern Je languages commonly employ different lexemes for the so called singular and plural predicates As Nikulin and Salanova 2019 put it Archetypally certain verbs have distinct forms according to the number of the absolutive argument if the argument in question is not human number is not marked independently on it but rather only on the verb In addition verbal number can indicate repeated action even if all participants are singular Further nuances of the plural include a more prolonged or sluggish carrying out of an action incomplete or ineffective carrying out of the action and perhaps even indirect evidence for the action 7 540 There are several dozen pairs of predicates which contrast in number Plural predicates are not regularly derived from their singular counterparts but are rather expressed by unrelated lexemes in a handful of verbs it is possible to the fossilized prefix ja encoding plural Some examples of Proto Northern Je verbs which differ in number include 7 541 Verbal numberin Proto Northern Je singular plural gloss ga bo to roast krẽ ku to eat mẽ rẽ to throw tẽ mo to go nĵo janĵo to hang mbe jambe to grab to carry kuto jato to ignite nopok japok to pierceReferences edit a b c d e f g Nikulin Andrey 2020 Proto Macro Je um estudo reconstrutivo PDF Ph D dissertation Brasilia Universidade de Brasilia a b Nikulin Andrey 1 January 2017 A phonological reconstruction of Proto Cerrado Je family Journal of Language Relationship 15 3 4 147 180 doi 10 31826 jlr 2018 153 404 Ribeiro Eduardo Rivail October 2010 Nimuendaju was right The inclusion of the Jabuti language family in the Macro Je stock International Journal of American Linguistics 76 4 517 570 doi 10 1086 658056 a b c Salanova Andres Pablo May 2001 A nasalidade em Mebengokre e Apinaye O limite do vozeamento soante PDF MA thesis Campinas Universidade Estadual de Campinas a b c d Nonato Rafael February 2014 Clause Chaining Switch Reference and Coordination PDF Ph D dissertation Cambridge MA Massachusetts Institute of Technology Wetzels W Leo Nevins Andrew 2018 Prenasalized and postoralized consonants The diverse functions of enhancement Language 94 4 834 866 doi 10 1353 lan 2018 0055 hdl 1871 1 47588b0b fa5c 41af 804b 77bebb120cb8 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Nikulin Andrey Salanova Andres Pablo October 2019 Northern Je Verb Morphology and the Reconstruction of Finiteness Alternations International Journal of American Linguistics 85 4 533 567 doi 10 1086 704565 Nikulin Andrey 2016 Historical phonology of Proto Northern Je Journal of Language Relationship 14 3 4 165 186 doi 10 31826 jlr 2017 143 405 a b c Sa Amado Rosane de 2004 Aspectos morfofonologicos do Gaviao Pykobje PDF Ph D dissertation Sao Paulo Universidade de Sao Paulo a b c d Camargo Nayara da Silva 2015 Tapayuna Je aspectos morfossintaticos historicos e sociolinguisticos PDF Ph D dissertation Campinas Universidade Estadual de Campinas a b Cunha de Oliveira Christiane July 2003 Lexical Categories and The Status of Descriptives in Apinaje International Journal of American Linguistics 69 3 243 274 doi 10 1086 381336 a b c d Castro Alves Flavia de 2004 O Timbira falado pelos Canela Apaniekra uma contribuicao aos estudos da morfossintaxe de uma lingua Je PDF Ph D dissertation Campinas Universidade Estadual de Campinas a b c d e f g Oliveira Christiane Cunha de February 2014 The Language of the Apinaje People of Central Brazil PDF Ph D dissertation Eugene OR University of Oregon a b Salanova Andres Pablo September 2007 Nominalizations and Aspect PDF Ph D dissertation Cambridge MA Massachusetts Institute of Technology a b c d e Castro Alves Flavia de October 2010 Evolution of Alignment in Timbira International Journal of American Linguistics 76 4 439 475 doi 10 1086 658054 Gildea Spike Castro Alves Flavia de 2020 Reconstructing the Source of Nominative Absolutive Alignment in Two Amazonian Language Families In Barddal Johanna Gildea Spike Lujan Eugenio R eds Reconstructing Syntax Brill pp 47 107 doi 10 1163 9789004392007 003 ISBN 978 90 04 39199 4 Reis Silva Maria Amelia 2001 Pronomes ordem e ergatividade em Mebengokre MA thesis Campinas Universidade Estadual de Campinas Callow John Campbell 1962 The Apinaye language phonology and grammar Ph D dissertation London University of London Ham Patricia Waller Helen Koopman Linda 1979 Aspectos da Lingua Apinaye PDF Cuiaba Sociedade Internacional de Linguistica SIL Alves Flavia de Castro August 2018 Sujeito dativo em Canela Boletim do Museu Paraense Emilio Goeldi Ciencias Humanas 13 2 377 403 doi 10 1590 1981 81222018000200007 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Northern Je languages amp oldid 1172713000, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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