Ye'kuana Language
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Ye'kuana (), also known as Maquiritari, Dekwana, Ye'kwana, Ye'cuana, Yekuana, Cunuana, Kunuhana, De'cuana, De’kwana Carib, Pawana, Maquiritai, Maquiritare, Maiongong, or Soto is the language of the Ye'kuana people of Venezuela and Brazil. It is a
Cariban language The Cariban languages are a family of languages indigenous to northeastern South America. They are widespread across northernmost South America, from the mouth of the Amazon River to the Colombian Andes, and they are also spoken in small pockets ...
. It is spoken by approximately 5,900 people (c. 2001) around the border of northwestern Brazilian state of
Roraima Roraima (, ) is one of the 26 states of Brazil. Located in the country's North Region, it is the northernmost and most geographically and logistically isolated state in Brazil. It is bordered by the state of Pará to the southeast, Amazonas ...
and Venezuela – the majority (about 5,500) in Venezuela. At the time of the 2001 Venezuelan census, there were at 6,523 Ye’kuana living in Venezuela. Given the unequal distribution of the Ye’kuana across two South American countries, ''
Ethnologue ''Ethnologue: Languages of the World'' (stylized as ''Ethnoloɠue'') is an annual reference publication in print and online that provides statistics and other information on the living languages of the world. It is the world's most comprehensi ...
'' lists two different vitality ratings for Ye’kuana: in Venezuela it is listed as Vigorous (6a), while in Brazil it is classified Moribund (8a) on the Graded Intergenerational Disruption Scale (GIDS).


History

In Brazil, the Ye’kuana are believed to have settled on the lands they now occupy more than a century ago, coming from the larger population centres in Venezuela. Traditional mythology and oral history, however, tells that the lands around the Auari and
Uraricoera The Uraricoera River (Uraricuera) is a river of Roraima state in northern Brazil. The confluence of the Uraricoera and Takutu Rivers forms the Branco River The Branco River ( pt, Rio Branco; Engl: ''White River'') is the principal affluent of t ...
rivers have long been travelled by the Ye’kuana. During the 18th century, there was a lot of
missionary A missionary is a member of a Religious denomination, religious group which is sent into an area in order to promote its faith or provide services to people, such as education, literacy, social justice, health care, and economic development.Tho ...
activity in Ye'kuana territory, during which they were forced into constructing forts for the Spanish, and coerced into converting to
Catholicism The Catholic Church, also known as the Roman Catholic Church, is the largest Christian church, with 1.3 billion baptized Catholics worldwide . It is among the world's oldest and largest international institutions, and has played a ...
. A rebellion was organised against the Spanish in 1776. The 20th century brought a new wave of exploitation in the form of the colonists looking to capitalise on the discovery of rubber. Whole villages were forced into labour, driven in
chain gangs A chain gang or road gang is a group of prisoners chained together to perform menial or physically challenging work as a form of punishment. Such punishment might include repairing buildings, building roads, or clearing land. The system was not ...
to the
rubber Rubber, also called India rubber, latex, Amazonian rubber, ''caucho'', or ''caoutchouc'', as initially produced, consists of polymers of the organic compound isoprene, with minor impurities of other organic compounds. Thailand, Malaysia, and ...
camps. Later, another wave of missionaries arrived around the early 1960s. The Brazilian Ye'kuana decided not to live in the missions established on that side of the border, because the missionaries’ attention in Brazil was focused on the Sanumá and not on them. They were also more reluctant to convert, having seen their Venezuelan cousins convert and become (from the Brazilian Ye'kuana perspective) culturally weaker as a result, giving up key elements of their traditional ways of life. On the Venezuelan side of the border, this wave of missionaries brought the establishment of health services, schools, and access to local markets, also creating several relatively large communities centred around the missions. In 1980, a married Canadian missionary couple came to live among the Ye’kuana for a while, but they did not like their way of life, and there were disagreements between them and the Ye’kuana, and they left. After this, the Brazilian Ye’kuana decided that they did not want religion, but they did want a school, seeing the benefits that that infrastructure had provided indigenous communities in Venezuela. They got one, after negotiating with the leader of the Evangelical Mission of Amazônas. So began a process of becoming sedentary, wherein the Ye’kuana all moved closer together, and established semi-regular schedules (including that certain times of day for children were set aside for school). This establishment of solid permanent contact also led to more far-reaching mobilisation and contact with other indigenous communities and the state of Roraima. The Ye’kuana became known as skilled
canoe A canoe is a lightweight narrow water vessel, typically pointed at both ends and open on top, propelled by one or more seated or kneeling paddlers facing the direction of travel and using a single-bladed paddle. In British English, the ter ...
makers and
manioc ''Manihot esculenta'', commonly called cassava (), manioc, or yuca (among numerous regional names), is a woody shrub of the spurge family, Euphorbiaceae, native to South America. Although a perennial plant, cassava is extensively cultivated ...
scrapers, all while remaining fairly removed from the intense river traffic and influx of outsiders that had harmed many other indigenous communities.


Typology

The Ye’kuana language is situated typologically in the
Cariban The Cariban languages are a family of languages indigenous to northeastern South America. They are widespread across northernmost South America, from the mouth of the Amazon River to the Colombian Andes, and they are also spoken in small pocket ...
family, which is subdivided into seven subfamilies and one uncategorised language. Ye’kuana is a member of the Guianan Carib subfamily, along with ten other languages. The Guianan languages are located, for the most part, around the
Guiana Shield The Guiana Shield (french: Plateau des Guyanes, Bouclier guyanais; nl, Hoogland van Guyana, Guianaschild; pt, Planalto das Guianas, Escudo das Guianas; es, Escudo guayanés) is one of the three cratons of the South American Plate. It is a ...
. Ye’kuana and Wayumara form a smaller category within the Guianan subfamily, the Maquiritari-Wayumara subfamily.


Literature

The first
documentations Documentation is any communicable material that is used to describe, explain or instruct regarding some attributes of an object, system or procedure, such as its parts, assembly, installation, maintenance and use. As a form of knowledge manageme ...
of Ye’kuana in the nineteenth century consist of several wordlists by Schomburgk, followed by several comparative and ethnographic works. The early twentieth century saw more wordlists, moving away from works more generally about the Cariban languages to more specifically focusing on Ye’kuana. Escoriaza (1959 and 1960) provided a grammatical sketch. The 1960s and 70s mostly saw work on the ethnography of the Ye’kuana, including their mythology, political structure, and village formation. Schuster 1976 published a wordlist within his ethnography, but otherwise there was not much linguistic study in that time period. Heinen (1983–1984) published a grammar sketch couched in his mostly ethnographic study; Guss (1986) includes some texts in the language in his publication on oral tradition; and Hall (1988) published two volumes on morphosyntax and discourse analysis. Later, Hall (1991) looked at transitivity in verbs, amid many more ethnographic studies, and Chavier (1999) studied some further aspects of the morphology. A dictionary was published on CD-ROM, and most recently, Natália Cáceres’ MA thesis is a brief overview of the sociolinguistic profile of the Ye'kuana, while her doctoral dissertation presents a more complete descriptive grammar. Coutinho (2013) has also explored the number system of Ye'kuana, from a typological perspective.


Phonology

At the beginning of a word, and after a glottal stop, /ɾ̠/ becomes /j/ is in
free variation In linguistics, free variation is the phenomenon of two (or more) sounds or forms appearing in the same environment without a change in meaning and without being considered incorrect by native speakers. Sociolinguists argue that describing such ...
with and /h/ becomes ʷ~ this last change also happens following /o/, /u/, or /w/. All consonants except the glottal stop /ʔ/ can be found
geminated In phonetics and phonology, gemination (), or consonant lengthening (from Latin 'doubling', itself from '' gemini'' 'twins'), is an articulation of a consonant for a longer period of time than that of a singleton consonant. It is distinct fr ...
; it is unclear what phonetic environments allow gemination, and similarly unclear whether a distinction exists between geminated consonants and sequences of glottal stop plus consonant. The phoneme /k/ is commonly labialized to ʷwhen geminated or preceded by /ʔ/, /o/, /u/, or /w/, and occasionally also after /n/ The glottal stop /ʔ/ is always treated as part of the syllable coda for the purposes of assigning stress (see below) and can also be realized as laryngealization (
creaky voice In linguistics, creaky voice (sometimes called laryngealisation, pulse phonation, vocal fry, or glottal fry) refers to a low, scratchy sound that occupies the vocal range below the common vocal register. It is a special kind of phonation in which ...
) on the preceding vowel. Nasals become before /k/, /w/, and /ʔ/, after /i/ and /j/, and before /h/; in this last case the /h/ also assimilates to become an unvoiced ̥ Any nasal can cause nasalization of a preceding short vowel. Most consonants palatalize in various ways after /i/ and /j/: /t/ and /k/ become ʃ /s/ becomes /h/ becomes nasals become /w/ and /ɾ̠/ ordinarily become and /ɾ̠/ becomes ʃin certain special cases (at the right border of a word, or sometimes as part of the possessive suffix '' -dü''). Syllables have a (C)V(ː/C) structure. Long vowels cannot occur in closed syllables. Syllables codas can only be /w/, /j/, /ʔ/, or a nasal, and the final syllable of a word can only have coda /w/ or /j/ (or no coda at all). There are two separate accentual systems operating simultaneously. One deals with vowel length and is iambic in nature: it causes the vowel in every short-vowelled open syllable preceded by a short-vowelled open syllable to lengthen, applied recursively from the start of the word. Thus, some long vowels are unpredictable and phonemic, while others can be fully predicted by the vowel lengthening rule; writing systems differ in choosing to represent either only the first type or both types as long. This rule does not apply to bisyllabic words, whose vowel lengths seem irregular, and it also does not affect the final syllables of longer words, which show no length distinction. The second accentual system deals with pitch and is simpler: in words without attached clitics, a high pitch tends to fall on the penultimate syllable. Some dialectal variation is found. In some areas speakers (particularly younger city-dwellers) merge /ʃ/ into /s/. A ''Ye'kwana'' and ''De'kwana'' dialect are sometimes differentiated, where some words that have /j/ in Ye'kwana have /ɾ̠/ instead in De'kwana. Sequences of /wɾ̠/ ɾ̠~ ɾ̠ʷ~ ̠ʷin De'kwana also correspond to /ɾ̠ɾ̠/ din Ye'kwana, and some vowels differ.


Orthography

Several different orthographies are in use. In Venezuela, the one in widest official use was devised in the 1970s according to the conventions of the Venezuelan Indigenous Languages Alphabet (ALIV) (with some later modifications). It has been widely adopted by speakers in the state of Bolívar. Earlier orthographies designed by missionaries still see some usage, however, and speakers in Brazil and in the Venezuelan state of Amazonas in particular often use a somewhat different system.


Vowels

In the standard orthography used in Venezuela, /ɨ/ is written , and /ə/ is written . Some writing systems, such as the one in use in Brazil and Amazonas, instead write for /ɨ/, and for /ə/. Long vowels are indicated by doubling the letter. As discussed under Phonology above, orthographies all represent phonemic long vowels as long, but differ on whether to represent non-phonemic long vowels as long or short. * - a * - ö (Venezuelan standard), ä (Brazil and Amazonas) * - e * - i * - o * - ü (Venezuelan standard), ö (Brazil and Amazonas) * - u * ː- aa * ː- öö (Venezuelan standard), ää (Brazil and Amazonas) * ː- ee * ː- ii * ː- oo * ː- üü (Venezuelan standard), öö (Brazil and Amazonas) * ː- uu


Consonants

* ͡ʃ- ch * ̠ - d * (only found in De'kwana dialect) - d (Venezuelan standard), dh (Brazil and Amazonas) * ʷ - j (Venezuelan standard), f (Brazil and Amazonas) * - j * - j (Venezuelan standard), jh (Brazil and Amazonas) * - k * ʷ- kw * - m * - n * - ñ (Venezuela), nh (Brazil) * - n before k, w, or '; elsewhere, n' (Venezuelan standard) or ng (Brazil and Amazonas) * - s * - sh, s * - t * - ' * - w at the start of a syllable, u at the end * - y at the start of a syllable, i at the end


Morphology

Ye’kuana's morphology is comparable to that of other Cariban languages. Ye'kuana makes use of the following major grammatical aspects: past and non-past. The 'past' aspect is subdivided into recent and distant (the much more used of the two) as well as perfective and
imperfective The imperfective (abbreviated or more ambiguously ) is a grammatical aspect used to describe ongoing, habitual, repeated, or similar semantic roles, whether that situation occurs in the past, present, or future. Although many languages have a ge ...
. The 'non-past' is used for present, near future, and general truths. As well, probable and definite future aspects are morphologically distinct, there is a distinct imperfective suffix, and the
iterative Iteration is the repetition of a process in order to generate a (possibly unbounded) sequence of outcomes. Each repetition of the process is a single iteration, and the outcome of each iteration is then the starting point of the next iteration. ...
, durative (past), inchoative, terminative aspects are all marked, the latter three being marked periphrastically, rather than with a
suffix In linguistics, a suffix is an affix which is placed after the stem of a word. Common examples are case endings, which indicate the grammatical case of nouns, adjectives, and verb endings, which form the conjugation of verbs. Suffixes can carr ...
like the others.


Pronouns

The first person plural is represented by three forms in Ye'kuana: a dual inclusive form küwü, a dual exclusive form nña, and a plural inclusive form künwanno. There is no plural exclusive form.


Derivational morphology

There is an extensive and productive derivation system, including nominalising, verbalising, and adverbialising suffixes.All forms are given in forms so as to make morphology obvious, occasionally the forms given are not the surface forms The system of nominalisation allows for
adverb An adverb is a word or an expression that generally modifies a verb, adjective, another adverb, determiner, clause, preposition, or sentence. Adverbs typically express manner, place, time, frequency, degree, level of certainty, etc., answering ...
s to be converted, for instance ''judume'' ‘black’ becomes ''judum-ato'' ‘that which is black’, ''eetö'' ‘here’ becomes ''eeto-no'' ‘that which is here’, etc.; it also has many varieties of verbal nominalisation: intransitivisation, participlisation, agentivisation (''önöö'' ‘eat (meat)’ becomes ''t-önöö-nei'' ‘eater of meat’), deverbal nominalisation of action, instrumental (''a’deuwü'' ‘talk’ gives ''w-a’deuwü-tojo'' ‘telephone’), and nominalisation of a participle. In terms of verbalisation, there is the benefactive ‘give N to someone, bring N to something’, such as ''a’deu'' ‘language, word’ becoming ''a’deu-tö'' ‘read, repeat’; its reverse, the privative (''womü'' ‘clothes’ -> ''i-womü-ka'' ‘undress someone); a general verbalisation suffix ''-ma''; ''-nö'' which can be used to make transitive verbs; -ta which can be used to make intransitive verbs such as vomit and speak; and the occasional suffixes ''-dö'', ''-wü'', and ''-’ñö''. Finally, the adverbialising suffixes include: nominal possessive, participial, abilitive, a form that indicates the destination of a movement, one indicating aptitude, indicating newness of action, potential, and deverbal negative.


Aspects


Future

The probable future aspect is indicated with the suffix ''-tai'', composed of the future marker ''-ta'' and the irrealis marker ''-i''. It does not occur frequently in the elicited data in Cáceres (2011), and it indicates an event for which a probability of its taking place exists, without certainty. The certain future is likewise rarely marked in spontaneous speech. Examples of the probable future given in the grammar include phrases that translate to “you will learn the Ye'kuana language” and “tomorrow it will become red”, contrasted with the certain future examples: “another day I will come and I will see you” (where the second verb is the one marked).


Valency marking

The language presents several strategies for changing the valency of a verb, primarily a detransitiviser prefix and several causativiser suffixes.


Detransitive

The base form detransitiviser is postulated to have the form ''öt-'', and has eight allomorphs: ''öt-, ö-, ö’-, ot-, o’-, o-, at-'', and ''a''-. Transitive verb roots beginning (at the surface level) with ''e'' take the detransitive prefix ''öt-'': Transitive roots beginning with ''o'', or with ''e'' where the second vowel is roundtake ''ot-'': Transitive roots beginning with ''a'' take ''at-'': For the most part, the patterning of the allomorphs is phonologically-based, however, some roots have slight differences in meaning depending on the allomorph they receive:


Causative

All classes of verb in Ye’kuana can receive a causative suffix, but each of the two types of intransitive verbs (termed UP and UA) has their own suffix that they take. Intransitive verbs of type UP can take the suffixes ''-nüjü'' (with allomorphs ''-mjü'' and ''-nü’'') and ''-nöjü'' (with allomorphs ''-mjü'' and ''-nö’''), and the result is a transitive verb: : Transitive verbs and intransitive verbs of type UA can take the causative suffix ''-jo''. In the case of transitive verbs, another argument is added to the valency of the verb, while intransitives maintain their initial valency. This suffix is used relatively rarely with intransitive verbs, and of all the examples given below begin with /e/, so it is theorised that these verbs take this suffix because they are derived from transitives, however this theory has not been proven. :


Plurality

All unmarked nouns in Ye’kuana can be understood semantically as singular or "general" in number, while some nouns can receive explicit plural marking that distinguishes them from the singular/general-numbered nouns. Ye’kuana generally uses the suffix ''=komo'' to mark the nominal plural. Cáceres (2011) treats this suffix as a generic plural, while other authors such as Coutinho (2013) subscribe to the analysis given to other Cariban languages that they distinguish in number between the ‘all’ (i.e. collective) and ‘less-than-the-total’ (i.e. non-collective), and therefore treats this morpheme as a collective morpheme. After high-front vowel and approximant the palatalised variant ''=chomo'' is also seen. This suffix is used likewise for
animate Animation is a method by which still figures are manipulated to appear as moving images. In traditional animation, images are drawn or painted by hand on transparent celluloid sheets to be photographed and exhibited on film. Today, most anim ...
nouns and inanimate nouns: However, there are some restrictions on the distribution of this morpheme, for instance that names of animals cannot take it: In the Caura dialect studied by Cáceres (2011), a few other nouns exist that some speakers consider ungrammatical with the plural suffix, but others do not: However, in the Auaris dialect, as examined by Coutinho (2013), the plural forms of these nouns and others were all accepted: Even in the Auaris dialect, certain nouns denoting fruit do not accept the plural marker: :


References


External links

* ELAR archive o
Documentation of Ye'kwana
{{Authority control Languages of Venezuela Languages of Brazil Cariban languages